1 00:00:01,920 --> 00:00:06,800 Speaker 1: Welcome to brain Stuff production of iHeart Radio, Hey brain 2 00:00:06,840 --> 00:00:11,280 Speaker 1: Stuff Lauren Vogelbaum Here. La Basilica de la Sagrada Familia, 3 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:14,440 Speaker 1: or the Basilica of the Holy Family in Barcelona, Spain, 4 00:00:14,880 --> 00:00:18,160 Speaker 1: is unlike any building in the world. The church's famous 5 00:00:18,239 --> 00:00:21,600 Speaker 1: Nativity facade looks from a distance like a supersized drip 6 00:00:21,680 --> 00:00:26,079 Speaker 1: sand castle, but closer inspection reveals ornately sculpted towers that 7 00:00:26,120 --> 00:00:30,360 Speaker 1: have been described as the Bible written in stone. The 8 00:00:30,440 --> 00:00:33,480 Speaker 1: architect of the Sagrada Familia was the eccentric and deeply 9 00:00:33,520 --> 00:00:36,920 Speaker 1: religious cutal on artist Antony Gordy, who was struck and 10 00:00:37,000 --> 00:00:39,640 Speaker 1: killed by a street car in ninety six when only 11 00:00:39,680 --> 00:00:42,360 Speaker 1: the Nativity facade of his master work had been completed. 12 00:00:43,080 --> 00:00:45,600 Speaker 1: At that point, the rest of the ambitious structure existed 13 00:00:45,680 --> 00:00:52,360 Speaker 1: only in Godi's complex architectural drawings and scale plaster models. Tragically, 14 00:00:52,560 --> 00:00:55,680 Speaker 1: Goodie's priceless models and most of his drawings were destroyed 15 00:00:55,800 --> 00:00:59,680 Speaker 1: by anarchist revolutionaries just ten years after his death, and 16 00:01:00,000 --> 00:01:03,320 Speaker 1: ever since, generations of architects and engineers have labored to 17 00:01:03,360 --> 00:01:07,200 Speaker 1: piece together Godi's singular vision and finish his magnum opus. 18 00:01:08,480 --> 00:01:11,360 Speaker 1: As of this writing, the Sagrada Familia is one hundred 19 00:01:11,360 --> 00:01:14,039 Speaker 1: and thirty seven years old. The first stone was late 20 00:01:14,120 --> 00:01:17,480 Speaker 1: in eighteen eighty two, making it the longest running active 21 00:01:17,560 --> 00:01:21,280 Speaker 1: building project on Earth. Not the longest running ever, though, 22 00:01:21,600 --> 00:01:25,160 Speaker 1: to name just one. Cologne Cathedral in Germany was started 23 00:01:25,200 --> 00:01:29,640 Speaker 1: in twelve forty eight and completed in eighteen eighty. It 24 00:01:29,680 --> 00:01:32,720 Speaker 1: wasn't until twenty nineteen that the City of Barcelona officially 25 00:01:32,720 --> 00:01:37,040 Speaker 1: granted Sagrada Familia a construction permit, even though Godi applied 26 00:01:37,040 --> 00:01:39,920 Speaker 1: for one in eighteen eighty five. The permit itself was 27 00:01:40,000 --> 00:01:43,039 Speaker 1: the most expensive on record, a whopping four point six 28 00:01:43,080 --> 00:01:46,360 Speaker 1: million euros that's around five point two million dollars American 29 00:01:46,680 --> 00:01:50,320 Speaker 1: to complete the monumental project by six, which will be 30 00:01:50,360 --> 00:01:54,880 Speaker 1: the one hundredth anniversary of Godi's death. As an architect 31 00:01:54,880 --> 00:01:58,000 Speaker 1: and structural engineer, Godi was at least a century ahead 32 00:01:58,000 --> 00:02:00,840 Speaker 1: of his time. His eleven vision airy works in and 33 00:02:00,840 --> 00:02:04,520 Speaker 1: around Barcelona, seven of which are UNESCO World Heritage Sites, 34 00:02:04,800 --> 00:02:09,560 Speaker 1: demonstrate how Godi employed wildly innovative building techniques to mimic 35 00:02:09,600 --> 00:02:14,040 Speaker 1: the beauty of nature. Godi's park Gwill, on a hill 36 00:02:14,080 --> 00:02:18,400 Speaker 1: overlooking Barcelona, features a broad patio contained by wavy, curved 37 00:02:18,400 --> 00:02:23,400 Speaker 1: walls adorned colorful Mediterranean tiled mosaics, and his casa batio 38 00:02:23,760 --> 00:02:26,280 Speaker 1: looks as if an alien apartment complex landed in the 39 00:02:26,320 --> 00:02:29,840 Speaker 1: middle of a nineteenth century city. Its breathtaking facade is 40 00:02:29,880 --> 00:02:33,560 Speaker 1: an architectural quilt of curved stone, iron, glass, and tile, 41 00:02:34,000 --> 00:02:37,960 Speaker 1: all girded by God's uncanny grasp of engineering and material science. 42 00:02:39,320 --> 00:02:42,440 Speaker 1: Godi was a devout and passionate Catholic who believed that 43 00:02:42,520 --> 00:02:44,880 Speaker 1: the deepest way to commune with God was to abide 44 00:02:44,880 --> 00:02:48,560 Speaker 1: in nature his creation. When thirty one year old Godi 45 00:02:48,680 --> 00:02:51,680 Speaker 1: received the commission to build the Sagada Familia church, he 46 00:02:51,760 --> 00:02:55,160 Speaker 1: drew up plans for a towering structure with eighteen spires 47 00:02:55,360 --> 00:02:58,880 Speaker 1: representing the twelve apostles for evangelists, the Virgin Mary and 48 00:02:59,000 --> 00:03:03,160 Speaker 1: Jesus Christ. Pope Francis's rumored to be considering Godi, known 49 00:03:03,200 --> 00:03:07,720 Speaker 1: sometimes as God's Architect, as a candidate for sainthood. In 50 00:03:07,840 --> 00:03:11,359 Speaker 1: contrast with the grand exterior, the inside of Sagrada Familia 51 00:03:11,520 --> 00:03:15,120 Speaker 1: is meant to evoke a naturalistic forest of stone. Massive 52 00:03:15,160 --> 00:03:18,200 Speaker 1: pillars stretched from floor to ceiling, where their twisting branches 53 00:03:18,280 --> 00:03:22,120 Speaker 1: intertwined to form an ornate canopy. Work was slow due 54 00:03:22,160 --> 00:03:24,880 Speaker 1: to the technical complexities of the cathedral and the fact 55 00:03:24,919 --> 00:03:28,919 Speaker 1: that it relied solely on private donations. Godi worked on 56 00:03:28,960 --> 00:03:32,280 Speaker 1: the Sagrada Familia for forty years, fully devoting the last 57 00:03:32,320 --> 00:03:35,440 Speaker 1: years of his life to the project. His biographer once 58 00:03:35,480 --> 00:03:38,400 Speaker 1: told the TV show Sixty Minutes he wanted to write 59 00:03:38,400 --> 00:03:41,400 Speaker 1: the history of the Catholic faith in one building and 60 00:03:41,520 --> 00:03:44,320 Speaker 1: added the Godi slept the construction site and took little 61 00:03:44,320 --> 00:03:46,880 Speaker 1: care for appearance, wearing frayed pants held up by a 62 00:03:46,960 --> 00:03:51,080 Speaker 1: rope belt. Godi knew that he wouldn't live to complete 63 00:03:51,080 --> 00:03:54,720 Speaker 1: his master work, so he drew up detailed architectural plans and, 64 00:03:54,960 --> 00:03:58,560 Speaker 1: most importantly, scale plaster models of each of the cathedral's 65 00:03:58,560 --> 00:04:02,680 Speaker 1: sculpted facades and tow wring spires. When Godi was killed 66 00:04:02,680 --> 00:04:05,800 Speaker 1: in the nineteen six tram accident, his associates were able 67 00:04:05,840 --> 00:04:08,680 Speaker 1: to keep building based on the architect's drawings and models. 68 00:04:09,920 --> 00:04:12,440 Speaker 1: But then the Spanish Civil War erupted in nineteen thirty 69 00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:15,640 Speaker 1: six and gangs of anarchists targeted churches as symbols of 70 00:04:15,680 --> 00:04:19,960 Speaker 1: institutional oppression. The Sagrada Familia was attacked and although the 71 00:04:20,000 --> 00:04:23,480 Speaker 1: structure was saved, the anarchists broke into the architect's workshop 72 00:04:23,640 --> 00:04:28,080 Speaker 1: and smashed Goodie's plaster models. Without those models, progress on 73 00:04:28,120 --> 00:04:31,279 Speaker 1: Sagrada Familia slowed to a crawl, further delayed by the 74 00:04:31,360 --> 00:04:35,600 Speaker 1: decades long fascist rule of Francisco Franco. Later, when New 75 00:04:35,680 --> 00:04:38,960 Speaker 1: Zealand born architecture student Mark Bury backpacked through Spain in 76 00:04:38,960 --> 00:04:41,640 Speaker 1: the nineteen seventies, he was recruited to the cause of 77 00:04:41,680 --> 00:04:45,479 Speaker 1: finishing Sagrada Familia while remaining true to Godi's original vision. 78 00:04:46,920 --> 00:04:50,120 Speaker 1: When Bury asked how these Stonemasons and other craftsmen were 79 00:04:50,120 --> 00:04:53,800 Speaker 1: receiving their instructions, he was shown boxes and boxes containing 80 00:04:53,800 --> 00:04:59,040 Speaker 1: the fragmented remains of Godie's plaster models. Bury told sixty minutes, 81 00:04:59,480 --> 00:05:02,599 Speaker 1: my job is to reverse engineer the models. It was 82 00:05:02,640 --> 00:05:05,640 Speaker 1: considered the only way to faithfully reconstruct the vision locked 83 00:05:05,640 --> 00:05:10,839 Speaker 1: inside Godie's singular mind. Barie worked on Sagarda Familia for 84 00:05:10,960 --> 00:05:13,920 Speaker 1: thirty years and is responsible for bringing the project into 85 00:05:13,920 --> 00:05:17,559 Speaker 1: the twenty first century. He consulted with industrial designers working 86 00:05:17,560 --> 00:05:21,599 Speaker 1: on vehicles, ships, and other complex engineering problems. All of 87 00:05:21,640 --> 00:05:24,920 Speaker 1: them were using three D aeronautical drafting software. The could 88 00:05:24,960 --> 00:05:28,200 Speaker 1: prototype designs and materials digitally before constructing them in the 89 00:05:28,240 --> 00:05:32,000 Speaker 1: real world. So Bury decided to employ the same drafting 90 00:05:32,000 --> 00:05:36,320 Speaker 1: technology to solve Sagrada Familia's thorniest engineering challenges on computers 91 00:05:36,600 --> 00:05:40,599 Speaker 1: before casting them in concrete, iron, and stone. For a 92 00:05:40,640 --> 00:05:44,200 Speaker 1: one and thirty seven year old construction project, Today's Sagrada 93 00:05:44,240 --> 00:05:47,520 Speaker 1: Familia is remarkably high tech. In addition to using the 94 00:05:47,600 --> 00:05:51,760 Speaker 1: latest virtual modeling software, components are prototyped using three D printers, 95 00:05:51,960 --> 00:05:54,839 Speaker 1: and architects can explore and interact with digital models using 96 00:05:54,920 --> 00:05:59,680 Speaker 1: virtual reality. Because of these technological and engineering advances, the 97 00:05:59,760 --> 00:06:03,839 Speaker 1: car chief architect of the Sagada Familia, Jordie Foley's confident 98 00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:07,480 Speaker 1: that Gordie's grandiose structure, including the tallest church spire in 99 00:06:07,520 --> 00:06:09,680 Speaker 1: the world set at five hundred and sixty six feet 100 00:06:09,720 --> 00:06:12,760 Speaker 1: that's a hundred and seventy three, will finally be completed 101 00:06:12,800 --> 00:06:17,359 Speaker 1: in At least that's the hope. As fully mused to 102 00:06:17,440 --> 00:06:21,919 Speaker 1: Architect Magazine, are the great cathedrals and basilicas of the 103 00:06:21,960 --> 00:06:30,080 Speaker 1: world ever truly finished. Today's episode was written by Dave 104 00:06:30,160 --> 00:06:32,640 Speaker 1: Ruse and produced by Tyler Clang. Grain Stuff is a 105 00:06:32,680 --> 00:06:35,080 Speaker 1: production of I Heart Radio's house to Works. 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