Barcelona &ndash affectionately shortened to &ldquoBarca&rdquo by locals &ndash is the capital of Catalunya (or Catalonia), the wealthiest region of Spain, with a good life to match, and its residents know how to make the most of it. There is plenty going on by way of commerce, but hardly anyone barks instructions into smartphones people go to work, but a stroll past lunching crowds makes it seem that afternoons were invented for a long, al fresco meal and a glass of sangria. The buzzing high streets offer every on-season fashion collection under the sun, but the residents are innately stylish rather than trend victims. Even on a weekday, just a few minutes from the major thoroughfare of Passeig de Gracià, dozens of pavement cafés in the district of L'Eixample have patrons sitting with a coffee, the sun on their back, showing no sign of that stroke-inducing mania of 'getting things done'. This charm of a lifestyle built on savoured moments is very typically Spanish, though Catalans do not identify themselves with the rest of the country an independence referendum is due in 2014.