The Exposition Center, ''el recinte de l'Exposició'', was built to designs by Puig i Cadafalch with two different types of buildings: palaces, the sections devoted to the official competition; and flags, representing countries, institutions and companies. The exposition's main axis began at the ''Plaça d'Espanya
, where four large hotels were built, through the Avenue of Americas (now the Avinguda de la Reina Maria Cristina''), which housed the grand buildings of the Exposition, to the foot of the mountain, the site of the "Magic Fountain", the Palaces Alfonso XIII and Victoria Eugenia, and a monumental staircase. The Avenue of the Americas was decorated with numerous fountains, as well as glass columns—illuminated by electricity—designed by Charles Buïgas, which caused a great sensation. On both sides of the avenue were the main buildings of the Exposition: Palace of Costumes; the Palace of Communications and Transport; and the Palace of Metallurgy, Electricity and Locomotion. Today, these buildings are used as exposition spaces in the Barcelona Trade Fair. Along the avenue was Mechanics Square (now the ''Plaça de l'Univers
), at the center of which stood the "Tower of Light", and the sculpture El Treball'', by Josep Llimona.
Plaça d'Espanya The Plaça d'Espanya was included in
Ildefons Cerdà's plan for the expansion of Barcelona, the
Eixample. It was to be a major point of communication in the route between Barcelona and the towns of
Baix Llobregat. After a first draft by the urbanized square Josep Amargós in 1915, the square was finally built to plans by Josep Puig i Cadafalch and Guillem Busquets, and then finished by Antoni Darder i Marsa. It was fully complete by 1926. They designed the square as a monumental
rotary, to be surrounded by a Baroque
colonnade. The design was influenced by
Bernini's
St. Peter's Square in Rome. Dividing the square from the Avenue of the Americas Ramon Reventós designed two bell-towers, known as the
Venetian Towers, which were heavily influenced by
St. Mark's Campanile in Venice. At the center of the square another monumental fountain was built, designed by Josep Maria Jujol. Its ornate decoration is an allegory of Spain, surrounded by water. Three niches with sculptures symbolize the three principal rivers of the
Iberian Peninsula, the
Ebro,
Guadalquivir, and
Tagus. Around the central sculpture, three decorated columns symbolize Religion (a cross with
Ramon Llull,
Saint Teresa of Jesus, and
Saint Ignatius of Loyola), Heroism (a sword with
Pelagius of Asturias,
James I and Isabella), and Arts ( a book with
Ausias March and
Miguel de Cervantes).
The Magic Fountain The famous
Magic Fountain of Montjuïc, designed by Carles Buïgas, was constructed in 1929 on Avinguda Maria Cristina at the foot of
Montjuic, and amazed the public with its light and water displays. Today, it is still an emblem of the Catalan capital, and musical lightshows are often performed there during the annual festival of
La Mercè, as well as during every weekend. It enchants the public with a backdrop of the
Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. Originally,
four columns were built in this location by Puig i Cadafalch to represent the
Catalan flag, but these were removed by Spanish dictator Primo de Rivera's orders.
Official Sections • The
Communications and Transport Centre: Designed by Félix de Azúa and Adolf Florensa in 1926, it was built in a neoclassical style inspired by the architecture of the French academy. It was one of the largest buildings of the Exposition, with an area of 16,000 m2. With entrances onto the Plaza de España and Avenida de la Reina María Cristina, its structure is organised around a floor projecting out onto Plaza de España and supported by columns. The Avenida's façade is in the form of a
triumphal arch, finished off with a group of sculptures including the figure of a
Victoria. It is currently part of the Barcelona Trade Fair. • The
Clothing Centre (or Labour Centre): initially named the Centre of Pedagogy, Hygiene and Social Institutions, it was designed by Josep Maria Jujol and Andrés Calzada, and is located between the Plaza de España and the Avenida de la Reina María Cristina. With an area of 6,500 m2, like the Communications and Transport Centre its structure had to be adapted to an elevated room supported on columns over the Plaza de España, with an irregularly shaped floor arrayed around a central space, with a large rotunda topped by an eastern-style
dome. This building is also part of the Barcelona Trade Fair. • The
Centre for Metallurgy, Electricity and Motive Force: the work of Amadeu Llopart and Alexandre Soler i March, this building has an area of 16,000 m2. From its rectangular plan, a large
polyhedral dome rises from its centre, with a
lantern but no
drum, possibly inspired by
Bruno Taut's glass pavilion, built for the
Deutscher Werkbund in
Cologne. The façade is notable for its large classical
pediment, decorated by Francesc d'Assís Galí's
frescoes (he also painted the entrance hall's
soffits, together with
Josep Obiols and
Manuel Humbert). To either side of the building are large towers with allegorical sculptures by
Enric Casanovas. This building is also part of the Barcelona Trade Fair. • The
Centre for Textile Arts: designed by Joan Roig and Emili Canosa, this was situated between the Communications and Transport Centre and the Projection Centre, with its entrance on the Plaza del Universo. With an area of 20,000 m2, it was dedicated to the
textile industry, with booths for Spanish, German, Austrian, French, Italian and Swiss companies. The central body of the building is in
renaissance style, while the taller façade was neoclassical, with a balustrade
castellated in the
Plateresque style and two domed towers. Its interior housed an exhibition on silk, promoted by Germany and designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and interior designer
Lilly Reich, the first example of the German architect's creative genius. He conceived a well-lit, open space,
neoplasticist in structure, where a skilled use of space achieved a feeling of open space throughout the room. The 50th Anniversary Centre, belonging to the Barcelona Trade Fair, was built in its place. • The
Projection Centre: designed by Eusebi Bona and Francisco Aznar, this building is situated between the Avenida de la Reina María Cristina, the Avenida Rius i Taulet and the Plaza del Universo. With an area of 10.000 m2, it had two floors, the first with a large showroom, with a stage and projection room, and various exhibition rooms. The building's façade is notable, in the classical, monumental style, decorated with sculptures by Joan Pueyo: four groups of
caryatids with bisons, four groups of
sphinxes and two fountains, carved in artificial stone. Removed after the Exposition, the current Convention Centre was built in its place. Next to this building were the Exposition's offices, now a college (CEIP Jacint Verdaguer), designed by Juan Bruguera. • The
Alfonso XIII and Victoria Eugenia Centres: originally named the Centres for Modern Art and Architecture, they were designed by Josep Puig i Cadafalch y Guillem Busquets, symmetrically located next to the Magic Fountain, at the foot of the
Palau Nacional. These were the first buildings to be constructed, completed in 1923, when they housed the a Furniture and Interior Decoration Exposition as a trial run for the later event. Each had a surface area of 14,000 m2, rectangular floors formed by quadrangular modules, and a set of four towers for each building, topped by pinnacles in the shape of
pyramids and decorated with
sgraffito, representing
Solomonic columns and plant motifs. The Alfonso XIII Centre was dedicated to Construction, while the Victoria Eugenia housed the representatives of countries without their own pavilions. It is currently part of the Barcelona Trade Fair. • The
Palau Nacional: the main building of the Exposition, this was designed by Eugenio Cendoya and
Enric Catà, under the supervision of Pere Domènech i Roura, after Puig i Cadafalch and Guillem Busquets' initial plan was rejected. Built between 1926 and 1929, it has an area of 32,000 m2. Its classical style was inspired by the
Spanish Renaissance, and its floors are rectangular with two lateral sections and a square section behind, with a large
elliptical dome in the central part. The cascades and jets of the Palace's staircase were also designed by Carles Buïgas, and nine large projectors were placed which to this day still send out intense beams of light which write the city's name in the sky. The inauguration ceremony was held in its Oval Hall, presided over by
Alfonso XIII and Queen
Victoria Eugenia. The Palau Nacional was dedicated to an exhibition of
Spanish art with more than 5,000 works from throughout Spanish territory. Various artists were involved in its decoration—in Novecento style, in contrast to the classical architecture—such as the sculptors
Enric Casanovas,
Josep Dunyach,
Frederic Marès and
Josep Llimona, and painters
Francesc d'Assís Galí,
Josep de Togores,
Manuel Humbert,
Josep Obiols,
Joan Colom and
Francesc Labarta. As of 1934, it has housed the
Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. • The
City of Barcelona Pavilion: a work designed by architect Josep Goday in the noucentist style. It hosted an exhibition about past, present and future of the host city. Located between the Plaza de los Bellos Oficios (today Plaça de Carles Buïgas), the Avenida de la Técnica (currently Carrer de la Guàrdia Urbana), the Avenida Rius i Taulet and the Alfonso XIII Centre, it covered an area of 2,115 m2. It is a brick and Montjuic stone building. Its façade is decorated with several sculptures, allegories of Barcelona and its history, carved by sculptors Frederic Marès, Eusebi Arnau and Pere Jou. It is currently the
Guàrdia Urbana de Barcelona headquarters. • The
Press Centre: dedicated to the magazines and daily papers printed in Barcelona at that time, this building was designed by Pere Domènech i Roura. Located on Avenida Rius i Taulet, it currently houses the Guardia Urbana de Barcelona. With an area of 600 m2, it has a basement and three floors, with several styles mixed in a historic concept:
neo-Mudéjar,
neo-Romanesque,
neo-Gothic, etc. Domènech used various modernist elements, such as facebrick, iron and ceramics, being influenced by his father, Lluís Domènech i Montaner. • The
Centre for Decorative and Applied Arts: located between calle Lérida and the Avenida de la Técnica, this building was designed by Manuel Casas and Manuel Puig and had an area of 12,000 m2. The building was organised around a central patio, covered by a rectangular glass structure; the rest of the building was in a French baroque style, with a monumental appearance. The façade displayed a set of receding and protruding shapes, from which two large towers topped with domes and lanterns stood out. In 1955, the
Palau dels Esports de Barcelona (now the Barcelona Teatre Musical) was built in its place. • The
Graphical Arts Centre: located on the Paseo de Santa Madrona, this was designed by
Raimon Duran i Reynals and
Pelai Martínez, in a Noucentist style influenced by the
Italian Renaissance, particularly
Filippo Brunelleschi,
Donato Bramante and
Andrea Palladio. With an area of 4,000 m2, it was dedicated to the graphical arts, particularly book printing. Entrance was via a staircase and two lateral ramps for vehicles, with a façade formed by arcaded galleries, with pavilions to the sides and a central drum over which a dome is elevated. Once again, the German exhibition designed by Mies van der Rohe and Lilly Reich stood out, composed of glass cabinets in geometric shapes. Since 1935 it has housed the Archeological Museum of Catalonia. • The
Centre of Agriculture: designed by Josep Maria Ribas i Casas and Manuel Maria Mayol, it is located between Paseo de Santa Madrona and calle Lérida. With an area of 16,000 m2, it is arranged around a central patio, with five rectangular naves and two arcaded galleries. Influenced by the Italian Renaissance—particularly by
Lombardy—the façades of the various façades are covered by
stucco and ceramics, with several octagonal towers and triple arches. It is now known as the "Mercat de les Flors" (
Market of the Flowers) and is occupied by the Theatre City, which includes the Theatre Institute, the
Teatre Lliure Foundation, the Mercat de les Flors Municipal Theatre and the Fabià Puigserver Theatre. • The
Spanish Pavilion: designed by Antoni Darder, with an area of 4,500 m2, was designed for representatives from the Government and ministries. It consists of a central body and two symmetrical wings, with towers at each end. It was inspired by the Plateresque style, with semicircular arches and Corinthian columns. It was demolished after the Exposition. • The
Delegation Centre: designed by Enric Sagnier i Villavecchia, it is located between the Avenida del Marqués de Comillas and the Avenida de Montanyans, opposite the Plaza de la Hidráulica (now the Plaza de Sant Jordi; the fountain of
Ceres and an equestrian statue of
Saint George by Josep Llimona were located here). With an area of 2,350 m2, it was dedicated to the representatives of provincial Spanish delegations. Designed in a Gothic-Plateresque style, the main façade was
concave, with a central tower and two symmetrical wings with crenellated arches and towers at their extremes. The Royal shield and the shields of Catalonia,
León and Barcelona were displayed on the façade. • The
Chemistry Centre: designed by Antoni Sardà, this building was designed to display sports-related material, but at the last moment its function was changed in order to dedicated it to the
chemical industry. With an area of 4,500 m2, it was located in the Avenida de Montanyans, next to the Delegation Centre. Classically styled, the main façade was divided into three sections, the central section having a colonnaded entrance and a ribbed dome over a decagonal drum. From 1932 to 1962, when it was destroyed in a fire, it was the seat of Orphea Cinematographic Studios. • The
Royal Pavilion: now known as Albéniz Palace, it housed the representatives of the Spanish Royal House. Located close to the Stadium, surrounded by spacious gardens, it was designed by Juan Moya in a baroque style inspired by the 18th-century French courts. The interior decoration is in the
Empire style, most notably the
tapestries designed by
Francisco Goya and a room of mirrors copied from
Versailles. Extended in 1970 and decorated by
Salvador Dalí paintings, it is currently used in certain ceremonies and public acts. • The
Centre for Modern Art: designed by Antoni Darder in 1927, it had an area of 5,000 m2 and is located between the Royal Pavilion and the Centre of Missions. It formed part of the "Art in Spain" section, containing collections of paintings, sculpture, drawings and engravings from the 19th century. Rectangular in plan, its main façade had a central body and two symmetrical wings, with a central structure in the form of semicircular arches resembling the work of the Italian architect Filippo Juvara. • The
Centre of Missions: designed by Antoni Darder, it had area of 5,000 m2, dedicated to displaying the work of
missionary institutions. The main façade was inspired by Romanesque churches, with semicircular arches built with semicircular arches with
voussoirs, long, narrow windows and pentagonal tops. The building was rectangular in plan, with an octagonal dome inspired by the Italian Renaissance. • The
Southern Palace: designed by Antoni Millàs, it was located in the Avenida Internacional (now the Avenida del Estadio). With an area of 26,000 m2, it was rectangular in plan, with three naves covered by square modules with skylight-style openings. It was located in a place initially planned to hold an aviation field, which was never built.
International Section As the
Ibero-American Exposition of 1929 was taking place simultaneously in Seville, no
Spanish American countries participated. From the remaining countries, the official participants were Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Norway, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland and the
State of Slovenes, Croats and Serbs (later
Yugoslavia); most of these countries had their own pavilions, except for Austria, Czechoslovakia, Finland and Switzerland. Apart from these countries, Japan, the Netherlands, Portugal, the United Kingdom and the United States participated in an unofficial capacity. Each country had a week dedicated to it throughout the course of the event, with a highlight of the German week being the flight of the
Graf Zeppelin airship over Barcelona, on 16 May 1929. •
German Pavilion: one of the masterpieces by
Mies van der Rohe, it is one of the best examples of the
international style of architecture due to its purity of form, its spatial concept and its intelligent use of structures and materials, which turned this pavilion into the quintessential piece of 20th-century architecture. In 1928 Mies was contracted to build the official German pavilion together with the Electricity Supply pavilion and several exhibits in the Official Section's buildings, with the collaboration of interior designer
Lilly Reich. Rectangular in shape, it is elevated on a
travertine-covered podium; the covering was supported on cross-shaped columns and load-bearing walls, with side walls of different materials (
plaster-covered bricks, steel covered by green
marble and Moroccan
onyx). Its decoration was reduced to two ponds and a sculpture,
La Mañana, by
Georg Kolbe. Demolished after the Exhibition, it was reconstructed between 1985 and 1987 in its original location by Cristian Cirici, Ignasi de Solà-Morales and Fernando Ramos, following Mies van der Rohe's plans. •
Belgian Pavilion: designed by the architect Verhelle, this was next to the Spanish Pavilion. Rectangular in shape, it was inspired by the
Hof von Busleyden in
Mechelen, built when
Margaret of Austria established the court there, notable for a
watchtower twice the height of the building. •
Danish Pavilion: designed by
Tyge Hvass, this was a
dihedron of reddish wood with a gabled roof, evoking a typical Danish mountain house. The façade showed an embossed Danish flag, anchor, wheat sheaf and cog wheel, typical elements of the Danish economy. •
French Pavilion: designed by
Georges Wybo, in a classical style with art deco elements, this was located next to the Alfonso XIII centre. It was a single-volume building in the shape of a
cube, with its roof formed by superimposed stepped rectangular sections, like a
ziggurat, with a sculpture at the front in the shape of a woman and the initials R. F. (
République Française). •
Hungarian Pavilion: designed by
Dénes György and Nikolaus Menyhért, this was made up of two rectangular sections, with a tower over it in the shape of a
prism. An example of
expressionist architecture, the geometrical synthesis of its structure evoked the architecture of the
Pre-Columbian era. •
Italian Pavilion: designed by
Piero Portaluppi, this was located between the Spanish and Swedish pavilions. It had a surface area of 4,500 m2, in the shape of a U, a renaissance classical style and a monumental atmosphere. The façade had some columns with the
eagle of the Roman Empire, a
frieze with the country's name and a fronton finished off with a statue of
Minerva. •
Norwegian Pavilion: designed by Ole Lind Schistad, this was wooden like the Danish pavilion, with a similar likeness to mountain buildings, with shuttered windows and a sloped roof. •
Serbian, Croatian and Slovene Pavilion: the country which before the end of the fair would be renamed as
Yugoslavia, this was designed by the architect
Dragiša Brašovan and located next to the Palau Nacional. Avant-garde in conception, it was a
star-shaped building with the façade made from wooden strips arranged in horizontal black and white stripes. •
Romanian Pavilion: designed by
Duiliu Marcu, this was a rectangular building with a tower to one side and a gabled roof, panelled with wood and stucco. The façade had a series of arches ending in a
pergola, with architectural elements characteristic of
Transylvania. •
Swedish Pavilion: designed by Peder Clason, as with the other
Scandinavian buildings it was built of wood, rectangular and with a geometric structure within the avant-garde currents of the time, such as neoplasticism. Next to the entrance door was a
conical wooden tower, topped with three superimposed horizontal discs; it was named "Funkis", Swedish abbreviation for functionalism at the beginning of the 20th century. Both the building and the tower were dismantled after the Exhibition and reconstructed in
Berga, where the pavilion served as a school up until the
Spanish Civil War when the building was demolished at the beginning of the 1960s. There is currently a project to rebuild the tower next to the Olympic Museum, near its original location. File:Pabellón Bélgica.jpg|Belgian Pavilion. File:Pabellón Italia.jpg|Italian Pavilion. File:Pabellón Suecia.jpg|Swedish Pavilion. File:Pabellón Yugoslavia.jpg|Serbian, Croat and Slovene Pavilion.
Private pavilions . . •
Pavilion of the Barcelona Bank Savings and Pensions: located on Paseo de Santa Madrona, this was designed by Josep Maria Ribas i Casas and Manuel Maria Mayol. Eclectic in style, it presents structural solutions based on various different styles: the central section was inspired by Spanish palacial architecture of the 18th century, while the lateral parts are based on civil architecture of northern Italy and the
loggias are reminiscent of 19th century tastes in Mediterranean villas. Because of its raised location, terraces with illuminated fountains were located at its entrance. Since 1982 it has been the headquarters of the Cartographic Institute of Catalonia. •
Pavilion of the Compañía General de Tabacos de Filipinas: located on Paseo de Santa Madrona, it was designed by Antoni Darder and constructed in 1928. The building is U-shaped, surrounded by gardens, and has a tower to one side and an octagonal dome over its central section. Darder followed the "art deco" style which was popular in the 1920s, with an intelligent distribution of internal space and a playful use of exterior volume. In 1932 it became the Forestier Municipal Kindergarten. •
Can Jorba: the commercial company Jorba was presented in Can ("house of" in
Catalan) Jorba, a small structure in the shape of the
Eiffel Tower with the initials of the sponsoring brand built in: the J at the top and the A at the base of the tower. •
Pavilion of the Hydrographic Confederation of Ebro: designed by Regino Borobio, this was one of the few Spanish buildings in an avant-garde style, being a building in the shape of a horizontal box with a tall signal tower. •
Pavilion of the Hispano-Suiza Company: designed by Eusebi Bona, it was located in the viewpoint opposite the Palau Nacional. • '''Artists' Gathering Pavilion''': designed by Jaume Mestres i Fossas, its objective was to present the works of various Catalan artists who were not represented in the official section, for which reason it coexisted in private form. The building, in an art deco style, was octagonal with a stepped dome, while the interior distribution of space and decoration were rationalist in style, one of the few national examples of avant-garde type. Participating artists included
Pablo Gargallo, Josep Granyer, Josep Llorens i Artigas, Lluís Mercadé, Josep de Togores, Josep Obiols, Miquel Soldevila, Jaume Mercadé, etc., displaying paintings, sculpture, ceramics, furniture, jewellery,
enamel,
woven rugs and other works of art, most of which fell within the sphere of art deco. == Other buildings ==