Avinguda Gaudí leads to the HOSPITAL DE LA SANTA CREU I SANT PAU (82) (HOSPITAL OF THE HOLY CROSS AND OF SAINT PAUL) wich stands at the opposite end of the avenue. Construction of the current premises began in 1902, following a design by Lluís Domènech i Montaner, who was sensitive to the new hygienist theories of public health applied to town planning promoted by the doctor Pere Felip Monlau and engineers Ildefons Cerdà and Pere García Faria (designer of the Barcelona underground sewage network in the 19th century). The new hospital was raised on one of the ends of the Eixample district, on land bought by the Hospital de la Santa Creu thanks to a donation by the banker Pau Gil. Gil provided in his will for the construction of a health centre bearing his Christian name, and thus “Sant Pau” was added to the “Santa Creu”. Work started in 1902 and finished around 1926, when the Hospital was finally moved from its old Gothic location in the Raval to the new building. Domènech i Montaner’s work is considered to be one of the best Art Nouveau complexes in the world. The hospital is like a self-contained town, with streets, buildings and gardens. The access pavilion, crowned by a slender clock tower, has the exposed brickwork that predominates in the whole ensemble, with mosaics depicting historical subjects and stone capitals and corbels in the form of angels, sculpted by a young Pau Gargallo. Inside, the main features are the stained glass by Mario Maragliano, the large staircase and the ceilings, which are reminiscent of Islamic architecture. Two dates (1905 with the Greek letter alpha and 1910 with the Greek letter omega) indicate the start and finish of the work on this main building of the complex. The entrance pavilion and the 10 pavilions located around it were built under the personal direction of Domènech i Montaner and show the highly intelligent use of stone, iron and ceramics which is characteristic of the architect. Most of the remaining pavilions, including the huge Casa de Convalescència (Convalescence House), are a later work of Pere Domènech i Roura, the architect’s son. Some pavilions were given the names of male or female saints and others the names of Virgins. The pavilions are set among gardens and connected through a network of underground service passages more than one kilometre long. Thus Domènech designed a totally innovative hospital, breaking the building up into a series of cells surrounded by gardens, with a great deal of sunlight and fresh air, in which the patients and doctors enjoyed a far more pleasant natural environment than that of the old medieval hospital. One of the pavilions, currently used as a café, has an unusual Baroque façade, the original front of the old church of Santa Marta designed by Carles Grau in 1735, salvaged and moved to this location when the church was torn down to build the Via Laietana in 1909. The hospital occupies 14.5 hectares, the equivalent of nine blocks of the Eixample, and has been restored several times. In 1978 the Modernista pavilions of the hospital were declared a historic artistic monument, and in 1997 the ensemble was listed as UNESCO World Heritage. In the twentieth Century, the Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau has begun to build a new, larger and more modern building on an adjacent site. Old Modernista buildings are today modern and functional workspaces for organisations that promote high social impact projects in the fields of innovation, sustainability, health, education and culture. These institutions develop their programmes and also establish collaboration agreements to implement projects and activities that provide solutions to some of the challenges facing our society.
Timetable
FREE VISIT
Mondays to Sundays:
9.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. (from November to March)
9.30 a.m. to 6.30 p.m. (from April to November)
The box office closes half an hour before closing time
GUIDED TOURS
Weekends
Spanish 11am
Catalan 12.30pm
Visits in other languages are available (arranged in advance).
The itinerary may be modified depending on the availability of the spaces.
Closing days: 25th December.
Free entrance: 23rd April, Night of Museums, and 24th September.
Guided tours are not available on free days.
Prices and discounts
Standard ticket
Self-guided visit: €17
Guided visit: €21
Concession ticket
aged 12 to 24, over 65, disabled (65%)
Self-guided visit: €11.90
Guided visit: €14,70
Free admission:
children (under 12), unemployed, Targeta Rosa Gratuïta cardholders.
Discounts 50% off
Barcelona Modernisme Route (Ruta del Modernisme) discount 50% off the self-guided visit.
Discounts 20% off
Bus Turístic
City Tours
Carnet BCN Cultural
Carnet d’Usuaris de la Xarxa de Biblioteques
Club TR3SC
Òmnium Cultural members
RACC members
Groups (maximum 30 people per group)
General: €320
Concession ticket (retired and special groups): €200
Must be reserved by calling: visites@fundaciosantpau.cat and escoles@fundaciosantpau.cat
More information
Tel.: (+34) 935 117 876.
www.santpaubarcelona.org
Entrance: corner Sant Antoni Maria Claret / Cartagena.
Get the Guidebook of Barcelona Modernisme Route
The Barcelona Modernisme Route is an itinerary through the Barcelona of Gaudí, Domènech i Montaner and Puig i Cadafalch, who, together with other architects, made Barcelona the great capital of Catalan Art Nouveau. With this route you can discover impressive palaces, amazing houses, the temple that is symbol of the city and an immense hospital, as well as more popular and everyday works such as pharmacies, shops, shops, lanterns or banks. Modernisme works that show that Art Nouveau took root in Barcelona and even today is still a living art, a lived art.
The Guidebook of Barcelona Modernisme Route can be acquired in our centers of Modernisme.