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    From the Past, a Futuristic Plan for WTC Site

    Spanish-U.S. Group Offers 1908 Design by Famed Architect Gaudi

     
    Proposed building on site
    Paul Laffolley, The Boston Visionary Cell, Inc.

    The Gaudi design as it would be sited in lower Manhattan, viewed from the Hudson River.

     
     
     
    Compared to Other Landmarks
    Paul Laffolley, The Boston Visionary Cell, Inc.

    The size of the Gaudi design relative to the Empire State Building, the Chrysler Building and the Eiffel Tower.

     
     
     
    Cross-section of Gaudi design
    Paul Laffolley, The Boston Visionary Cell, Inc.

    Here is a cross-section of the interor of the Gaudi design

     
     

    Weekend Edition Saturday, January 25, 2003 · The architectural models of nine prospective designs for the World Trade Center site are on display in lower Manahattan across the street from what's come to be known as Ground Zero.

    A tenth may soon join them -- a plan not by one of the world's greatest living architects - - but a New York skyscraper conceived nearly 100 years ago by Antonio Gaudi, the Spanish architect who died in Barcelona in 1926.

    A group of artists from Barcelona plans to enter Gaudi's futuristic vision in the formal competition with the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation. Apart from the Barcelona group, Boston artist and architect Paul Laffoley is advocating building a skyscraper in lower Manhattan based on the Gaudi design. Marc Mascort i Boix heads up the Barcelona group.

    Mascourt i Boix was in New York this week to present its vision of the building. He is an artist and co-editor of Rojo, a Barcelona magazine of art and culture. NPR's Scott Simon talks with him about Gaudi and their building proposal.

    Gaudi's original design, which he called the Hotel Attraction, rivals the Empire State Building in height. Mascourt i Boix says of the design, "It's so before its time," but constructing it in the first decades of the 20th century "was impossible and now it's possible."

    Mascourt i Boix says "Gaudi was a religous man." Although only seven sketches survived the Spanish Civil War, what is known from memoirs and Gaudi's notes is that he wanted the building to incorporate rooms and large spaces devoted to the world's cultures and religions.

    Mascourt i Boix says Gaudi's design features for the building would have it "full of tile, color and handcraft." He says the design is "not a leftover," rather the design "got lost in time." He wants the design by Spain's celebrated architect to be be seen as a "present from Barcelona, like the Statue of Liberty."

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