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Old 03-30-2012, 12:18 AM   #9
sandypossum
tri-continental dag hag
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Australia
Posts: 247
Quote:
Originally Posted by bbuilder View Post
I just have to wonder how many starving kids could we feed or people could we educate if we just toned it down a little bit and did something a little more practical.
All of the costs of the Sagrada Familia are covered by donation for that specific purpose. These days that also includes the entrance fees to visit it. You could just as easily ask if all the entrance fees paid to blockbuster movies could not have been better spent on starving children (although I feel some sympathy with that view as well).

I agree in general with your feelings, though, bbuilder - the first thing I thought when I went to both the Taj Mahal and the Forbidden City was "wow, how many man hours of labour and lives would this have cost?" Cathedrals to a lesser extent, as at least they are there - at least in theory - for the poor as well as for the rich, whereas palaces, mausoleums etc were/are for the ruling class only. In days of yore it would have been one of the few things the population would have found worthy of putting in lots of joint effort to create something superb, utilising the skills of the best carpenters, stone masons, artists, etc etc. No doubt the clergy were keener than the poor, of course, but even the poor were usually believers and got to use the building. Furthermore, I think the people who built cathedrals were paid for their work, and even if not, at least you would have been clocking up points for the afterlife. Building the Taj Mahal or Forbidden City, on the other hand, would have been purely for the glory or use of the one who commissioned it.

I also rather like the fact that the Sagrada Familia has an estimated finishing date of 2028. I don't know of any other building that started last century with a building schedule of over 100 years. It's all done quickly now, and the buildings are also not intended to last more than, say 50 years. A few centuries ago monumental buildings were made to last "forever" and took almost as long to build.

When it's finally finished, we (me and other half) have already agreed that we will go and see it again.
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Last edited by sandypossum; 03-30-2012 at 12:24 AM.
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