The Cultural Tutor Profile picture
Apr 24, 2023 24 tweets 9 min read Read on X
This is Barcelona at night, one of the world's most unique cities. But why does it look like that?

Well, until 1855 it was overcrowded, dirty, and diseased — then something special happened.

Here is how you build a beautiful city... Image
The year is 1855. Barcelona's population has nearly reached 200,000, all crammed within the two kilometres squared of the city's Medieval walls.

Overcrowding, rampant disease, crime, poor sanitation - the city had become a filthy and dangerous place. Image
Since 1714 any construction within half a mile of the walls (the range of the cannon fire) had been forbidden.

Two hundred years later this had become a colossal hindrance; life expectancy had dropped to the mid-30s for the middle class and the mid-20s for workers. Image
It was also a time of unrest. For as the population of the city swelled because of industrialisation and the agricultural labourers flocking to the city for work, so too did political consciousness.

In Barcelona, in 1855, came Spain's first ever general strike. Image
The situation was untenable and so the government ordered the demolition of the city's walls - after years of popular demand and political wrangling.

And a competition was announced to design the vast expansion Barcelona needed, to be known as the Eixample... Image
Enter Ildefons Cerdà, a former civil engineer who had become inspired - even obsessed - by urban planning.

He had quit his engineering job to perform social and topographical studies of Barcelona, all in preparation for a new city plan.

His time had come. Image
He was a visionary. As Cerdà wrote in his monumental General Theory of Urbanisation, he realised that technology was changing the world and that a new kind of city was needed.

His chief concerns were hygiene, living standards, equality, and preparation for the modern world. Image
It was a process dogged by political machinations. Cerdà's submission won, was rejected, then accepted again in altered form.

You can see the scale of it here. The parts in black are Barcelona in 1855; everything else would be new, with six small towns annexed into Barcelona. Image
One of his innovations was the chamfered corners of
Barcelona's blocks, the mansanas.

This allowed turning room and visibility for traffic, though Cerdà theorised that smaller, personal vehicles would be invented.

He anticipated the car and gave Barcelona wide avenues. Image
Cerdà's proposed blocks were built around large gardens; this was about hygiene, sunlight, and quality of life for every citizen, however rich or poor.

But Cerdà's utopia was not realised - the blocks were built up and the gardens filled in. Image
Still, the unprecedented construction of the Eixample continued.

A key moment came when Barcelona was chosen to host the Universal Exposition in 1888. The world's attention would be turned on Barcelona - here was a chance to create a truly distinctive and modern city. Image
The citadel, just outside the old walls, was demolished and replaced with the Parc de la Ciutadella.

Preparation for the Universal Exposition also saw the construction of many other buildings and features of the city which survive to this day. ImageImage
Like the Arc de Triomf, designed by Josep Vilaseca i Casanovas, immediately recognisable by its red bricks.

What had started with the Eixample, an urban renewal and expansion project, was morphing into something more... Image
Because, suddenly, Barcelona and Catalonia had an architectural style all of their own: Catalan Modernism.

It was, broadly speaking, a sub-genre of Art Nouveau, inspired by the same design principles and creative philosophies that swept Europe in the 1880s and 1890s. Casa Comalat, designed by S...
But this continental movement took on a unique form in Catalonia, spurred on by a greater sense of cultural identity.

A crop of immensely talented, experimental architects appeared: Antoni Gaudí, Lluís Domènech i Montaner, and Josep Puig i Cadafalch foremost among them. Castle of the Three Dragons...
Gaudí's work - the Sagrada Família, the Parc Güell, the Casa Batlló, the Pedrera - may be the most famous.

But they only represent a small portion of the wildly idiosyncratic, eternally delightful architecture that filled Barcelona in the decades after the Universal Exhibition. Casa Amatller, redesigned b...Hospital de la Santa Creu i...
Just consider the Palau de la Música Catalana, designed by Lluís Domènech i Montaner and completed in 1908.

Barcelona had come a long way since the cramped Medieval city of five decades earlier; the Renaixença - the Catalan Renaissance - had come to fruition. Image
And so, eventually, Cerdà's (somewhat altered) Eixample was completed.

Barcelona has seen more expansion since, but most of it has been inspired by, if not the specific principles of the Eixample, then the architectural, civic, artistic, and urban values it inculcated. Image
And so Cerdà's visionary plan, combined with the flowering of Catalan Modernism, has been an unprecedented success.

He had prepared his city for the future and given it, even incidentally and through the many who followed in his footsteps, an entirely unique identity.
Cerdà wasn't the first urban planner.

London had been rebuilt after the Great Fire of 1666, Paris was transformed by Haussmann, and in the ancient world there was a long tradition of grid-based city layouts.

Like the Roman city of Timgad in Algeria. Image
What makes Cerdà special is that he dealt so directly (and innovatively) with the wave of modernisation reshaping the world, and performed an unprecedented level of research into public health and urban form.

Cerdà is, perhaps, the founder of modern urbanism.
And nor did Barcelona, as so many places have done, demolish its Medieval city.

The walls went, but the tightly packed Gothic quarter, with its narrow streets, paved squares, and churches remains intact (albeit with some 19th century meddling).

A city Medieval and Modern. ImageImage
Ildefons Cerdà died in 1876; he never lived to see the jewel that Barcelona would become, one of the world's most beloved cities. But his dream, however wild it once was, has come true.

Here is his gravestone. An appropriate monument to one of history's greatest urban planners. Image
If you found this interesting then you may like my newsletter, where I've written about Catalan Modernism before.

Seven short lessons. Every Friday. All free.

To join 75k+ other readers, consider subscribing here:
culturaltutor.com/areopagus

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with The Cultural Tutor

The Cultural Tutor Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @culturaltutor

Aug 21
The world's most famous neoclassical buildings are kind of boring and generic when you actually look at them.

It's even hard to tell them apart: which one below is Versailles, or Buckingham Palace?

So here's why neoclassical architecture (although it's nice) is overrated: Image
Buckingham Palace, despite being one of the world's most famous and visited buildings, is essentially quite boring and uninspiring from the outside.

There's a certain stateliness to it, but (like most big neoclassical buildings) it's really just a box wrapped in pilasters. Image
The same is true of Versailles.

Again, it's evidently pretty (largely thanks to the colour of its stone) but there's something weirdly plain about it, almost standardised.

Plus the emphasis on its horizontal lines makes it feel very low-lying, undramatic, and flat. Image
Read 13 tweets
Aug 17
These aren't castles, palaces, or cathedrals.

They're all water towers, literally just bits of infrastructure relating to water management.

Is it worth the additional cost and resources to make things look like this... or is it a waste? Image
These old water towers are an architectural subgenre of their own.

There are hundreds, mostly Neo-Gothic, and all add something wonderful to the skylines of their cities.

Like the one below in Bydgoszcz, Poland, from 1900.

But, most importantly, they're just infrastructure. Image
We don't think of infrastructure as something that can improve how a town looks and feels.

Infrastructure is necessary to make life convenient; but also, we believe, definitionally boring.

These water towers prove that doesn't have to, and shouldn't be, the case. Image
Read 24 tweets
Aug 8
If one thing sums up the 21st century it's got to be all these default profile pictures.

You've seen them literally thousands of times, but they're completely generic and interchangeable.

Future historians will use them to symbolise our current era, and here's why... Image
To understand what any society truly believed, and how they felt about humankind, you need to look at what they created rather than what they said.

Just as actions instead of words reveal who a person really is, art always tells you what a society was actually like.
And this is particularly true of how they depicted human beings — how we portray ourselves.

That the Pharaohs were of supreme power, and were worshipped as gods far above ordinary people, is made obvious by the sheer size and abundance of the statues made in their name: Image
Read 23 tweets
Aug 6
This is St. Anne's Church in Vilnius, Lithuania.

It's over 500 years old and the perfect example of a strange architectural style known as "Brick Gothic".

But, more importantly, it's a lesson in how imagination can transform the way our world looks... Image
Vilnius has one of the world's best-preserved Medieval old towns.

It's a UNESCO World Heritage Site, filled with winding streets and architectural gems from across the ages.

A testament to the wealth, grandeur, and sophistication of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Image
Among its many treasures is the Church of St Anne, built from 1495 to 1500 under the Duke of Lithuania and (later) King of Poland, Alexander I Jagiellon.

It's not particularly big — a single nave without aisles — but St Anne's makes up for size with its fantastical brickwork. Image
Read 18 tweets
Jul 31
Tell your friends! Your enemies! Your lovers!

The Spanish edition of my new book, El Tutor Cultural, is now available for pre-order.

It'll be released on 22 October — and you can get it at the link in my bio.

To celebrate, here are the 10 best things I've written about Spain: from why Barcelona looks the way it does to one of the world's most underrated modern architects, from the truth about Pablo Picasso to the origins of the Spanish football badge...Image
What makes Barcelona such a beautiful city? It wasn't an accident — this is the story of how the modern, beloved Barcelona was consciously created:

Image
And, speaking of Barcelona, here's why the renovation of the Camp Nou is — although necessary — a shame:

Image
Read 11 tweets
May 21
When Vincent van Gogh started painting he didn't use any bright colours — so what happened?

It isn't just about art.

This is a story about how we're all changed by the things we consume, the places we go, and the people we choose to spend time with... Image
The year is 1881.

A 27 year old former teacher and missionary from the Netherlands called Vincent van Gogh decides to try and become a full-time artist, after being encouraged by his brother Theo.

What does he paint? The peasants of the countryside where his parents lived. Scheveningen Woman Sewing (1881)
Vincent van Gogh's early work is unrecognisably different from the vibrant painter now beloved around the world.

Why?

Many reasons, though one of the most important is that he had been influenced by his cousin, the Realist painter Anton Mauve, who painted like this: Fishing Boat and Draught Horses on the Beach by Anton Mauve
Read 23 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(