Showing posts with label L'Eixample. Show all posts
Showing posts with label L'Eixample. Show all posts

Friday, June 19, 2009

Casa Battló de noche



The Casa Battló was just as spectacular at night as it was during our visit during the day...

Casa Vicens


Casa Vicens was Antoni Gaudí’s first major private commission.

Taking inspiration from the Moorish style, he covered the façade in linear green-and-white tiles with a flower motif; the decorative iron railings serve as a reminder of Gaudí’s early training as a metalsmith.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Fundació Antoni Tàpies

The Lonely Planet describes the building as a “pioneering” Modernista building that was built in the early 1880s. It exists as an homage to, and by, the Catalan artist, Antoni Tàpies.

Unfortunately, we were unable to see the exhibitions that are normally on display inside due to the fact that the museum was closed for renovation.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

Casa Batlló















Designed for the industrialist Josep Batlló and completed in 1907, the Casa Batlló was constructed from what was originally an apartment building to liven up the building. Gaudí was hired for such an endeavor, and he created a fascade that Dalí later compared to “the tranquil waters of a lake.” Like most of Gaudí projects, there is evidence of inspiration in nature. The façade of the building hangs in folds, much like skin, and from below, the balconies resemble evil eyes.

The interior of the building has a very organic ambience, with snakeskin-patterned walls in addition to window frames, fireplaces, doorways, and staircases without a trace of a straight line anywhere.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Sagrada Familia









Although it has been undergoing construction for more than 100 years, the Sagrada Familia is still unfinished. Despite the fact that it is projected to be completed by the 2020s, it is still one of Spain’s most visited monuments as well as a kind of symbol for the city of Barcelona.

The church of the “Sacred Family” served as the project to which Antoni Gaudí dedicated the latter part of his life. With a goal of constructing a building large enough to hold 10,000 people, Gaudí surpassed even his own expectations, ultimately designing a Gothic-shaped church with a temple 95m long and 60m wide which was able to seat 13,000.

Without a doubt, the size of the church is startling. With eight squires that have been compared to everything from perforated cigars to celestial billiard cues that tower more than 100m into the Barcelona skyline. For Gaudí, the squires represented the 12 apostles; he planned to build four more squires and add a 170-meter central dome and tower topped with a lamb, symbolizing Jesus.

However, the reality of the church is still marked by the scaffolding, pallets, dressed stone, cranes, tarpaulins, and fencing scattered about while construction crews are hard at work.

For me, it was particularly interesting because I hadn't been to visit the Sagrada Familia since 2004. Even though it had only been 4 years, it was fascinating to see the building's progress.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Casa Amatller






Although the majority of the Modernist sites in Barcelona were created by Antoni Gaudí, Casa Amatller serves as an example of a contribution to the Modernist ambience by someone other than Gaudí, Josep Puig I Cadafalch. Casa Amatller is an apartment building dating to 1900 that was commissioned by Catalan chocolate manufacturer, Antoni Amatller.

Unfortunately for us, the building was undergoing renovation while we were in Barcelona, so we got to see a small fraction of the interior. I guess that is motivation to make it back to Spain someday, eh?

All the same, I personally really enjoyed the stained glass. To say the least, it was a change from what I was used to seeing in the churches scattered across Spain!

La Pedrera










First on the to-do list for our visit was La Pedrera. Originally constructed as the Casa Milà between 1905 and 1911, what is popularly known as La Pedrera, or “The Stone Quarry,” was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. The rugged facade of the building is said to have been inspired by the mountain of Montserrat, while the apartments themselves resemble eroded cave dwellings.

Because of the curvatures in the architecture, the popular joke is that the new tenants would only be able to have snakes as pets! Gaudí described the building as “more luminous than light,” and while it was his last secular commission, critics have declared it among his best.