Showing posts with label Lluís Domènech i Muntaner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lluís Domènech i Muntaner. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 6, 2016

Last Two Months: Palau de la Música Catalana


May 31st, 2016

We could not leave Spain without going to a concert at the Palau de la Música which is one of the most famous modernist buildings in the city of Barcelona.  The Palau de la Música was designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner between 1903 and 1905. 

Bob and I saw the Barcelona Guitar Trio and Dance, a tribute to Paco de Lucia.  It was an amazing concert.  Definitely one of the highlights of my 3 years in Spain.  It's the combination of being in such an incredible building, listening to beautiful guitar music and also watching passionate flamenco dancers that made the experience so memorable for me.  It was a reminder of everything that I love and will miss about Spain. 



A promotional video clip from the concert


The exterior of the Palau de la Música 
Inside the grand concert hall













Friday, July 15, 2016

Last two months: Recinte Sant Pau

It was clear, that we would have to leave Barcelona before July 1st.  So during our last few months in Spain, I felt the need to visit as many sights as I could that we had missed during the previous 3 years.  It just goes to show that even after 3 years of living in Barcelona, there was still so much more that we hadn't seen and done.

One of Barcelona's hidden gems is The Recinte Sant Pau, which used to be a fully operational hospital from the 1930s until 2009.  The hospital complex was designed by one of Catalunya's most famous architects, Lluís Domènech i Montaner in the Modernist period when Barcelona was booming and had plenty of money for ambitious projects.  What makes the Recinte Sant Pau even more incredible was the fact that it was a hospital for the poor, as the more wealthy could afford to be treated in their own homes.  Walking through the buildings and grounds you can't help but wonder what life would have been like in Barcelona at that time.  Each building is so elaborate and unique and always designed with the patients' happiness and comfort in mind.  They don't make buildings like this anymore, let alone hospitals.

This is a place that every visitor to Barcelona should see.  It's very close to the Sagrada Familia and because it's still relatively unknown, you don't have to buy tickets in advance or line up and deal with huge crowds. I recommend taking the guided tour, it's a little more expensive, but more interesting.  With a Barcelona Library card you do get a 20% discount.

Recinte Sant Pau, view of the centre courtyard and surrounding buildings




Main administrative building

One of the rooms for patients