The Serra de la Llacuna (Catalan for "Small lake mountain range") is a modest mountain ridge located in the municipality of La Llacuna in the comarca of Anoia, Catalonia, Spain. Its highest point reaches approximately 844â¯metres above sea level.
The Serra de la Llacuna is part of the Catalan Pre-Coastal Range and belongs to the broader landscape unit known as the Serra d'Ancosa. This mountain ridge acts as a natural barrier between the valley carved by the Llacuna stream and the surrounding plains. It is situated in a transitional area where the elevated terrain of the Pre-Coastal Range gives way to the lower-lying lands of the Catalan Central Depression.
Forested with Mediterranean species such as holm oak, Aleppo pine, and shrubs like rosemary and heather, the Serra lies within a mosaic of forest and shrubland typical of the Anoia highlands. The ridge forms part of the rural landscape managed as forest reserve by local landowners, with pathways starting from La Llacuna and fountains such as Font Cuitora, Pla Novell, Font del Teix, and Font dels Horts frequently visited by hikers.
Popular hiking and mountainâÂÂbike routes cross the ridge, including several waymarked local loops.
Visible from the ridge are the ruins of the medieval Castle of VilademÃÂ ger, first documented in 987 in a donation by Count Borrell II of Barcelona to the church of Sant Pere de Vic.
The ridge historically served as a rural boundary and grazing area for transhumant shepherds, contributing to local traditions of agroâÂÂpastoral land use in La Llacuna.