Barcelona
has boomed
since
the
early
1990s,
when
preparations
for the
Olympic
Games
wrenched
it into
modernity,
and
today it
remains
well in
the
vanguard
of other
Spanish
cities (with
the
possible
exception
of
Madrid)
in terms
of
prosperity,
stability
and
cultural
activity.
It's a
confident,
progressive
city,
looking
towards
the rest
of
Europe
for its
inspiration
and its
innovations
- the
classic
tourist
images
of Spain
seem
firmly
out of
place in
Barcelona's
bustling
central
boulevards
and
stylish
modern
streets.
And
style is
what
brings
many
visitors
here,
attracted
by
enthusiastic
newspaper
and
magazine
articles
which
make
much of
the
outrageous
architecture,
user-friendly
city
design,
agreeable
climate
and
frenetic
nightlife.
Even the
medieval
Gothic
quarter
and its
once-notorious
red-light
area
have
been
swept up
by the
citywide
renovation
programme,
which is
still
running
at full
tilt. As
the new
millennium
starts
Barcelona
has
continued
to
blossom
from
provincial
city to
putative
European
capital.
It's
no
accident
that the
city's
current
development
outstrips
most of
the rest
of Spain.
With the
return
to
democracy
following
the
death of
Franco,
the
various
Spanish
regions
were
allowed
to
consolidate
their
cultural
identities
through
varying
degrees
of
political
control
over
their
own
affairs.
Catalunya
(Catalonia
in
English),
of which
Barcelona
is the
capital,
has an
historical
identity
going
back as
far as
the
ninth
century,
when the
first
independent
County
of
Barcelona
was
established,
and
through
the long
period
of
domination
by
Castile,
and even
during
the
Franco
dictatorship
when a
policy
of
cultural
suppression
was
pursued,
it
proved
impossible
to
stifle
Catalan
ethnicity.
In
Barcelona
itself,
this
regionalism
is
complemented
by a
strong
socialist
tradition
- the
city was
a
bastion
of the
Republican
cause
during
the
Civil
War,
holding
out
against
Franco
until
January
1939,
and
remained
the
scene of
protests
and
demonstrations
throughout
the
dictatorship.
As a
result
of this
urge to
retain
its own
identity,
Barcelona
has long
had the
reputation
of being
at the
forefront
of
Spanish
political
activism
and of
radical
design
and
architecture,
but
these
cultural
distinctions
are
rapidly
becoming
secondary
to the
city's
position
as one
of the
most
dynamic
and
prosperous
commercial
centres
in the
country.
As the
money
(much of
it from
the EU)
continues
to pour
in, the
economic
transformation
of a
city
deprived
under
Franco,
continues
at a
remarkable
pace:
entire
districts,
from the
harbour
to the
suburbs,
have
been
replanned
and
rebuilt;
historic
buildings
and
museums
have
been
given
face-lifts;
and
roads
and
communications
have
been
upgraded.
In part,
this
progress
is due
to the
huge
psychological
shove
that the
granting
of the
1992
Olympics
gave to
Barcelona.
When the
Games
had
finished,
the city
was left
with an
entirely
new
harbour
development
containing
the
futuristic
Olympic
Village.
And
along
with a
construction
programme
that
touched
every
corner
of the
city,
went the
indisputable
knowledge
that
these
had been
Barcelona's
Olympics,
and not
Spain's
- an
important
distinction
to the
Catalan
people,
who,
bolstered
by the
gradual
integration
of
immigrants
from
other
parts of
Spain,
endow
the city
with a
character
distinct
from
Spain's
other
regional
capitals.
Since
1992,
the
developments
have
continued
unabated;
indeed
Barcelona's
drive
for
self-improvement
and
self-promotion
seems to
know no
bounds.
The
commercial
port
continues
to
expand,
and is
now
dominated
by a
futuristic
World
Trade
Center
set in
the
central
harbour,
while
the
airport
is given
a new
runway
and the
city
anxiously
awaits
the
arrival
of a
high-speed
train
(AVE)
line.
There's
a pride
in the
city
which is
expressed
in a
remarkable
cultural
energy,
seen
most
perfectly
in the
glorious
modernista
(Art
Nouveau)
architecture
that
studs
the
city's
streets
and
avenues.
Antoni
Gaudí is
the most
famous
of those
who have
left
their
mark on
Barcelona
in this
way: his
Sagrada
Família
church
is
rightly
revered,
but just
as
fascinating
are the
(literally)
fantastic
houses
and
apartment
buildings
that he
and his
contemporaries
designed.
In
art
, too,
the city
boasts a
stupendous
legacy,
from
important
Romanesque
and
Gothic
works to
major
galleries
containing
the
life's
work of
the
Catalan
artists
Joan
Miró and
Antoni
Tàpies,
and -
perhaps
the
greatest
draw of
all - a
representative
collection
of the
work of
Pablo
Picasso.
For
all its
go-ahead
feel,
though,
Barcelona
does
still
have its
problems
. A
traditionally
homogeneous
society,
accustomed
to
Spanish
emigration,
has been
changed
forever
by the
arrival
of large
numbers
of
immigrants
from
Asia,
Africa
and
South
America,
many of
whom
enter
illegally,
looking
to grab
a share
of the
city's
economic
success.
Partly
as a
consequence
of this,
the
petty
crime
rate has
rocketed,
and
tourists
must
take
precautions
when
visiting
the
city,
and
despite
the work
done on
the
infrastructure,
there is
still a
lot to
do.
There's
also a
growing
gap
between
rich and
poor,
and one
repercussion
of the
gentrification
of
poorer
districts
is that
the
original
dwellers
are
being
priced
out -
real
estate
speculation
has led
to a
curious
situation
wherein
the
city, in
the
midst of
an acute
housing
crisis,
has tens
of
thousands
of empty
apartments
which
are not
on the
market.
There's
a
problem,
too, in
Barcelona's
relationship
with the
rest of
Catalunya.
More
than
half the
region's
inhabitants
live in
the city
and its
surroundings,
creating
an
uneasy
imbalance
that
becomes
clear if
you
travel
through
the
depopulated
inland
and
mountain
areas,
and
which is
most
obvious
in the
political
sphere -
Catalunya
is
conservative
and
regionalist,
Barcelona
is
socialist
and
nationalist.
At times
the city
has
prospered
at the
expense
of the
rest of
Catalunya,
and
though
there
are
pockets
of
wealth
and
interest
- on the
coast,
in the
ski
resorts
-
there's
a
nagging
feeling
that
Barcelona
is very
much the
main
event.
It's not
a
feeling
that
holds
firm if
you do
make the
effort
to spend
time in
other
parts of
the
region,
but it
is
indicative
of the
fact
that
Barcelona,
boasting
loudly
of its
European
character
and city
style,
is in
danger
of
forgetting
its
wider
roots
and
becoming
self-absorbed
and
inward-looking