This post is almost a month late, but here it is. Our last
stop on our Mediterranean trip was right where we started in Barcelona.
Once again the weather was supreme, sunny and 70 degrees.
This last day of trip was already scheduled to see the notable sights and enjoy
a midday tapas meal.
Barcelona is a very beautiful city trimmed with luscious
gardens and accessible beaches, which seem to be almost a year round spot to
visit because of the temperate climate in the southern Mediterranean.
One of the most spectacular sights is the Sagrada Familia, a
cathedral designed by Antoni Gaudi, one Spain’s most famous architects and
designers. Although Gaudi died in 1926, with just one-third of his inspiration for
the cathedral completed, the work continues today to complete Gaudi’s original
vision for the Cathedral to have three facades to depict the Nativity, Passion
and Resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The Nativity façade, the original Gaudi interpretation, faces east and is the most ornate. |
The Passion façade faces west is rigid and simple with its modern lines. |
The Glory Façade, still under construction. |
Sagrada Familia 1925 |
The basilica is too much to cover in one day, but worth the
trip around the block that it takes up, just to see the transition of styles
over the last century.
We ended or afternoon with a fine tapas mid-day meal and a nap. That night the Eagles were playing the Miami Dolphins and a few of us NEEDED to find some place that would be televising the game. As Fate would have it they found The Philharmonic, an English Pub that televised American football in Barcelona, Spain. Sadly, the Birds lost, but it was yet another Pub to add to the list of the other non-Mediterranean pubs we visited while on our Mediterranean vacation.