logo
Restoration rejuvenates iconic Gaudi house in Barcelona

Restoration rejuvenates iconic Gaudi house in Barcelona

France 242 days ago

Previous refurbishments, changes of owner and the turbulent period marked by Spain's 1936-1939 civil war had taken their toll on the unique building completed in 1906.
A team of architects, historians and artisans spent more than a year repairing the bright mosaics and restoring the original cream-coloured hue to the blackened curvy balcony bars.
The result is "the most similar to 1906 that we have been able to achieve with today's technology", Xavier Villanueva, the chief architect and official in charge of the works, told AFP.
In the courtyard, the pergola replicates a parabola shape and more than 85,000 pieces make up the paving, "hand made one by one, as it was originally", Villanueva said.
The painstaking task meant the team "carried out a lot of analyses in several university laboratories, many prospections, we have lots of documentary information", he said.
The restoration cost 3.5 million euros ($4 million), according to Casa Batllo, which is in a fashionable neighbourhood of Barcelona frequented by the city's bourgeoisie and wealthy industrialists in the early 20th century.
A UNESCO-listed site since 2005, Casa Batllo welcomed 1.9 million visitors last year, making it one of the most popular attractions in a city known as a global tourism magnet.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Eight dead in Brazil hot air balloon accident
Eight dead in Brazil hot air balloon accident

France 24

time4 hours ago

  • France 24

Eight dead in Brazil hot air balloon accident

"Eight fatalities and 13 survivors," governor Jorginho Mello said on X. Videos taken by bystanders and carried on Brazilian television showed the moment when the balloon erupted in flames above the coastal town of Praia Grande. The weather conditions were clear. The basket carrying the passengers plummeted dozens of meters to the ground in flames. "We still have no information" about the condition of the survivors, a spokeswoman for Santa Catarina firefighters told AFP. Praia Grande, on the Atlantic coast, is a popular destination for hot-air ballooning in Brazil. The survivors were being treated in area hospitals, firefighters said. An investigation was launched to determine the cause of the accident. "I want to express my solidarity with the families of the victims," Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said in a statement. The pilot told officials that the fire was sparked by a blowtorch in the basket, Tiago Luiz Lemos, a police official in Praia Grande, told local media. The pilot tried to bring the balloon down as soon as the fire erupted, "and once it was close to the ground, he told the passengers to jump from the basket. But some of them couldn't do it and the fire grew," the official said. One witness told the Razao newspaper that he saw "two people falling, they were on fire, the basket broke off and the balloon fell." It was the second fatal balloon accident in the country in just a few days. Less than a week ago, a woman died during a ride in southeastern Sao Paulo state.

Staff shortages bite as Greeks shun low-paid tourism jobs
Staff shortages bite as Greeks shun low-paid tourism jobs

France 24

timea day ago

  • France 24

Staff shortages bite as Greeks shun low-paid tourism jobs

Beyond the bad pay, the 22-year-old told AFP that her working and living conditions were "miserable and unacceptable". Millions holiday in Greece every year, but its vital tourism industry is finding it harder and harder to recruit Greeks to look after them. "I was asked to work in any department of the hotel where there was a need, from service to cleaning," said Katerina, a tourism and marketing student, who would not give her surname for fear of putting off future employers. "We were housed in a space with eight other people, without air conditioning or laundry facilities," she added. Despite a record year in 2024 with 36 million visitors -- and equally robust forecasts for this season -- operators say they are short of thousands of staff. Studies show one in five jobs are perennially unfilled, with similar forecasts for this year. Markos Kesidis, who runs a beach bar and a small hotel in Halkidiki, said he has to wait on his customers himself. 'Impossible' to find help "I need 20 people for the beach bar. Right now it's impossible to find that many," he said. Tourism brought in 30.2 billion euros ($35 billion) last year, according to the Greek Tourism Confederation (INSETE) -- roughly 13 percent of Greece's GDP. But the sector was short of 54,000 workers, said the Research Institute for Tourism (ITEP). Its chair Konstantina Svynou said that is unlikely to change. "For this reason, many hotel owners turn to seeking temporary staff from third countries," Svynou told AFP, meaning from outside the EU. Nearly half of Greek hoteliers intended to hire from countries outside the bloc to fill more than 28,000 jobs, ITEP research indicated, she said. Most tended to be for unskilled positions such as housekeeping, dishwashing and cleaning. Hotel staff in Greece earn on average between 950 and 1,000 euros ($1,150) a month, plus bonuses. In Halkidiki, local hotel associations have attempted to hire workers from nearby refugee centres, but the uptake has not been high. "A total of 110 individuals initially expressed interest, but only 10 are currently working in the area's hotels," said Grigoris Tasios, head of the Halkidiki Hoteliers Association. "Most are afraid that when the tourist season ends, they might no longer find accommodation in the reception centres" as asylum arrivals tend to go up in the summer, he said. Tasios said one in 10 posts are vacant in hotels in the northern Greek peninsula, famous for its sandy beaches. Its 540 hotels nominally employ 14,000 people. "Several have hired workers from India and the Philippines" to get by, he said. Asian and African workers The majority of staff on some of the heavily-touriste Greek islands tend to come from outside the EU. "Only 14 of the 70 staff at the hotel where I work are Greek," said Maria Angeli, 54, a linen keeper in a luxury hotel on the island of Santorini. "My other colleagues are from countries like Nepal, Bangladesh and African nations,"she said. "Greeks, particularly young people, are now more reluctant to work in tourism businesses. Often the working and living conditions are not good, and this is a deterrent," she added. Catering is also beleaguered by staff shortages, although the exact statistics are unknown. However, restaurants and other catering businesses on some islands are closing for a day a week because they can't get enough help. "Finding staff is challenging anyway, but labour law restrictions make it even harder for our businesses to operate and remain viable," said Markos Kesidis, owner of a beach bar in the Halkidiki area. "Many want to work seven days a week due to the seasonality of the work, but are not allowed to, which is absurd," he said.

Summoning golden Olympic memories, Paris parties like it's 2024
Summoning golden Olympic memories, Paris parties like it's 2024

France 24

time2 days ago

  • France 24

Summoning golden Olympic memories, Paris parties like it's 2024

The Olympic rings will be projected on the Eiffel Tower and there will be a giant Olympic karaoke in front of the town hall on July 26. However, preceding that party the glowing caudron balloon, "a symbol of the popular enthusiasm for these Olympic Games," according to France's National Olympic Committee, returns on Saturday. It will float once again above the Tuileries Garden, with President Emmanuel Macron in attendance, to conjure golden memories, even for those who were not there. "There are many Parisians who fled Paris last year and who kicked themselves," said Matthieu Gobbi of Aerophile, the company responsible for the balloon. Yet athletes and grass-roots sports organisations in France lament the lack of a more tangible "legacy". For those who were there, and the five billion the International Olympic Committee says watched around the world, the Games provided 15 days of candy-coloured distraction from wars, divisive elections and global inflation. The sport was also spectacular, illuminated by the redemption of gymnast Simone Biles, a likely last Roland Garros triumph for the then 37-year-old Novak Djokovic, and the swimming heroics of French golden boy Leon Marchand. An unusually high proportion of the Olympics was held in the the middle of the city, and that posed a challenge. There were fears of terrorist attacks, that public transport would not cope and the Seine would be too polluted for triathletes and long-distance swimmers to compete. Yet Paris pulled it off, enhancing its image, not least in France, as the world's leading tourist destination. "We'll see who can repeat a Games like this," said Macron. 'Joy, unity, pride' This summer, Parisians will be able to swim at three venues along the Seine. The Tour de France, rerouted to avoid the capital last year, returns for its traditional finish on the Champs-Elysees at the end of a stage that covers many of the same streets where half a million spectators watched the Olympic road races. That stage will be on July 27, a year and a day after the Paris Games opened with an epic and grandiose ceremony, put on by a cast of 20,000 artists and staff, along the Seine. Celine Dion sang from the Eiffel Tower while the athletes sailed down the river in the pouring rain. "This moment is a memory we share. It's not so common these days," Thomas Jolly, artistic director for the opening and closing ceremonies, told AFP. "Having everyone watching the same thing at the same time... surely creates a bond!" The ceremony left a lasting mark, he said, "of joy, unity, pride". The Games themselves even made a profit, a surplus of 76 million euros. That figure does not yet include broader public spending, particularly on infrastructure, and it is here that some in France feel the Olympics has left a slightly bitter taste. 'Legacy' For Olympic organisers "legacy" -- both tangible and intangible -- helps legitimise hosting an event many countries no longer want. "We're trying to give the Olympics a role they weren't made for," Mickael Attali, a sports historian at Rennes II University, told AFP. "Good memories" and "a good image of France" remain. "Materially, there are still some things left in Seine-Saint-Denis," said Attali, referring to the poorest departement in mainland France where the Olympic Aquatic Centre, opposite the Stade de France, has just opened to the public. Macron promised the Olympics would help turn France into a sporting nation. The number of people registered to sports clubs has increased five percent, but thousands of enthusiastic children were turned away last autumn because of a lack of space. After the Games ended, national and local sports budgets were cut. Sports officials say infrastructure projects have been halted and expenditure on equipment cut. Some French athletes were abandoned by commercial sponsors. "All the companies that had set up sponsorship for the Olympics have left," said a specialist in sports marketing. Even some of France's Olympic stars feel the lustre has faded fast. "We should not have said there would be a legacy," said Olympic fencing champion Manon Apithy-Brunet.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store