La Ruta del Hierro y el Agua — Ruta Quad Patrimonial | Rutas Marbella
Quad Heritage Route · Marbella → Ojén

The Route of
Iron and Water

Drive from the Mediterranean to the mountains of Ojén — crossing the Río Real, between Roman mines, muleteer bridges and the iron fever that built modern Spain. With panoramic stops offering views of the sea, Gibraltar and the African coast.

35 kmOf route and track
2–3 hOf journey
9Stops with history
3Panoramic viewpoints

One valley. 2,000 years of stories.

The hills between Marbella and Ojén look wild — and they are. But along the Río Real valley lies an amazing past: the oldest mine on the Costa del Sol, exploited since Roman times; the stone bridges where mule trains carried ore and aguardiente down to the coast; and the iron mines of the 19th century that, for a few decades, made Málaga the steel capital of Spain.

Our guides bring these places to life as you ride a Polaris quad through cork forests, river crossings and mountain trails. It's not just adrenaline: it's a journey through the real, untold history of the Costa del Sol.

The route, stop by stop

All stops are accessible by quad or with a short walk from where we park. Tags indicate how to get there.

KM 0Base

Marbella Base — Briefing and equipment By quad

Safety briefing, driving lesson and helmets at our base. Then we head out through La Cañada, leave the city behind and climb towards the hills in the direction of Ojén.

KM 6Stop 1

Mediterranean Viewpoint Viewpoint By quad

First photo stop. The coast unfolds beneath your feet — and on clear days, the Rock of Gibraltar and the mountains of Africa float on the horizon.

Did you know…? Sailors and smugglers used these hills as watchtowers for centuries — whoever spotted the ship first, won.
KM 9Stop 2

Río Real Crossings Bath By quad

We cross the Río Real several times as it descends from Sierra Blanca through a small canyon of cork oaks and oleanders. In summer, cool off in the waterfall pool.

The story: This valley was Marbella's green pantry for centuries — water mills, orchards and vineyards populated its banks long before the first golf course arrived.
KM 11Stop 3

Puente de las Mulas By quad

An ancient stone crossing on the historic bridle path between Marbella and Ojén.

The story: Before roads, everything moved on mule back: ore, oil, coal and brandy. In 1872, only the Peñoncillo mines employed 25 muleteers and 100 pack animals on these trails. Everything passed over this bridge.
KM 14Stop 4

El Peñoncillo Iron Mines View from the track

The reddish scars on the hillside are the remains of the great Andalusian iron rush — today protected mining heritage.

The story: In 1826 Spain's first modern blast furnaces were lit nearby to smelt this magnetite. By 1844 Málaga was producing nearly three-quarters of all Spanish iron. A Scottish company later built a mining railway from here to a wharf in Marbella to ship the ore to Great Britain. The mines worked, with interruptions, until 1974.
KM 17Stop 5

Ojén Panorama Viewpoint By quad

The white village of Ojén appears below, nestled between Sierra Blanca and Sierra Alpujata at the gateway to Sierra de las Nieves National Park — with the Mediterranean sparkling in the distance.

Did you know…? In the 19th century Ojén brandy became so famous that in New Orleans «Ojen» became the official drink of Mardi Gras — and they still serve it there today.
KM 19Stop 6

Charca de la Viña Bath Short walk

Our turning point: a natural pool of crystal-clear waters just below Ojén, accessed by a short wooden staircase from where we park the quads. Time for a swim, a picnic and photos.

The story: The name recalls the vineyards that once covered these slopes until phylloxera devastated them in the late 19th century. By the pool, a small shrine to the Virgin of Pilar still watches over swimmers — just as it once watched over the harvest.
+Extended

Linarejos Valley — The Roman Mine Short walk

On our extended route: a hidden valley of cork oaks concealing the oldest mining complex on the Costa del Sol — complete with its mysterious stone aqueduct.

The story: The Romans extracted silver-bearing lead here two millennia ago, and written mining records date back to 1692. The aqueduct carried water to the ore-washing facility — you can still see the stone-covered conduit crossing through the forest.
+Extended

Bridge of the old N-340 over the Río Real View from the track

Where the route meets the old coastal road stands a two-arch stone bridge from the 1860s — part of the original Málaga–Cádiz highway, engineered by Pablo Alzola.

KM 35Finish

Return to Marbella By quad

One last sweep of sea views on the descent, then back to base. Route photos and videos included.

Practical Information

The Route

  • Duration: 2 h (classic) / 3 h (extended heritage)
  • Polaris quads 330 cc or 500 cc
  • 1 or 2 occupants per quad
  • Mix of asphalt, forest track and river fords
  • In summer, afternoon departures to avoid the heat

Requirements

  • Driving licence mandatory to pilot
  • Under 25? Licence with 5+ years experience, or signed parental consent
  • Passengers: no licence needed
  • Closed-toe shoes recommended
  • Swimwear and towel in summer

Included

  • Casco y briefing de seguridad
  • Guía durante todo el recorrido
  • Agua embotellada
  • Fotos y vídeos de tu aventura
  • Seguro completo

Rueda por la historia

Grupos reducidos, historias reales y las mejores vistas de la Costa del Sol. Reserva hoy tu aventura en quad.

Consultar disponibilidad
¿Necesitas Ayuda?
🇬🇧EN🇫🇷FR🇪🇸ES🇳🇱NL