Thank you Cheryl, Meadow Mist Designs, for hosting this Linky Party for the fifth year. This year has been really good for me, so it was very difficult to choose only five posts! (Click the title and it will take you to the post.)
Be sure to check out all the other best posts on Cheryl's blog.
(I also participated in 2018, 2017, 2016, and 2015.)
On my final day in Barcelona, I visited the Christopher Columbus Monument, which is at the Placa de la Porta de Pau. The Statue of Columbus is on the top of a 60 meters (197 feet) column and overlooks the sea. It was designed by Catalan architect Gaieta Buigas i Monrava for the Universal exhibition of 1888. The statue itself is more than seven meters tall and was created by Rafael Atche. Columbus points towards the sea, but not in the direction of the new world he discovered. The pedestal is adorned with allegorical figures.
Under the tower is something like a visitors center with information and a shop. There is also the elevator to go to the top! The fee is six euros and the elevator was tiny - barely big enough for the elevator operator and me.
I walked around the top several times, looking all around Barcelona.
American President Grover Cleveland was the first to be carried to the top during the 1888 event. The elevator operator told me it took quite a long time to get him to the top, as he was a large man. It was very quick when I went up.
La Sagrada Familia has been on my bucket list for quite some time and I was not disappointed! The construction began in 1882, under the direction of architect Francisco de Paula del Billar y Lozano. After only a year, he resigned and the position of chief architect was given to Antoni Gaudi. Gaudi devoted his life to the project and when he died in 1926, less than one quarter of the church was finished. He is buried in the crypt. The early construction was slow because it was funded on private donations. In July 1936, Spanish Civil War revolutionaries set the crypt and workshop on fire, destroying many of Gaudi's original plans, drawings and plaster models. It took 16 years to reconstruct them. It is on schedule now to complete the Catholic Basilica in 2026, one hundred years after Gaudi's death.
I bought a tour ticket in order to be able to skip the lines. Unfortunately it was a windy day and the tour was not able to go up in one of the towers.
In this model the grey shows the current building, the yellow is yet to be built.
There are three entrances. The Glory or front entrance began in 2002 and is not finished or open. We entered through the Nativity entrance, which was the first entrance to be finished. The Passion entrance began in 1954 and was finished in 1976.
This is our tour guide explaining about the many details in the facade. Gaudi's design called for eighteen spires - the twelve apostles, the Virgin Mary, the four evangelists and Jesus Christ, which will be the tallest. The completion of this spire will make La Sagrada Familia the talles church building in the world.
Close-ups of the door in the photo above.
The stained glass inside is amazing. One side is blues, greens, and purples. The other is reds, oranges, and yellows.
This is the unfinished Glory entrance from the inside.
I can't imagine how this all works and can bear the weight of everything above it.
There are windows from the main floor down to the crypt.
The tour ended, and everyone could continue on their own or leave at that point. I went outside through the Passion entrance.
This is a puzzle where all lines and combinations add up to 33, the age of Jesus at his death.
Next, I continued on to the museum.
I found this next exhibit fascinating.
I'm so glad I had the opportunity to visit this amazing place!