The Chapel of Santa Cruz de la Calle Malva is one of the most emblematic churches in Lucena del Puerto, notable for its regionalist architecture and its profound significance in local traditions.
Built in 1992 by architect Francisco J. Ramón Girón, the chapel is located in the heart of Lucena del Puerto, on the street that gives it its name. Its whitewashed façade, decorated with Sevillian-style tiles, features images of the archangels Saint Michael and Saint Gabriel, as well as the Bread and Wine and the monstrance held by angels. All of this is decorated with mauve flowers and in that color, reflecting the characteristic colors of the Cross: white and pink.
Access to the chapel is through a small courtyard adorned with pots of geraniums that brighten and stand out against the whitewashed walls. The entrance has carved wooden doors with reliefs related to Jesus Christ, his passion, and the Virgin Mary. Above the doors is a stained-glass window depicting the Holy Resurrection of Our Lord, and higher up, a wrought-iron balcony decorated with gold-embroidered cloths.
Inside, the chapel houses the Cross of Calle Malva, a work created in 1956 by the Seville workshops of Manuel Seco Velasco. The wood, chiseled in gold and silver, is bathed in silver and gold, with precious stone inlays and an interior of authentic tortoiseshell. On the front, it bears a monstrance and the traditional INRI, while on the back, it shows the Sacred Heart of Jesus on a cloud. Around the cross are four rays of light. As decoration, it has a shroud embroidered in gold and silk on gold mesh, made by the embroiderer Rosendo Antonio Jiménez Pérez, held up by three polychrome angels attached to the cross.
The processional float is the work of the Orfebrería Andaluza workshop, and is carried on poles on the outside and decorated with brightly colored natural flowers.
The Cross of Calle Malva is one of the most venerated in Lucena del Puerto. Every May 3, the day of the Invention of the Holy Cross, the chapels of the crosses are opened. The weekend before Pentecost, the festival of the Crosses is celebrated; on Wednesday of that week, the crosses are moved from their chapels to the church, and on Saturday, after the main service, they are carried through the streets of the town, visiting the chapels of the crosses and performing the traditional “falls.” On Sunday, the Cross of Calle Malva returns to its chapel.
During these celebrations, it is traditional to throw petals and hold a fireworks display in honor of the Cross. In addition, a novena dedicated to the Cross of Calle Malva is celebrated, along with a floral offering on September 14, the day of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, as it is the only cross in the town that has a recognized monument. The Cross has its own hymn, composed by a devotee and a member of the Maestro Tejera Music Band of Seville.
The Chapel of the Holy Cross of Calle Malva is undoubtedly a place of great cultural and spiritual importance for the inhabitants of Lucena del Puerto, representing a living tradition that is renewed every year with fervor and devotion.