Although there are several styles of construction, this cathedral is basically a Gothic building, a cruciform plan with transepts north and south, and a crossing covered by an octagonal tower (), with an
ambulatory and a polygonal
apse. This cathedral was begun at the end of the 13th century (1270–1300) at the same time as the
mosque was being demolished. The first part to be finished was the ambulatory with its eight radiating chapels, and the Almoina Romanesque gate. Between 1300 and 1350 the crossing was finished and its west side went up as far as the Baroque Apostles' Gate. Three out of the four sections of the naves and transepts were also built. The crossing tower ('''' or eight-sided dome) was also begun. The old
chapter house (today Holy Grail Chapel, 1356–1369), where the canons met to discuss internal affairs, and the
Miguelete Tower, known as El Miguelete in
Castilian Spanish or Torre del Micalet in the
Valencian language, were initially separate from the rest of the church, but in 1459 the architects
Francesc Baldomar and
Pere Compte expanded the nave and transepts in a further section, known as
Arcada Nova, and finally joined both the chapter house and the Micalet with the rest of the cathedral, thereby attaining in length and in width. The centuries of the
Renaissance (15th–16th centuries) had little influence on the architecture of the cathedral but much more on its pictorial decoration, such as the one at the high altar, and sculptural decoration, such as the one in the Resurrection chapel. During the
Baroque period, the German
Konrad Rudolf designed in 1703 the main door of the cathedral, known as the
Iron gate due to the cast-iron fence that surrounds it. Because of the
War of the Spanish Succession he could not finish it, and this task fell mainly to the sculptors
Francisco Vergara and
Ignacio Vergara. Its concave shape, which causes a unique and studied perspective effect, was distorted during the 20th century because of the demolition of some adjacent buildings (in what was formerly Saragossa Street) to expand the square (
Plaza de la Reina). A project to renew the building was launched during the last third of the 18th century, whose intention was to give a uniform neoclassical appearance to the church, different from the original Gothic style that was then considered a vulgar work in comparison. Works started in 1774, directed by the architect
Antoni Gilabert Fornés. The reshuffle affected both constructive and ornamental elements: the
pinnacles were removed outside, and the Gothic structure was masked by stucco and other pseudo-classical elements. In 1931 the church was declared a historic and artistic landmark by the Spanish government, but during the
Spanish Civil War it was burned, which meant that it lost part of its decorative elements. The
choir, located in the central part, was dismantled in 1940 and moved to the bottom of the high altar. Also in 1970, the Houses of Canons, a building attached to the chapels facing
Micalet street, were demolished to give the cathedral back its previous appearance, and at the same time elements of little or no architectural value were removed. The task of removing the Neoclassical elements in order to recover the original Gothic aspect was undertaken in 1972. The only Neoclassical elements spared were most of the ambulatory chapels, and some isolated elements such as the sculptures at the base of the dome (''''). After several restorations, the cathedral is currently in a good state of preservation, especially after the exhibition of 1999 named
The Image’s Light. It was once again declared a cultural landmark, this time by the regional Valencian government (Consell de la Generalitat Valenciana). == Relics ==