Sagrada Familia
Every photo you've seen of the Sagrada Familia is wrong.
About Sagrada Familia
Every photo you've seen of the Sagrada Familia is wrong. Not inaccurate - just incapable of capturing what happens when you walk inside and the morning light hits those columns. Gaudi designed the interior as a forest, and that's not a metaphor: the columns branch like trees, the light filters through stained glass like a canopy, and your neck hurts from looking up within thirty seconds. The exterior gets all the photos but the inside is the actual masterpiece.
Book tickets online at least two weeks ahead - they sell out, and the guys outside offering "skip the line" are either scalpers charging triple or scammers selling nothing. The €26 basic entry is worth every cent. The €36 tower ticket adds a lift to either the Nativity or Passion tower - the Nativity tower has better views and more Gaudi detail, but both involve narrow spiral staircases on the way down that aren't great if you're claustrophobic or have bad knees.
Timing matters more here than almost anywhere else in Barcelona. The eastern stained glass windows light up between 9-10 AM, turning the entire nave blue and green - it's the single most beautiful moment in the building. By 11 AM the light shifts and the crowds arrive. Late afternoon between 5-6 PM, the western windows go orange and red, which is equally stunning but harder to get tickets for. Midday is the worst time: flat light, maximum crowds, and you'll spend more time dodging selfie sticks than looking up.
The construction has been going since 1882 and the completion date keeps slipping - 2026 was the target but don't count on it. The cranes and scaffolding are part of the experience at this point. The Nativity facade facing the park is Gaudi's original work - intricate, organic, covered in stone animals and figures. The Passion facade on the opposite side was finished by sculptor Josep Subirachs in a completely different angular style, and locals have been arguing about it since the 1980s. Walk around the full exterior before going in - it's free and takes 15 minutes, and you'll appreciate the inside more knowing what holds it all together.
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