"I would like to be here for many more years, of course, but I leave it to God," confides with a shy grimace this Barcelonan, born near the famous basilica, where he started working in 1990.

At the time, he was 31 years old.

The same age as Gaudí when he started building this monumental structure to which he devoted four decades, until his death, when he was hit by a tram in 1926.

"When I arrived, only three of these columns were built, and only the first ten meters," Jordi Faulí told AFP, pointing to several stone pillars from an attic in the main nave.

The largest of the nine towers already completed, that of the Virgin Mary, will be officially inaugurated this Wednesday, the day of the Immaculate Conception, at 7.40 p.m. (6.40 p.m. GMT), with the illumination of a gigantic star of glass and steel. of 5.5 tons which overhangs the structure at 138 meters high.

It will eventually be the second tallest tower of the 18 planned by Gaudí.

It will also be the first inaugurated since 1976.

Broken story

When will the rest of the building be completed?

The initial schedule called for work to be completed in 2026, the centenary of the death of the famous modernist architect.

But with the Covid-19 pandemic, this goal has been abandoned and further work remains uncertain.

The nave of the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona on December 1, 2021 LLUIS GENE AFP

"We cannot give any estimate, because we do not know at what level the visits will resume in the years to come", explains Jordi Faulí, who recalls that the basilica is financed only by private donations and, above all, the entrance fees for visitors.

In 2019, the Sagrada Familia was the most visited monument in Barcelona, ​​with 4.7 million admissions.

But with the Covid-19 pandemic, the basilica remained closed to the public for almost a year from March 2020, in two cumulative periods.

According to municipal data, less than 764,000 people visited the building in 2020. And according to the foundation in charge of the work, the visits will not return to their pre-crisis level before the end of 2023 at the earliest.

This is not the first time that the site has encountered difficulties.

The Sagrada Familia even saw its future threatened during the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), when a large part of the plans and models left by Gaudí disappeared in a fire.

For some, this capital loss does not allow considering recent elements as the work of the Catalan architect.

UNESCO also includes in its world heritage only the facade of the Nativity and the crypt of the basilica, erected during Gaudí's lifetime.

The chief architect of the Sagrada Familia Jordi Fauli inside the Gaudi building in Barcelona on December 1, 2021 LLUIS GENE AFP

But for Faulí, the current building is faithful to the original project.

Gaudí "clearly drew the arrangement of the different elements of the naves (...), vaults, towers" and proposed "that these geometric rules, this grammar that he left in his models can be reproduced", he insists. -he.

Mass tourism

Before the pandemic, Faulí, appointed chief architect of the basilica in 2012, led a team of 27 architects and more than 100 workers.

Today, only five architects and 16 workers work on the site.

In Barcelona, ​​a city of 1.6 million inhabitants where the debate on its tourism model is raging, such a project is all the more delicate as many inhabitants are opposed to mass tourism which, according to them, is destroying some districts of the city ... including that of the basilica.

The chief architect of the Sagrada Familia Jordi Fauli inside the Gaudi building in Barcelona on December 1, 2021 LLUIS GENE AFP

"My life is here and they want to put it to the ground" or "Stop the lies of tourist guides", denounce the banners attached to balconies in the street where the future main entrance to the building is to be built, a staircase that would require the relocation of several hundred families.

Asked about these criticisms, Faulí advocates "dialogue with everyone and the search for fair solutions".

However, he would like to see the main facade of the building completed, from which he has never moved away for more than two weeks in a row over the past 30 years.

© 2021 AFP