This square can be said to be the most open and common space for Coineñas, and it has been so historically.
In this emblematic square are the last two Town Halls as well as the last remaining vestiges of nineteenth-century architecture.
Of special relevance in this square are the figure of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, commonly known as "the Saint of the Alameda" and the beautiful fountain that presides over the square, chiseled with marble from the Coín quarries and which, in addition to being the most Beautiful and monumental of all, it represents the bringing of drinking water to Coín to its public squares, with all that this entails, in addition to beautifying the environment, as an illustrated measure of social, hygienic and sanitary content.