The most marvelous thing about the Sagrada Familia (okay, second to how insanely beautiful it is for a Catholic cathedral) is the ticketing system: There are almost no lines to get in.
Every ticket you buy has a time and day- a 15 minutes period in which you may enter. And there are a limited number of tickets per 15-minute period.
This does mean you have to plan your visit ahead by a day or two, but you'll be rewarded with not needing to line up for more than a few minutes.
Operationally, the management have an exact steady stream of visitors from open to close, so staffing can be just as even, which I can only imagine reduces costs. And management can also tell if they've priced entry correctly by seeing if they have open spots all week or having three weeks' backlog sold out.
Could we please do this for everything that has a line up? It's a wonderful system.
I've also seen this at Disney World and the Washington Monument. Agree, it is so much better. Waiting in line (or traffic) is such a waste of human life and potential.
I didn't know about this Cathedral until I was looking into what I might find in Barcelona earlier this year. It's entirely easy to imagine not knowing about it until I showed up.
There's (at least one) order of magnitude difference in popularity between the two. I don't think the average American could name the Sagrada Familia from a picture of it, for instance. For me, when I travel, sometimes I don't really look up what there is to see/do in a city until I'm there. When I landed in Barcelona, I didn't know what the Sagrada Familia was.
Sure it's a tradeoff. But also consider, like the eiffel tower, both are large architectural installations with beauty one can marvel from a distance. No ticket needed. Haven't had your fill from the outside views, and want a deeper look, you'll probably go back home/hotel and look it up, learn a bunch about Gaudi on wikipedia, find out you can book tickets online. Get them, a couple of days later you can go back and explore the inside, and find that everyone there seems to be a little knowledgeable about Gaudi, and there are no lines, since there are no walk-ins.
This is because the Sagrada Familia is still way from being finished.
It was supposed to be an atonement temple relying on donations of sinners for progress but unfortunately there were not enough sinners in the Barcelona area or these were tight with their money.
Once the huge dome is finished, I’m sure it will play in the same league as ND in Paris.
You likely could find the slot the same day, it's not likely 100% daily tickets always sell (I've been there and while the traffic is substantial, it's not packed, so looks like the capacity is managed quite well).
I was also impressed with the ticket experience. Everything flowed nicely. I visited almost a decade ago and I'd like to go back to see how much has changed since then.
>> This does mean you have to plan your visit ahead by a day or two
Actually, when I went to visit Sagrada Famillia I didn't know a first thing about its ticketing system, went straight to it, and then ended up finding their website on my smartphone and buying ticket online. They still had tickets with time of entry in 15 minutes.
Good system, yes. Though I am still not sure why you can go only to one tower. I am not sure it's worth going to the both, but why not allow it? I don't think it would add that much to the traffic...
My wife and I love to travel, but we've reached a point where we don't bother with cathedrals anymore. They all seem to be identical to the last one. Oh sure, little touches here and there that are unique, but rarely worth the wait in line and time spent. At St David's in Wales last month, we were way more interested in the ruins of the Bishop's Palace than by the actual cathedral next to it.
The Sagrada Familia is such a different place. It is art with a function.
personally i find it disgusting to have to pay for ticket to enter church, unseen in many European countries, almost ridiculous on par to pay ticket to enter nature (national park), what's next ticket to enter square or use sidewalk?
This seems absolutely insane, maybe someone can provide more context. Looks like a leftist government money grab to me.
How much tourism revenue does 4.5 million visitors annually bring the city of Barcelona? What other famous national landmarks (likely Church-owned) in Spain can be retroactively fined for being constructed without a building permit?
Yea, it does seem like an excuse for the money raised by the church to make it into the local politicians hands.
However, this can be a legitimate issue. For example, New Haven, Connecticut, the site of Yale University, has become a notoriously crime-ridden area. It's not a very big place and something like half the property in the city is owned by non-profits (a few universities, a few large hospitals). Therefore the city's tax base is cut in half (US city revenues are largely from property taxes), but it still needs to provide infrastructure, police, public transportation, etc for everyone.
But it makes it seem more suspicious doing it like this instead of passing a new law that formalizes payments for services.
I'm not disparaging Yale at all, just explaining how a lot of untaxable property can affect a city. Yale owns a lot of commercial properties in New Haven, including stores and offices. I'm sure they pay taxes on those. And like a lot of universities they pay for their own police and emergency services which takes a burden off the city. But there is also University of New Haven, Southern Connecticut State University, Albertus Magnus College, and Gateway Community College, as well as Yale-New Haven Hospital and all its satellite buildings and St Raphael. This is all in a town of 130,000 people, a quarter of whom live below the poverty line. Again, not saying any of these are bad institutions, or that the problems in New Haven are their fault, just that it is a tricky situation to deal with. https://www.politico.com/story/2017/12/31/yale-new-haven-hos...
I've been trying for a few minutes to think of a way the city's position makes sense, but yes, as presented your explanation seems like the only viable one. A 130 year old building, which also happens to be the most famous monument in your city, would be grandfathered in in any other context.
It would be extremely interesting to read more about how this played out and why the basilica agreed to pay. Was there a lawsuit?
I guess this is the core of why there's no permit.
Typically a permit stipulates that a building should be finished within a certain time. It can probably be prolonged, but I think the project was in hiatus for a long time. Or a couple of times actually.
Definitely, it's not like they just grabbed somebody other's spot and started building, infringing somebody's right. Sagrada Familia is literally the symbol of Barcelona now, one of the most recognizable buildings in the world and enormous tourist magnet. But here come some municipal officials and say - well, nice church you've got here, I see it makes money, so just give some of the money to us because we decided you need a paper from us to build, and also because you have money and we want money. Legal robbery.
If you attract 4.5 million tourists a year and charge admission your "nonprofit" label is a bit of a joke.
I don't buy the argument about bringing in other tax revenue by association. "Everybody else" shouldn't be subsidizing infrastructure for the most attractive place in town just because it's the most attractive place... those people are probably working harder and taking more risks, they shouldn't have to foot the bill for the group profiting the most. (see also, sports stadiums)
> If you attract 4.5 million tourists a year and charge admission your "nonprofit" label is a bit of a joke.
If you don't charge for admissions then there is no way to moderate how many people visit the site, and you start to create a lot of problems just to deal with the massive influx of people.
> I don't buy the argument about bringing in other tax revenue by association. "Everybody else" shouldn't be subsidizing infrastructure for the most attractive place in town just because it's the most attractive place...
If you ever visit the Sagrada Familia you'll notice that the blocks surrounding the cathedral are packed with businesses living off the cathedral's popularity.
Even FC Barcelona and Nike have official stores right next to the front entrance.
It is rather obvious that the cathedral is a huge profit source for the city and a lot of companies, not counting the typical tourism and HORECA businesses. Insinuating that the Sagrada Familia is leechng off the poor government's goodwill is simply wrong and the exact opposite of the truth.
What? You don't need to charge for admission to rate limit.
Just give out a fixed number of free tickets.
I don't have a problem at all with selling admission tickets, but maybe if you have millions of visitors a little bit of the money you get from them which you use to maintain your own premises and employees can also go to maintain the roads and police and schools just like everybody else.
Nonprofits can be great, but there gets to be a level with so much money that the value to society of not taxing seems lost.
> What? You don't need to charge for admission to rate limit.
That's your opinion, and one that is based on your personal assumption that no fee should be charged for admission.
> Just give out a fixed number of free tickets.
That's a effective way to generate a profitable ticket scalping network for criminal organizations. Is that your notion of a better outcome?
> I don't have a problem at all with selling admission tickets, but maybe if you have millions of visitors a little bit of the money you get from them which you use to maintain your own premises and employees can also go to maintain the roads and police and schools just like everybody else.
For some reason you've assumed that directly or indirectly absolutely zero money goes into those populist cliches.
> If you attract 4.5 million tourists a year and charge admission your "nonprofit" label is a bit of a joke.
No, it's not. “Nonprofit” isn't about not generating revenue, or even not generating surplus revenues (though IIRC, Sagrada Familia visitor fees fund construction, so it's not generating surplus revenues.)
Nonprofit is about not having people with a claim on profits.
The agreement includes urbanistic planning around the temple.
One of the major issues is that to complete Gaudi's original design, there should be gardens and accesses that are now occupied by buildings. Since the Sagrada Familia is not officially being built (because it has no permit), the city cannot officially study (if it can / how to) free that space.
Now they will be able to make these studies, and will have a proper justification if they end up deciding to expropriate some buildings to make space for these gardens/accesses. That's the real reason why the Sagrada Familia managers agreed to the payment...
Edit: Also, the Sagrada Familia is already exempt from paying property (not construction!) taxes because (a) it is owned by the church (religious temples don't pay property taxes in Spain); and (b) it is a good of public interest (that also don't pay taxes, like the Gaudi's designed Casa Batlló for instance). That is, "the leftists" could go after a much larger pie, and we must assume they don't because they somewhat agree with your reasoning.
Cathedral building has always been about temporal prestige, with patrons, cardinals, cities, and nations competing to build the most elaborate house of worship. There's no unexpected element in your claim, therefore it is not ironic.
Serious question: were building permits required in Barcelona at the time construction began?
(Side comment not worth its own response to others' posts: the church is not technically a cathedral—ie the seat of the local bishop—but rather a basilica.)
This looks to be a way for the city to coerce some money from an organization, and which fits into an existing bureaucratic process, giving it the patina of legitimacy.
It is a bit surprising that the cathedral didn't just immediately stop construction and close down access with a big sign saying what was going on. After all, its all about complying with the law and all. They could have even started making plans to move the cathedral to a different site with all the proper permits and everything. The city would have caved for sure.
If you're not willing to go to the mat, you'll always get taken advantage of.
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[ 5.8 ms ] story [ 100 ms ] threadEvery ticket you buy has a time and day- a 15 minutes period in which you may enter. And there are a limited number of tickets per 15-minute period.
This does mean you have to plan your visit ahead by a day or two, but you'll be rewarded with not needing to line up for more than a few minutes.
Operationally, the management have an exact steady stream of visitors from open to close, so staffing can be just as even, which I can only imagine reduces costs. And management can also tell if they've priced entry correctly by seeing if they have open spots all week or having three weeks' backlog sold out.
Could we please do this for everything that has a line up? It's a wonderful system.
It was supposed to be an atonement temple relying on donations of sinners for progress but unfortunately there were not enough sinners in the Barcelona area or these were tight with their money.
Once the huge dome is finished, I’m sure it will play in the same league as ND in Paris.
Suckers.
That would be like going to Paris and being surprised to see the Notre-Dame.
Actually, when I went to visit Sagrada Famillia I didn't know a first thing about its ticketing system, went straight to it, and then ended up finding their website on my smartphone and buying ticket online. They still had tickets with time of entry in 15 minutes.
Beautiful Catholic cathedrals are the norm not the exception. France alone contains some of the most mesmerizing cathedrals you're likely too see.
Although, yes, the design of Sagrada Familia is exceptional.
The Sagrada Familia is such a different place. It is art with a function.
How much tourism revenue does 4.5 million visitors annually bring the city of Barcelona? What other famous national landmarks (likely Church-owned) in Spain can be retroactively fined for being constructed without a building permit?
However, this can be a legitimate issue. For example, New Haven, Connecticut, the site of Yale University, has become a notoriously crime-ridden area. It's not a very big place and something like half the property in the city is owned by non-profits (a few universities, a few large hospitals). Therefore the city's tax base is cut in half (US city revenues are largely from property taxes), but it still needs to provide infrastructure, police, public transportation, etc for everyone.
But it makes it seem more suspicious doing it like this instead of passing a new law that formalizes payments for services.
https://web.archive.org/web/20110907184503/http://www.yale.e...
The Yale endowment is a hair away from $30 billion dollars.
Their budget is $4 billion per year.
I don't feel good about tax benefits for organizations that big.
It would be extremely interesting to read more about how this played out and why the basilica agreed to pay. Was there a lawsuit?
Typically a permit stipulates that a building should be finished within a certain time. It can probably be prolonged, but I think the project was in hiatus for a long time. Or a couple of times actually.
It's second time when Ada is taking money by force from the development. First: https://www.auraree.com/real-estate-news/colau-to-force-30-o... (has become a law few weeks ago)
I don't buy the argument about bringing in other tax revenue by association. "Everybody else" shouldn't be subsidizing infrastructure for the most attractive place in town just because it's the most attractive place... those people are probably working harder and taking more risks, they shouldn't have to foot the bill for the group profiting the most. (see also, sports stadiums)
If you don't charge for admissions then there is no way to moderate how many people visit the site, and you start to create a lot of problems just to deal with the massive influx of people.
> I don't buy the argument about bringing in other tax revenue by association. "Everybody else" shouldn't be subsidizing infrastructure for the most attractive place in town just because it's the most attractive place...
If you ever visit the Sagrada Familia you'll notice that the blocks surrounding the cathedral are packed with businesses living off the cathedral's popularity.
Even FC Barcelona and Nike have official stores right next to the front entrance.
It is rather obvious that the cathedral is a huge profit source for the city and a lot of companies, not counting the typical tourism and HORECA businesses. Insinuating that the Sagrada Familia is leechng off the poor government's goodwill is simply wrong and the exact opposite of the truth.
Just give out a fixed number of free tickets.
I don't have a problem at all with selling admission tickets, but maybe if you have millions of visitors a little bit of the money you get from them which you use to maintain your own premises and employees can also go to maintain the roads and police and schools just like everybody else.
Nonprofits can be great, but there gets to be a level with so much money that the value to society of not taxing seems lost.
That's your opinion, and one that is based on your personal assumption that no fee should be charged for admission.
> Just give out a fixed number of free tickets.
That's a effective way to generate a profitable ticket scalping network for criminal organizations. Is that your notion of a better outcome?
> I don't have a problem at all with selling admission tickets, but maybe if you have millions of visitors a little bit of the money you get from them which you use to maintain your own premises and employees can also go to maintain the roads and police and schools just like everybody else.
For some reason you've assumed that directly or indirectly absolutely zero money goes into those populist cliches.
No, it's not. “Nonprofit” isn't about not generating revenue, or even not generating surplus revenues (though IIRC, Sagrada Familia visitor fees fund construction, so it's not generating surplus revenues.)
Nonprofit is about not having people with a claim on profits.
SF's entrance fee is €30. There are at least 3 million visitors a year. Money is also collected from private donations.
The building and maintenance costs are €25m a year.
The rest goes... somewhere.
Considering that the city has to provide significant transport and other infrastructure support, this new deal is a bit of a bargain for the project.
One of the major issues is that to complete Gaudi's original design, there should be gardens and accesses that are now occupied by buildings. Since the Sagrada Familia is not officially being built (because it has no permit), the city cannot officially study (if it can / how to) free that space.
Now they will be able to make these studies, and will have a proper justification if they end up deciding to expropriate some buildings to make space for these gardens/accesses. That's the real reason why the Sagrada Familia managers agreed to the payment...
Edit: Also, the Sagrada Familia is already exempt from paying property (not construction!) taxes because (a) it is owned by the church (religious temples don't pay property taxes in Spain); and (b) it is a good of public interest (that also don't pay taxes, like the Gaudi's designed Casa Batlló for instance). That is, "the leftists" could go after a much larger pie, and we must assume they don't because they somewhat agree with your reasoning.
(Side comment not worth its own response to others' posts: the church is not technically a cathedral—ie the seat of the local bishop—but rather a basilica.)
https://bit.ly/2EyDkEt
https://i.pinimg.com/originals/06/4a/1d/064a1d213e4c75d4d48d...
It is a bit surprising that the cathedral didn't just immediately stop construction and close down access with a big sign saying what was going on. After all, its all about complying with the law and all. They could have even started making plans to move the cathedral to a different site with all the proper permits and everything. The city would have caved for sure.
If you're not willing to go to the mat, you'll always get taken advantage of.