One of Europe’s most famous tourist attractions is giving away free tickets worth £30 – how to get one
The project was designed by Francisco de Paula del Villar in 1882.
It's cornerstone is laid by Bishop Urquinaona on March 19, that year.
Famed modernist architect Antoni Gaudi takes over the project in 1883, while still working on other buildings.
In 1885, the Chapel of Saint Joseph is inaugurated in the crypt and the first masses are held.
1891 Work begins on the Nativity facade.
Antoni Gaudi starts working full-time on the temple in 1914 and will do so until his death in June 1926.
The Saint Barnabas bell tower on the Nativity facade is completed in 1925.
Gaudi dies in 1926 and his disciple Domènec Sugranyes takes over the project.
In 1936 the building is vandalised during the Spanish Civil War. Plans and photographs are burnt and the plaster models, smashed.
Work continues in 1939 thanks to the material that could be saved from Gaudí’s workshop and that was reconstructed from published plans and photographs.
The staircase on the Nativity facade is built, and the facade is lit up for the first time in 1952.
The foundation for the Passion facade is laid in 1954.
A sculpture representing the Holy Family is put in place, created by Jaume Busquets in 1958.
Francesc de Paula Quintana dies and Isidre Puig i Boada and Lluís Bonet i Garí take over in 1966.
1976 sees the completion of the bell towers on the Passion facade.
Jordi Bonet i Armengol is named head architect and site manager in 1985.
In 1986 work began on the foundations for all the naves, the columns, vaults and façades on the main nave, transepts, crossing and apse. The works were completed in 2010.
On 7 November 2010, Pope Benedict XVI consecrated the Basilica for religious worship and designated it a minor basilica.
Construction begins on the towers of the Evangelists, the Virgin Mary and Jesus Christ in 2016.
In July 2018 The Cross is placed on top of the pediment of the Passion facade.
All efforts focus on finishing the tower of the Virgin Mary, the Basilica’s second tallest at 138 metres in 2021.
On December 8, 2021, the Sagrada Família inaugurated the tower of the Virgin Mary with a mass as the central event and, afterwards, the blessing of the tower and the first lighting of the star on the second-tallest tower, which is now complete.
On November 12, 2023 the Sagrada Família inaugurated the four the towers of the Evangelists, with the central event of the mass and the subsequent blessing and lighting up for the first time.
As part of the central group of towers, the four towers of the Evangelists surround the tower of Jesus Christ and are the Temple’s third tallest, standing 135 metres tall.
Together with the tower of the Virgin Mary, five of the six central towers have been completed.
The central tower of Jesus Christ is scheduled for completion in 2026.