TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「When Antoni Gaudí died at the age of 73, struck down by a tram on a busy #Barcelona street in 1926, the architect had been working on the Templo Expiatorio de la Sagrada Familia for 43 years. Only the crypt, the apse’s facade and a single tower were complete. Everything else, including the remaining 17 towers and the central nave, remained undone. By the time Jordi Faulí joined the team as a junior architect in 1990, only three of the interior’s 56 columns (each one tied, in typical Gaudí fashion, to the liturgical calendar) and a handful of the windows had been completed. But that was before the miracle of modern tourism, writes @lisaabend. Although many in Barcelona would eventually see them as a curse, the travelers who began flooding the city at the start of the new century meant salvation for the #SagradaFamilia. As the number of visitors rose—the church currently gets roughly 4 million per year, and each one pays an entry fee that ranges from $16 to $43—the foundation overseeing the basilica found itself in the unfamiliar position of having enough money to finish the main nave. A soaring expanse with tree-like pillars and multicolored stained-glass windows that make it feel like a kaleidoscopic forest, the nave was consecrated by Pope Benedict in 2010. Go inside the race to complete one of the world's longest-running construction projects at the link in bio. Photograph by @lucalocatelliphoto for TIME」7月10日 8時50分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 7月10日 08時50分


When Antoni Gaudí died at the age of 73, struck down by a tram on a busy #Barcelona street in 1926, the architect had been working on the Templo Expiatorio de la Sagrada Familia for 43 years. Only the crypt, the apse’s facade and a single tower were complete. Everything else, including the remaining 17 towers and the central nave, remained undone. By the time Jordi Faulí joined the team as a junior architect in 1990, only three of the interior’s 56 columns (each one tied, in typical Gaudí fashion, to the liturgical calendar) and a handful of the windows had been completed. But that was before the miracle of modern tourism, writes @lisaabend. Although many in Barcelona would eventually see them as a curse, the travelers who began flooding the city at the start of the new century meant salvation for the #SagradaFamilia. As the number of visitors rose—the church currently gets roughly 4 million per year, and each one pays an entry fee that ranges from $16 to $43—the foundation overseeing the basilica found itself in the unfamiliar position of having enough money to finish the main nave. A soaring expanse with tree-like pillars and multicolored stained-glass windows that make it feel like a kaleidoscopic forest, the nave was consecrated by Pope Benedict in 2010. Go inside the race to complete one of the world's longest-running construction projects at the link in bio. Photograph by @lucalocatelliphoto for TIME


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