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The Spanish city of Barcelona sits on the Iberian Peninsula,
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100 miles from the French border,
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and just a few steps from the Mediterranean Sea.
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With its roots reaching back into pre-history,
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the hands of many cultures have shaped Barcelona.
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But it was the Catalan spirit that created something truly unique.
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In Barcelona, everything you see, taste, reach out and touch…
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every detail is an expression of Catalan creativity.
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For this is more than just a city, Barcelona is a dream.
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And just like our dreams,
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Barcelona is sometimes chaotic, often intense,
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and always, always seductive.
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The dream begins in the city’s heart, in Placa de Catalunya.
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Follow the gaze of Barcelona’s luminaries and legends,
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along avenues where iron, tile and stone melt together in a sensual dance.
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To the South, drift with the sea of souls down La Rambla,
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which the poet Lorca called,
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“the only street in the world I wish would never end.”
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But beware, the busyness of La Rambla makes it a dream for pickpockets too.
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To the north, glide up Passeig de Gracia,
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a boulevard lined with creations
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by some of the giants of the Art Nouveau and Modernista movements.
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But it’s not just the city’s main avenues
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that lull the senses into a divine stupor;
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Barcelona’s side streets and alleyways are often rabbit holes into the sublime.
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And when the Mediterranean sun turns up the heat,
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cool off in one of the many plazas and let the city come to you.
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Barcelona is a dream shaped by the past.
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Lose yourself in the old town, Barrio Gotico,
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where each turn reveals some new layer of the city’s 2000 year-old history.
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Pass through the Roman towers,
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which guarded the city when it was known in ancient times as Barcino.
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Just beyond, Barcelona Cathedral,
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a Catalan-gothic masterpiece 600 years in the making
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rises from the ruins of a roman temple.
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While a few streets away, visit Saint Mary of the Sea,
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a spiritual safe harbor for generations of seafarers.
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Barcelona is a city that has forever looked to the sea.
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High above Port Vell stands Christopher Columbus,
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the intrepid mariner Catalonians proudly claim as one of their own.
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Nearby, set sail on your own voyage of discovery in the medieval dockyards.
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Though the sound of shipbuilding faded long ago,
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the Maritime Museum preserves the glorious echoes
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of Barcelona’s sea power throughout the days of sail.
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Nearby in the old general stores,
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explore the Museum of the History of Catalonia,
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a portal into the daily lives,
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nightmares, and aspirations of Barcelonans across the centuries.
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If Barcelona is a dream, it is dream set to music.
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Music is everywhere… on the streets, in flamenco bars, and clubs.
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For this is a city whose soul is laid bare
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in the stirring laments and pounding heartbeat of song.
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This passion reaches its crescendo in the Palace of Catalan Music,
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where even the statues,
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intoxicated by the joy of music,
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burst from the very walls.
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Just off La Rambla a different kind of theatre awaits.
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La Boqueria began as a goat market in the 13th century.
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Today, it’s the place to sample delicacies from across Catalonia,
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such as jamon from forest-roaming pigs,
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fattened to perfection on herbs and acorns.
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Wherever hunger strikes in Barcelona,
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a tapas bar is just a few steps away.
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For like everything they do,
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Catalans have turned the humble snack into an art form.
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For in Barcelona, life and art are inseparable.
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Explore the galleries of the European Museum of Modern Art,
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which celebrates the daring works of artists
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building on centuries of Catalan tradition.
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From Plaza Espanya, climb the steps to the National Palace,
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the home of the National Art Museum of Catalonia.
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Here, take a deeper dive through Catalan creativity,
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from Romanesque murals, to the glittering works of the Catalan Renaissance.
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The National Palace sits on the slopes of Montjuic,
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a broad hill laced with trails, gardens and historic treasures.
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Take the cable car even higher,
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and enjoy the commanding views from Montjuic Castle.
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For many in Barcelona however, this is a place of sorrow.
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For it was against these walls
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that prisoners cried their final defiant words before Franco’s firing squads.
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Over the last 100 years,
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Montjuic has been continually re-imagined and re-shaped,
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first by the World’s Fair in 1929, and again by the Summer Olympics of 1992.
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But the slopes of Montjuic
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were not the only part of the city to be given an Olympic makeover.
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Millions of tonnes of sand were pumped onto two miles of shoreline,
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giving run-down waterfront barrios a new lease of life,
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and lifting Barcelona high into the ranks of the world’s great beach cities.
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Whether it’s the sea, the soil, or the wind,
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Barcelona is a dream inspired by nature.
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And this dream was at its wildest in the imaginations of the Catalan Modernists,
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who embraced nature’s lyricism in defiance against
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the harsh lines and cold logic of the Industrial Revolution.
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Experience Catalan Modernism in full bloom,
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at Sant Pau Hospital, the visionary work of Lluís Domènech i Montaner.
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With an entrance representing open arms,
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and grounds scented by the medicinal fragrance of lavender, laurel and lemon,
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if ever a hospital could heal on aesthetics alone, surely it was this.
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But it was another Catalan,
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Antonio Gaudi, who took Modernism to the next level, and far beyond.
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Of the nine UNESCO World Heritage sites in Barcelona,
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Gaudi is responsible for seven of them.
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Visit Casa Vicens,
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the first residence designed by this future architectural superstar.
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Unlike anything built before,
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Gaudi fused Moorish and oriental styles with eclectic materials
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to create the foundations of a new architectural language.
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But for Gaudi, this voyage into modernism was only the beginning.
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Just off La Rambla, step through the arches of Palau Guell,
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whose tree-like basement pillars and
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rooftop chimney pots were but a taste of things to come.
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Halfway along Passeig de Gracia is the Block of Discord,
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where contrasting buildings by four modernist masters jostle for attention.
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But it’s Gaudi’s Casa Batllo that steals the show.
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It is here Gaudi began to realize his full powers,
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breaking every city by-law to create what locals call,
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the house of bones.
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Gaze up at the facade,
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which resembles a lily-covered pond straight from the brush of Monet.
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Then follow the serpentine halls and swirling interiors ever upward
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before emerging onto the back of a dragon.
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Just around the corner is the last private residence designed by Gaudi,
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Casa Mila.
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Some say the facade evokes coastal cliffs festooned with seaweed;
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others say it conjures up the mist-shrouded peaks of Montserrat.
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Whatever the case, Casa Mila has inspired generations of artists,
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including a young American filmmaker,
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who in these chimneys found the inspiration
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for Darth Vader and his Storm Troopers.
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Gaudi would have loved that,
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for he was more than just an architect;
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his genius extended to furniture design, interior decoration, and, landscaping.
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Pass through the gatehouses of Park Guell,
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and explore paths laden with historic and mythical symbolism.
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Cool off amid a forest of stone columns, bending under the world’s weight.
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Visit the house where Gaudi lived in later life.
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Then, take the stairs to Turo del Calvari,
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and behold the spires of Gaudi’s greatest vision,
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as they continue their climb towards the heavens.
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La Sagrada Familia is due for completion within the next decade,
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to commemorate the 100-year passing of the man they called, God’s Architect.
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Yet even unfinished,
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over four million visitors a year are stunned into silence
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as they gaze up into this vast, visionary kaleidoscope.
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Gaudi is the very essence of Barcelona.
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For just like his creations this is a city filled with grand visions,
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all brought to life by endless fragments of bliss.
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Barcelona is a city that shares with the world a message…
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such are the wonders we create,
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such is the life we live,
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when we allow ourselves to dream.