GÜELL PARK, Visit

Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio

If you're wondering why the park is built on a slope, you should know that Gaudí himself did not want to level it. In fact, thanks to careful water collection and pipe work, he managed to transform this arid and inhospitable area into a paradise of vegetation! Some of the park's most absurd displays, like the sculpture of the happy salamander, hide valves and faucets.

The name of the park written out in colored ceramic tiles welcomes you from the entry gate. To the right and left you can see the only two buildings that were actually built: the sample villa and the caretaker's house with a strange roof with pinnacles.

And now begin to climb the long staircase that leads you to the top of the hill, where you'll find the park's symbol: a nice, smiling salamander covered with fragments of colorful ceramic tiles.

Color abounds in this park: Gaudí has covered all of its structures with lively majolica tiles, giving the complex a fairy-tale like appearance. Highly ahead of the times, the architect worked with recycled materials: he reclaimed the processing waste from an industrial ceramic factory's dumpsite and turned it into bizarre mosaics that became the distinguishing feature of his art....

Scarica MyWoWo! La Travel App che ti racconta le meraviglie del mondo!