Thousands of horn-tooting, hat-wearing revellers jammed Madrid’s central Puerta del Sol square on Tuesday, braving freezing temperatures to ring in 2015 — a day early. The crowd roared and jumped up and down as the clock in the 18th century Real Casa de Correos struck midnight, even though the new year only starts 24 hours later. City officials test the chimes the day before New Year’s Eve to make sure they are working properly and each year a growing sea of people come for the trial run to start celebrating early. Many said they came to avoid the much larger crowd that turns out on New Year’s Eve for the countdown in the square.
Tomorrow it would be impossible to come down here — there would be too many people. We are going to spend New Year’s Eve at home and we will watch it all on television. This way we get a taste of what it is like.
Fatima Rodriguez de Ahumada, a 33-year-old secretary
Dozens of police frisked revellers as they entered the square and searched rucksacks to prevent glass bottles from being brought in while several ambulances stood by. With the temperature falling to minus two degrees Celsius, groups of people — many wearing colourful wigs or oversize plastic glasses — huddled together to keep warm and ate snacks as they waited for the clock to strike midnight. A smaller crowd of several hundred people, including many couples with young children, turned out for an earlier test of the chimes held at noon on Tuesday.
This is mad, I can’t imagine this many people turning out for something like this in London. No way.
Claire Brown, a 23-year-old student from Britain who was visiting a friend in Madrid