'Scrap cathedral' in Spain lives on after originator's death
Work contiues at Cathedral of Justo in Mejorada del Campo, 20 kilometres east of Madrid
(AFP/Gabriel BOUYS)
Alfons LUNA
Mon, November 29, 2021, 11:39 PM·3 min read
For over 60 years, former monk Justo Gallego had been building a cathedral out of scrap materials on the outskirts of Madrid, a project he would never see completed.
The 96-year-old died over the weekend, but left the unfinished complex in Mejorada del Campo to a charity run by a priest that has vowed to complete his labour of love.
Gallego began the project in 1961 when he was in his mid-30s on land inherited from his family after a bout of tuberculosis forced him to leave an order of Trappist monks.
Today, the "Cathedral of Justo" features a crypt, two cloisters and 12 towers spread over 4,700 square metres (50,600 square feet), although the central dome still does not have a cover.
He used bricks, wood and other material scavenged from old building sites, as well as through donations that began to arrive once the project became better known.
The building's pillars are made from stacked oil drums while windows have been cobbled and glued together from shards of coloured glass.
"Recycling is fashionable now, but he used it 60 years ago when nobody talked about it," said Juan Carlos Arroyo, an engineer and architect with engineering firm Calter.
The charity that is taking over the project, "Messengers of Peace", hired the firm to assess the structural soundness of the building, which lacks a permit.
Alfons LUNA
Mon, November 29, 2021, 11:39 PM·3 min read
For over 60 years, former monk Justo Gallego had been building a cathedral out of scrap materials on the outskirts of Madrid, a project he would never see completed.
The 96-year-old died over the weekend, but left the unfinished complex in Mejorada del Campo to a charity run by a priest that has vowed to complete his labour of love.
Gallego began the project in 1961 when he was in his mid-30s on land inherited from his family after a bout of tuberculosis forced him to leave an order of Trappist monks.
Today, the "Cathedral of Justo" features a crypt, two cloisters and 12 towers spread over 4,700 square metres (50,600 square feet), although the central dome still does not have a cover.
He used bricks, wood and other material scavenged from old building sites, as well as through donations that began to arrive once the project became better known.
The building's pillars are made from stacked oil drums while windows have been cobbled and glued together from shards of coloured glass.
"Recycling is fashionable now, but he used it 60 years ago when nobody talked about it," said Juan Carlos Arroyo, an engineer and architect with engineering firm Calter.
The charity that is taking over the project, "Messengers of Peace", hired the firm to assess the structural soundness of the building, which lacks a permit.
The 96-year-old former monk Justo Gallego died over the weekend, but left the unfinished complex in Mejorada del Campo to a charity (AFP/Gabriel BOUYS)
- No blueprint -
"The structure has withstood significant weather events throughout its construction," Arroyo told AFP, predicting it will only need some "small surgical interventions".
Renowned British architect Norman Foster visited the site in 2009 -- when he came to Spain to collect a prize -- telling Gallego that he should be the one getting the award, Arroyo added.
The sturdiness of the project is surprising given that Gallego had no formal training as a builder, and he worked without a blueprint.
In interviews, he repeatedly said that the details for the cathedral were "in his head" and "it all comes from above".
The complex stands in a street called Avenida Antoni Gaudi, named after the architect behind Barcelona's iconic Sagrada Familia basilica which has been under construction since 1883.
But unlike the Sagrada Familia, the Cathedral of Justo Gallego as it is known is not recognised by the Roman Catholic Church as a place of worship.
- 'Worth visiting' -
Father Angel Garcia Rodriguez, the maverick priest who heads Messengers of Peace, wants to turn Gallego's building into an inclusive space for all faiths and one that is used to help the poor.
"There are already too many cathedrals and too many churches, that sometimes lack people," he said.
"It will not be a typical cathedral, but a social centre where people can come to pray or if they are facing difficulties," he added.
Father Angel is famous in Spain for running a restaurant offering meals to the homeless and for running a church in central Madrid where pets are welcome and the faithful can confess via iPad.
Inside the Cathedral of Justo, volunteers continued working on the structure while a steady stream of visitors walked around the grounds admiring the building in the nondescript suburb.
"If the means are put in, especially materials and money, to finish it, then it will be a very beautiful place of worship," said Ramon Calvo, 74, who was visiting the grounds with friends.
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