The archeological excavations have identified the eldest human vestiges in Seville: rests of a kitchen from the first half of 8th century before Christ, just at the end of Bronze’s Age. These traces have been found five metres depth.
The archeologists have also found walls of a building of the roman period. It would be a “great importance” building because of the scale of the foundations with a height of three metres, for which the roman architects used the technic of “Opus Africanus”, as it could be proved in the excavations.
This building could be related with the fluvial port of the old Hispalis.