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Tuesday, December 16, 2025
C/ de Mallorca, 401, 08013 Barcelona, Spain
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Sagrada Família Interior - Forest Columns and Vaults Explained

Understand the structural and symbolic logic of the Sagrada Família’s interior — a forest of stone and light.

11/3/2025
16 min read
Sagrada Família nave with branching columns and dappled stained-glass light

Gaudí replaced Gothic buttresses with inclined, branching columns that resolve forces internally. Each column’s section morphs (circular → polygonal) as it rises, then splits to support vaults. The result is clarity without external props.


Column Taxonomy

  • Materials vary (basalt, granite, reinforced stone) according to load paths.
  • Sections rotate as they rise; flutes align with stress trajectories.
  • Branching allows shorter spans and lighter vaults.

Vaults and Light Wells

  • Hyperbolic vaults admit light through oculi at the nodes.
  • The mix of direct and reflected light keeps the nave luminous yet gentle.

Acoustics and Air

  • Perforations and surfaces diffuse sound for liturgy and choir.
  • Hidden ventilation works with the stack effect to move warm air up.

What to Notice

  • The floor plan’s tree-like grid.
  • How columns change color and texture with the stained glass cycle.

About the Author

Structural Analyst

Structural Analyst

I created this guide to make your Sagrada Família visit simple, insightful, and stress‑free.

Tags

Columns
Vaults
Sagrada Família
Geometry
Interior

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