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SAGRADA FAMILIA

Barcelona gives Sagrada Família building permit… after 137 years

Construction of Barcelona's Sagrada Família may have started 137 years ago, but the emblematic basilica only got a building permit... on Friday.

Barcelona gives Sagrada Família building permit... after 137 years
File photo: AFP

The Spanish seaside city council awarded the license to a committee in charge of finishing construction of the Catholic temple for 4.6 million euros , Janet Sanz, in charge of urban planning, told reporters.

In a quirk of history, authorities only discovered in 2016 that the building that draws millions of visitors every year had never had planning permission since construction began in 1882.

Sanz said the council had finally managed to “resolve a historical anomaly in the city — that an emblematic monument like the Sagrada Familia… didn't have a building permit, that it was being constructed illegally.”

According to the committee in charge of finishing construction of the not-yet-completed basilica, designer Antoni Gaudi had asked the town hall of Sant Marti, a village now absorbed into Barcelona, for a building permit in 1885 but never got an answer.

Some 137 years later, it is finally legal.

The new building permit states that the basilica will finally be finished in 2026, with a maximum height of 172 metres and a budget of 374 million euros.

Designed by Gaudi, a famous Catalan architect also known for the Park Güell, another tourist magnet in Barcelona, the Sagrada Familia was named a UNESCO World Heritage Sight in 2005.

Construction, financed solely by donations and entrance tickets, is due to conclude in 2026, coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the death of Gaudi, who was run over by a tram.

The basilica is Barcelona's most visited monument, with 4,5 million people in 2017, and one of the main tourist landmarks of the country.

READ ALSO: Ten ancient Spanish monuments that must be protected at all costs

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BARCELONA

Pandemic to delay completion date for Barcelona’s Sagrada Familia

The long-awaited completion of Barcelona's Sagrada Familia will no longer happen in 2026 because the coronavirus epidemic has curtailed its construction and frustrated funding, basilica officials admitted Wednesday.

Pandemic to delay completion date for Barcelona's Sagrada Familia
Photo: AFP

“The effects of the pandemic have forced us to rethink our planned timeline. This affects the end date we had planned for 2026,” said Esteve Camps who heads the Sagrada Familia's construction board.   

One of Spain's top tourist attractions, the towering architectural masterpiece has been under construction for nearly 140 years but the vast project only received a building permit last year.

When finished, the ornate cathedral which was by modernist Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi, will have 18 towers with its highest steeple reaching 172 metres (564 feet) into the air.

It was to have been completed in 2026 — on the 100th anniversary of the death of Gaudi, who was run over by a tram.   

“We are not able to propose any new date” for completing the building work which began in 1882, but “it will be impossible (to finish) in 2026”, he said.    

Construction works came to an abrupt halt in March when the Spanish government ordered a national lockdown to slow the spread of the virus, and will only resume “in the coming weeks”, he said.

Even then, the works will resume at a slower pace given the basilica's lack of funds as the cost of its construction is financed by donations from the faithful and the takings from ticket sales to tourists, both of which have plummeted during the crisis.   

For now, they only have funds to finish building a huge tower dedicated to the Virgin Mary which will be second highest of the 18 towers that will grace the finished monument.

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