Difficult to travel at present, so let’s enjoy images from earlier trips. In this Throwback Thursday post, I share digitized 35mm photos from my 1987 trip to Barcelona! I love design and Antoni Gaudí takes architecture to his own sky high level. I was experimenting with black and white film at Sagrada Familia cathedral. I like how it plays with the light and shadows of the spaces in the structure.

Sad to say, the first time I went to Barcelona, before I studied in Spain I was too busy worrying about my four suitcases arriving from Germany to get out and see the sights. I know, packing light was a talent that developed over time for me…
My roommate in Barcelona I’d met on the train from France asked me several times to see the Cathedral with her. I was too busy waiting. Make that two lessons learned! Pack light and see what you can when you’re there; two tips from my as yet unpublished travel book, Supergringa in Spain: A Coming of Age Memoir.

After the program in Spain, I was determined to see the Sagrada Familia. This time I couldn’t get my friend from the program to go. She and I’d traveled north from Toledo together. She argued she wasn’t Catholic (neither was I). She was a feminist (so was I). I didn’t want her to miss out. “It’s just a building under construction, not even a church yet,” I angled. “Okay,” she said. We left to tour Gaudí’s masterpiece.

As an architecture fan, I was thrilled. For her, it was just so-so. I think I paid for her ticket, since she was there to keep me company. I wandered around the whole structure, she looked here and there. I was uplifted that this was an historic building. My friend wasn’t as comfortable in this Catholic basilica.

I had seven photos left on my roll of film. I chose carefully the views I recorded. We were able to go up into the balcony, I saved two photos for that height. So disappointed the only photo of a spire turned out blurry. No retakes in those days. As for the second photo, I suppose it is historically interesting to look at the piles of stone blocks… (laughing at myself) It is a view that no longer exists. I have not had the chance to return since then. I’ve been looking at people’s Sagrada Familia photos online with amazement.
Today, there is a roof, stained glass windows and 8 spires, and the church is still under construction. After the roof was raised, the first mass was celebrated in 2010. The estimated completion date is 2026. Here’s a photo (not mine) of how it looked in 2009.

As a parting nugget of information, it took the Sagrada Familia building 134 years to get a building permit! It cost 4.6 million Euros, a discount from the 12 million it would have cost a for profit business. The permit application was filed in 1885, but was not approved by the Barcelona City Council until last year. Construction is now legal, retroactively.
What photos would you like to digitize and/or share?
¡Olé! Gracias for reading Fake Flamenco and commenting! –Rebecca
Wow, what an amazing building!! I would love to wander around this place!
🌟😊🌟
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Thanks, Beth. It gets more amazing every year. Very much worth a visit!
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Great post Rebecca! I love Barcelona, and the Sagrada Familia is a masterpiece. I saw it first many years ago when the inside had not even been built, then in 2006, then in 2016 and what a difference!
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Thanks, Francisco! How fortunate you’ve seen it twice more recently. Was the roof built by 2006 and the magnificent ceiling? Would love to take my family there once the immunizations for Covid-19 are successful!
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No, not in 2006, but by 2016 it was built and the Church was operational. Yes, it is a lovely place. Last time I was there I was surprised by the increase in entrance price and the amount of lines, we had to make an appointment to queue up to enter! But it was quite worth it!
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Sounds like it has become the major attraction that it deserves to be. 🙂 Amazing that construction is completely funded by donations and entrance fees. Thanks for your visits.
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Always a pleasure Rebecca
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What an amazing work of architecture!
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Thanks, Rosaliene! I feel lucky to have seen it before the roof was raised. Each year it has more fantastic details. The ceiling looks intricate, almost like one in the Alhambra. Trip to Spain in 2027?
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Oh I love the Sagrada familia!!
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Astonishing that it was designed in the 19th century, and still looks so modern. Thanks for your comment!
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Amazing pictures Rebe’. I remember going to Spain on vacation as a child, ’65 I believe. We stayed in Tarragona, went to Barcelona once. No-one talked of la sagrada familia. I remember Barcelona as dark, sooty, dirty. Everybody dressed in black.Franco times. From what I see on-line and my daughters who’ve gone afew times, it has changed quite a bit.
Thanks for the time-travel.
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Thank you! A friend who went in ’66 and I are going to compare photos. Hope you go on a side trip to Barcelona one journey to France, when we are traveling again…
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Those comparisons are always fascinating. And yes, Barcelona is on the list. Cuídate Rebe.
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Igualmente, amigo.
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I have been to visit La Sagrada Familia a number of times over the past ten years and more amazed every time. One of my favourite sights in the world!
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Wonderful, Darlene! Must say I’m a bit envious you were able to see it in person as it went through major transformations. How fortunate. 🙂
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Yes, I am very lucky!
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I’ve been to Barcelona twice now and the Sagrada Familia is perhaps the most impressive structure I have ever been in.
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Thanks for your comment, William. Gaudí’s imagination was beyond compare. What brought you to Spain your two visits?
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I first time, probably the movie “Vicky Cristina Barcelona”. I admit to being very superficial. I liked Barcelona so much that I returned on another vacation. Although time is growing a bit short of me, I would not be surprised it I returned one more time.
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Glad you had the inspiration to visit Barcelona and that you like it so well. The city must have been presented as attractive, we know the actors were. 🙂 It is a remarkable city. Salud!
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Great read! Love the vintage pics.
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Thanks for stopping by Dominick! Appreciate your comments and compliment. I’ll check out your site.
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My first visit to la Sagrada Familia was when my daughter was five. Who knew that twenty five years later she’d be living in Catalonia herself, with a Spanish partner and baby! However, the building we saw was not as chaotic as this, as it must have been about 1994. But my abiding memory is of climbing up some tower that was then open to the public, and gazing down into the church below to see a large lorry-with-crane at work, looking like some insignificant toy in comparison with the scale of the building. That was somehow even more awe-inspiring than the present soon-to-be-finished building
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Thanks for your Sagrada Familia story, Margaret! I feel the same way, that the dramatic height of the pillars from the balcony without a roof was tremendous. Fun to think about your daughter living there. Perhaps that visit had a deeper effect on her than you realized. ; ) Once we’re all traveling again and construction ceases, I look forward to seeing the church again. : )
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Thanks for the memories! I was a backpacker in Spain during the summer of 1987, and this is exactly how I remember my tour of the open-air Sagrada Familia. Your photos are so much better than mine 🙂
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Gracias, Denise! I appreciate your comments. I was lucky to have B&W film in the camera which worked well for architecture. Where else did you travel on your backpacking tour?
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awesome Rebecca! I love that city! Its so beautiful! ❤
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Thanks, Carol Anne. I appreciate your comments. It is a favorite city I’ve visited.
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