The final piece of the central tower of Barcelona’s Sagrada Familia has been set in place, bringing the basilica to its maximum height of 172.5 meters – a milestone reached 144 years after the first stone was laid.
Construction of the basilica began in 1882 and continued for decades under the direction of architect Antoni Gaudi, whose visionary design blended Gothic and Art Nouveau influences. Progress slowed repeatedly after Gaudí’s death in 1926, interrupted by funding shortages, political upheaval and war damage.
Some of the work completed on Friday involved the central Tower of Jesus Christ, the tallest of the basilica’s planned 18 towers, was topped with a monumental cross, completing the vertical outline envisioned by Gaudí more than a century ago. The church dominates the Barcelona skyline.
Designed with four arms so it can be recognized from any direction, the cross marks the completion of the tower’s defining architectural feature.
Video footage from the site shows workers guiding the gleaming structure into place high above the city before being secured atop the tower.
Engineers used cranes to lift and position the upper section during the installation, while residents and visitors gathered below to watch, applauding as the cross was fixed in place.
The long construction time reflects a combination of complex craftsmanship, evolving building technologies, and historical disruptions, including the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), which destroyed original models and plans. Modern architects relied on surviving fragments, photographs and digital modeling to continue Gaudi’s vision, turning the basilica into one of the longest running architectural projects in modern history.
“Today was a day we had been eagerly awaiting. Everything has gone very well,” head architect Jordi Fauli told reporters after the installation of the cross.