Barcelona's map, EXPLAINED

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 25 июн 2024
  • Broaden your understanding of the world. Try Ground News today and get 40% off your subscription by going to ground.news/BrightTrip
    Beautiful travel guides - brighttrip.com/
    FOLLOW ON SOCIAL
    Bright Trip Newsletter: mailchi.mp/brighttrip.com/sig...
    Bright Trip on IG: / bright.trip
    Bright Trip on Pinterest: / brighttriptravel
    Bright Trip on Facebook: / brighttripteam
    Bright Trip on Twitter: / trip_bright
    ABOUT BRIGHT TRIP
    Bright Trip creates video-based travel courses to help you travel smarter. From our location courses that visually demystify places like Tokyo, London, Costa Rica, or Cape Town to our skills courses that cover how to travel solo, with kids, or how to document your travels more effectively and efficiently - each course is created by real travelers, like you, and aims to create a community of curious travelers that are eager to travel smarter.
    For business inquiries: Partnerships@BrightTrip.com
    CREDITS
    Executive Producer: Andrew McGarrity
    Video: Driaan Louw
    Music: MusicBed
    www.musicbed.com/

Комментарии • 307

  • @BrightTripTravel
    @BrightTripTravel  2 месяца назад +12

    Compare news coverage. Spot media bias. Avoid algorithms. Try Ground News today and get 40% off your subscription by going to ground.news/BrightTrip

  • @cassioiks
    @cassioiks 2 месяца назад +430

    0:56 you got the rivers inverted there.

    • @jackguerra1716
      @jackguerra1716 2 месяца назад +3

      yup

    • @CineSoar
      @CineSoar 2 месяца назад +12

      @14:18 that would be the Mediterranean sea, not the ocean.

    • @MichalBrat
      @MichalBrat 2 месяца назад +1

      Thanks, now it makes sense! I was wondering how can I remember seeing Besos Mar if it is so far from the city center :-)

    • @25566
      @25566 6 дней назад +1

      Thank god I thought it was weird to have "hospitalet de Llobregat" near a river that wasn't Llobregat 😂

  • @paquitopix
    @paquitopix Месяц назад +62

    In my opinion, you missed one of the most curious things about Cerda's urbanistic plan. Avinguda del Paral·lel is aligned to the Earth's parallel lines and Avinguda Meridiana is aligned to the Earth's meridians. Extending two imaginary lines along those two avenues, they would intercept each other with a perfect 90º angle, right over the old Barcelona lighthouse from 1772 called Torre del Rellotge (The clock tower) at the port by the seaside. 🤓🤓
    This distribution makes the whole thing make much more sense. Opposite to the classical Nort-South orientation in most North American cities, in Barcelona, thanks to Cerda's geniality, every side of every block receives direct sunlight at some point during the day. This is absolutely genius. 👏👏👏👏👏

    • @davidfrigolatubert7621
      @davidfrigolatubert7621 6 дней назад

      But is that alignment of city blocks on purpose, or is it a consequence of the natural axes of the city being sea-mountain and besos-llobregat rather than N-S and E-W?

  • @rogerfernandezescude3431
    @rogerfernandezescude3431 2 месяца назад +166

    I'm from Barcelona. And, as many other comments, I must say your video is very, very accurate. Great video! Yes, there are minor (very minor) mistakes, but, mate, the work you've done is great! Thanks. And also, thanks for trying to keep the real catalan names of everything. Again, congratulations

    • @ptt95
      @ptt95 3 дня назад +2

      I'm also from Barcelona. I was impressed with the overview of the post 1714 repression. I have seen a lot of videos about Barcelona and Spain from non Spaniards, and most of them reach the whole Catalonia vs Spain issue and try to approach it in an impartial, just factual, way. They never succeed. I guess the current, easily available public information is too partisan to any of the two sides to be able to get a quick impartial understanding.
      This video however, did an amazing job of explaining the relevant information in a factual way and avoiding entering in the irrelevant (for the video topic) "drama".

    • @adrianredodo
      @adrianredodo 2 часа назад

      Say the same. Great video, fellows!

  • @jaumeroca9612
    @jaumeroca9612 13 дней назад +5

    I'm for Barcelona, I LOVE how much you respect places explained in yours videos. From the accuracy to the fact of saying names in the original language. Great video man!

  • @as3131985
    @as3131985 4 дня назад +2

    Born& raised by St.Antoni here! LOVED the video and the accuracy. I always tell visitors about the geniality of Cerdà's planning and how all the different neighborhoods wherebefore independent villages. Also, how the left party has been trying to get back to Cerdà's green areas idea and how beautifully this is modifying the city. Unfortunately I think we went a bit too crazy with tourism and it's complicating things for us locals, but guess u can't have it all. Thanks for making it!

  • @pjordi
    @pjordi 2 месяца назад +82

    Fabulous video, very well done and explained! At 0:51 min, the rivers are the other way round. West Llobregat, east Besòs.

    • @BrightTripTravel
      @BrightTripTravel  2 месяца назад +13

      Great piece of info, thank you!

    • @cassioiks
      @cassioiks 2 месяца назад +5

      @@BrightTripTravel Do you plan to fix that? Don't get me wrong, the video is perfect, one of the best I've seen in all youtube. But this little thing taints it a little.

    • @NikitaHilko
      @NikitaHilko 2 месяца назад +1

      Also noticed that the river names are misplaced. Anyway loved the video too

    • @DrPepperone
      @DrPepperone 2 месяца назад +5

      @@cassioiks unfortunately, fixing and reposting videos on youtube is a suicide in terms of views and engagement. Blame the game, not the player :(

    • @jordi6795
      @jordi6795 2 месяца назад +1

      @@DrPepperone YT should have an option of allowing the temporary edition of a video within a short period of time (a week or two as much) and minor corrections (to avoid a misuse of that function), in order to correct this minor mistakes without affecting the views and engagement...😅

  • @carbo73
    @carbo73 2 месяца назад +41

    you got the rivers wrong at 0:55. They are one each other's place. But apart from that, as a Catalan I find most of your historic and urban elements very well explained.

  • @marnusjansevanvuuren2442
    @marnusjansevanvuuren2442 2 месяца назад +11

    I've watched so many videos about Barcelona's history (I visited a year ago and fell completely in love with the city), but I've never heard them narrated by a South African accent. Very comforting.

  • @Merovingi
    @Merovingi Месяц назад +3

    Great video, I just want to add a minor detail. As you perfectly said, Avinguda del Paralel is called that way because it runs parallel to the equator (from east to west) like the parallel lines of a globe. In the same way, Avinguda Meridiana is called that way because it goes perfectly from north to south like the same globe meridians.

  • @DrPepperone
    @DrPepperone 2 месяца назад +43

    As a resident of Barcelona, this is the most comprehensive, engaging and concise history of the city I've seen. Thank you!

  • @oriolpujolmartinez7268
    @oriolpujolmartinez7268 2 месяца назад +42

    I know for a fact that you did an amazing research for this video. Accurate information and great maps you have to dig in archives to find in goog quality. As a catalan and barcelonian, thank you.
    By the way, you live in my dream house with those views to Montserrat, a sacred and magic mountain for many catalans.

  • @strongbad635
    @strongbad635 2 месяца назад +13

    Barcelona was where my husband and I went for our honeymoon, and I can't think of a better city to spend a week!

  • @pizzaipinya2442
    @pizzaipinya2442 2 месяца назад +17

    A part from the minor river swapping error, the video is really good, great job!

  • @dave-ul9dy
    @dave-ul9dy 2 месяца назад +7

    Great video!
    One critical change for the city that the Olympics brought was the construction of "Rondas", Ronda de Dalt and Ronda Litoral. 2 "urban highways" at the edges of the city (Dalt on the mountain neighborhoods, Litoral at the sea) limited to 80km/h which massively improved mobility.

  • @rawiro
    @rawiro 2 месяца назад +1

    absolutely insane video, i now love barcelona even more

  • @zenozeno8655
    @zenozeno8655 2 месяца назад +1

    Fantastic! That's what I call a good informative video. Pointing on a map different locations and then immediately supporting your explanations with real image (pictures) of those locations can make anyone understand what you're talking about.

  • @elgofre5504
    @elgofre5504 2 месяца назад +70

    As a person from Barcelona I love this video! But at 6:40, the map shows the territories of the Crown of Aragon, which were the Principality of Catalonia, and the kingdoms of Aragon, Valencia and Mallorca. By 1653, Spain was already formed. Many People considers that Spain was formed when the king Ferdinand II of the Crown of Aragon and the queen Isabella I of Castile married in 1469 (Catholics Monarchs). The 2 crowns, had their own laws and worked practically as different states. Basically Spain was a decentralized state. But when the Succession War began, Catalonians decided to support the Habsburgs because of Philip V's ideas of centralization of Spain. When Catalonia was abandoned by its Allies and lost the war, Philip V retired all privileges Catalonia had and they punished them with things like, as you mentioned, construction limitations

    • @sergiobasilio8098
      @sergiobasilio8098 2 месяца назад +8

      He explains that Aragón and Catunya were two completely separated regions, but to not mention the fact that were part of the same crown is a huge mistake.

    • @01RAMONATOR
      @01RAMONATOR 2 месяца назад +15

      ​@@sergiobasilio8098it's not a mistake , Catalunya until 1714, was inside the Aragón Crown...but with full self goverment

    • @c.n.i7105
      @c.n.i7105 2 месяца назад

      @@01RAMONATOR Is that so? I believed that those sort of Kingdoms had Councils and such, but that they did respond to Aragon's monarch

    • @zurikoalablanco1074
      @zurikoalablanco1074 2 месяца назад +3

      That was just a marriage and a political alliance, but Castile and Aragon where two different crowns with their own institutions. Spain appears later, it's difficult to determine when though. I like to think it officially starts in 1833, whit the readministration of the territories and the creation of provinces, abolishing the different institutions and kingdoms inside

    • @01RAMONATOR
      @01RAMONATOR 2 месяца назад +5

      @@c.n.i7105 Catalunya, Valéncia and Mallorca was kingdoms (Principat in Catalunya case), with full independence inside de Aragon, Crown,

  • @michaelgourlay1746
    @michaelgourlay1746 2 месяца назад +1

    Excellent information. Keep these coming.

  • @jimsteinberg9291
    @jimsteinberg9291 2 месяца назад +5

    Thx for this excellent visual explanation of Barcelona’s growth. Outstanding insights not available in one cohesive, concise narrative anywhere else

  • @OENGERAGENCY
    @OENGERAGENCY 2 месяца назад

    Wow. Visited Barcelona last year and now, thanks to this video, a lot of things we noticed finally fall into place.
    Amazing video!

  • @okgrorkultiv5356
    @okgrorkultiv5356 2 месяца назад

    Great video! It's incredible how much history there's in every detail and every part of the city!

  • @fatimaalariki7444
    @fatimaalariki7444 28 дней назад

    Loved it! Thanks for you work!

  • @alexloopdesign
    @alexloopdesign 4 дня назад +1

    I am from Barcelona. And i have to congratulate you. Great explaining. Just one mistake: you confused Besós and Llobregat position as you swap it... the rest perfect!

  • @elenadelapena9197
    @elenadelapena9197 2 месяца назад +1

    Congrats! as from someone born and bred in Barcelona, I really enjoyed this video

  • @oscaralbalate7933
    @oscaralbalate7933 23 дня назад +1

    Amazing video! Very accurate and well explained, coming from a barcelona local :)

  • @CesarGarciaJara
    @CesarGarciaJara 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks a lot for a great video.

  • @zarbajamon3818
    @zarbajamon3818 2 месяца назад +1

    As a Barcelonan I can only say congratulations on an amazing job 👏 I learnt from this video things about my city which i did not expect, subscribed, thank you for this!

  • @eddaines237
    @eddaines237 Месяц назад +1

    Good effort! A few minor glitches but one of the best concise timelines I’ve seen of this fantastic city.

  • @FedericoGonzalezSela
    @FedericoGonzalezSela Месяц назад

    great work mate ! super detailed and quite accurate

  • @bernattrro
    @bernattrro 2 месяца назад +6

    As a catalan, thanks to explain really well the story of the map of our capital :)

  • @jvives1615
    @jvives1615 Месяц назад

    Lovely video, and accurate information. Thanks!

  • @sergio1567
    @sergio1567 Месяц назад +1

    Being from Barcelona, must say this is such a well made video! Thank you!

  • @Dankkrg
    @Dankkrg 2 месяца назад

    Amazing work, you explain it like a true local

  • @xavierrodriguezmoreno4870
    @xavierrodriguezmoreno4870 2 часа назад

    Im from Barcelona thank you for this amazing and detalied story of my city, thanks

  • @Pallacus
    @Pallacus Месяц назад

    Congratulations. You explained it very well.

  • @BGTuyau
    @BGTuyau 2 месяца назад

    Fascinating video about the development of a fascinating city. Tons of research well-presented. I love the place. Gracias Mil ...

  • @ensapra
    @ensapra 48 минут назад

    I just learned so much my own city! Moltes gracies!

  • @hockysa
    @hockysa 10 часов назад

    this was a really informative video. been living here a year or so and was wondering about this.

  • @marw08
    @marw08 2 месяца назад +23

    Well…home to Picasso,…he lived there for some years but was Born and raised in Malaga (Andalucía) and lived most of his adult life in Paris.

  • @milyrouge
    @milyrouge Месяц назад +1

    Great video! I'm a Barcelona resident (well, a bit up the coast now) and appreciated the effort you put into this. I look forward to watching your other videos!

  • @timothybmonahan
    @timothybmonahan 17 дней назад

    Thia is fascinating, thoughtful and scholarly presented. I am researching the city for my upcoming visit and this is a fantastic intro to the history and the growth of the city.

  • @hectorquinones5579
    @hectorquinones5579 2 месяца назад

    Amazing video!

  • @guillembetetatorres7025
    @guillembetetatorres7025 2 месяца назад +18

    Thanks for being so respectful with the catalan society and their history across Barcelona, as well as for the research about the composition of the city. It has been a really enjoyable pleasure to see the video. Good job.

  • @alanthomas3236
    @alanthomas3236 Месяц назад

    what a high quality & informative video - thank you!!

  • @pedro01f
    @pedro01f 23 дня назад

    Nice video!

  • @eleneeristavi7051
    @eleneeristavi7051 Месяц назад

    Great video, thanks, and I must say, it’s the first time I really got interested in the company sponsoring the video and I’m very impressed by what they’ve created❤️✊🏻

  • @fernandocortess
    @fernandocortess 2 дня назад

    Amazing video

  • @cocazade7703
    @cocazade7703 2 месяца назад

    Super interesting and well done video

  • @Jorditrullenpla
    @Jorditrullenpla 2 месяца назад +8

    LLobregat and besos rivers are swapped in the map

  • @g0mium
    @g0mium Месяц назад +1

    I learnt more from your video than from all the years i lived in barcelona.

  • @ericmoreno1640
    @ericmoreno1640 Месяц назад +1

    I am Spanish and Catalan and I learned more about our history in this video than in school.

  • @chico847
    @chico847 Месяц назад

    Fantastic breakdown! It's fascinating how some locations maintain the essence of their original purposes, despite their transformations over time. Places like La Rambla often leave a peculiar aftertaste if you linger too long, and Plaça Espanya has a similar vibe. It’s also intriguing to witness Barcelona embracing Ildefons Cerdà’s visionary urban plan. It’s great to see such recognition for a true mastermind in city planning.

  • @joanpinyol7821
    @joanpinyol7821 2 месяца назад

    great video!

  • @victormanjarinsala2253
    @victormanjarinsala2253 Месяц назад

    Fantastic video, very well explained and mostly accurate :)) Here's some engagement for the algorithm!!

  • @gova8557
    @gova8557 2 месяца назад

    Man! I'm from Barcelona and you nailed it!!

  • @caminandobcn
    @caminandobcn Месяц назад

    Fantastic video

  • @AdriaFlores
    @AdriaFlores 2 месяца назад

    Amazing video.

  • @luisortizgervasi3820
    @luisortizgervasi3820 16 дней назад

    An excellent summary of the urbanistic history of Barcelona. Very accurate, except for the names of the rivers at the beginning of the video 👏👏👏

  • @samkelocele19
    @samkelocele19 2 месяца назад

    The way u explain this city, it amazing
    New cities around the world should look at barcelona plan. 😊

  • @blaifornsigarcia6830
    @blaifornsigarcia6830 2 месяца назад +9

    As a catalan, i gotta say thay you almost made no mistakes. I love to see you trying to include catalan ❤

  • @Gonnygbs
    @Gonnygbs 2 месяца назад +1

    Great video! Earned a gold star by acknowledging your mistake at 13:53

  • @alvarogulsanchico9429
    @alvarogulsanchico9429 2 месяца назад

    You've done a remarkable job, a few mistakes, but still very accurate and greatly done. You should be proud:)

  • @HistoriaExpress_
    @HistoriaExpress_ Месяц назад

    Although I lived in Barcelona for almost 8 years, I did not know about a lot of interesting things about the past. Thanks for the interesting video.

  • @bjarnemcdonald6333
    @bjarnemcdonald6333 2 месяца назад +1

    Also iconic camerawork from the olympic - A lot of sports were filmed with either art or architecture in the background. Segrada Familia was in all pictures from the diving competition.

  • @tonip3598
    @tonip3598 Месяц назад +4

    Increíble, un resum increíble. Tota una feinada, company.
    Gràcies, i felicitats per la bona feina.
    Amazing work here, pal.
    Keep the good work.
    Surely, this will help lots of people who just came to the city looking for paella... There are so many places to see.
    All the cities have a long history to be told, thank you for condensing such long history of my city, so beautifully, in less than 20 minutes.
    A million thanks, company.

  • @edwardmatson6773
    @edwardmatson6773 2 месяца назад

    Thanks!

  • @danielbarreiro8228
    @danielbarreiro8228 2 месяца назад +1

    An excellent and comprehensive overview of the city, few foreigners get so much right. Allow me to add a few details.
    - As pointed out elsewhere, the labels on the rivers, the Besos and Llobregat are inverted.
    - Besides the Parallel running, well, parallel to the Equator, the Meridiana runs perfectly north to south, over an Earth's meridian, hence its name. They were meant to converge on the Port Vell, where the historic clock tower is, but by practical reasons, it misses by a few feet.
    - The very slim city blocks of the Barceloneta are meant to provide everyone with light an air. This, as you well point out, was better achieved by Cerdá's plan with the hollow city blocks in the Eixample.
    - BTW, the inside of those blocks are not 'mainly' parking space. There were not many cars when the Plan Cerdá was being mended, they could park in the sidewalk all right, no need for dedicated parking space. What they were destined for was for commercial space. The many stores you see in the Eixample stretch well into the center of the block, providing lots of rental income to the landowners. Some of those commercial spaces were converted to parking, but that was a later adaptation, it was not by design. The roof over the back of the commercial spaces becomes the terrace for the high-end apartments above the store. Notice that at the time, lower floors were better priced than higher ones.
    - You forgot to mention along the main avenues the Passeig de Gracia, which is Barcelona's equivalent to the Parisian Avenue des Champs-Élysées, with many of the same high-end brands on it. It was the connection from the old town to the town of Gracia, hence its name.
    - Via Laietana was in no one's plans. It was a later addition because both the Eixample and the port grew a lot, and they needed a connection, thus, needs must. The most significant houses in its way were not demolished but dismantled and re-assembled within the Gothic Quarter, in the area between the Cathedral and Sant Jaume.

    • @pizzaipinya2442
      @pizzaipinya2442 2 месяца назад +1

      Great comment and extra info! But you're a bit wrong on the last point. Via Laietana was part of Cerdà's plan, along with a horizontal street cutting all Ciutat Vella and another vertical one cutting through el Raval (those 2 were never built).
      But yeah, you're right in that it was left aside and recovered later on (1907-1908) because of what you already pointed out :)

  • @ctalcantara1700
    @ctalcantara1700 2 месяца назад +26

    Barcelona is truly a magnificent city.

  • @urshack1992
    @urshack1992 Месяц назад

    awesome

  • @srsaquet4787
    @srsaquet4787 2 месяца назад

    Awesome video! As an engineer from Barcelona, I believe you really explained the citt in the besg way possible.

  • @hughfergusson9544
    @hughfergusson9544 2 месяца назад

    Hard flex to have table mountain in the background of the Ad. Cape Town for the win!

  • @elenamartinezgonzalez2846
    @elenamartinezgonzalez2846 24 дня назад

    To add a bit more to this great video, "ramblas" refer to dry riverbeds that temporarily fill with water after heavy rainfalls. In urban settings, these have been transformed into broad promenades. So, it is not a concept unique to Barcelona; other places, such as Alicante, also have ramblas. Loved the concent!

  • @61jojo61
    @61jojo61 2 месяца назад +1

    Bon vídeo, bona feina.

  • @AlexTrull
    @AlexTrull День назад +1

    TL/DR they're still quite rebellious. Nice shot of table mountain from your balcony :-)

  • @yonibenitah6325
    @yonibenitah6325 2 месяца назад +1

    "Bullet shaped skyscraper ..." you handle euphemism well

  • @VictorAutonell
    @VictorAutonell 2 месяца назад +1

    @brighttriptravel
    you got the two rivers at the start confused -- llobregat is on the left, and Besos, to the right, ;)
    Great facts!!! Really enjoyed watching this.

  • @phillipmcgough6282
    @phillipmcgough6282 2 месяца назад +1

    i LOVED this. thank you. You did not explain what Eixample meant, but i looked it up lol!

    • @01RAMONATOR
      @01RAMONATOR 2 месяца назад +1

      Eixample means extension...or new suburb

  • @charlielikeswaffles
    @charlielikeswaffles 2 месяца назад

    Its funny watching this being there rn

  •  17 дней назад

    Home ❤

  • @sendark001
    @sendark001 Месяц назад

    omg love the way you used the catalan independence "plight" to segway into your sponsor video. Pure Capitalist Realism. Just for that i'm subscribing.

  • @Admm744
    @Admm744 2 месяца назад

    Oooo do Casablanca next please🇲🇦

  • @shegua
    @shegua 2 месяца назад +15

    Some of yall should clean your ears out. He said the city was/is home to those people, he didn’t say they where born there. Shut up about it everyone knows Messi is from Argentina and Picasso was from Málaga.

  • @BMCOmotors
    @BMCOmotors Месяц назад

    Impressive, thanks for treating us with such respect!

  • @srijanpandey1172
    @srijanpandey1172 2 месяца назад

    Could you perhaps try a 'New Delhi's Map, EXPLAINED' video? The octagonal plan of the central city looks interesting and i would love to learn more about its history

  • @fancimaski
    @fancimaski 4 дня назад +1

    the beSos river being pronounced as Bezos is insane 😭

  • @buff_lucio_boop
    @buff_lucio_boop 2 месяца назад

    Not the last bullfighting arena. Just one of them, but cool video and generally accurate

  • @frozen_peas
    @frozen_peas Месяц назад

    0:51 the rivers are flipped, Llobregat is in the south(left) and Besòs in the north(right)

  • @cedricklyon
    @cedricklyon 4 дня назад

    super intéressant !
    00:55 : mistake : Rivers are inverted

  • @oriolandres1085
    @oriolandres1085 2 месяца назад

    Congratulations for the video. It's excellent and pretty accurate. Only there's a real mistake at 0:55 about the two rivers near the city

  • @yuberini
    @yuberini Месяц назад

    0:54 They are changed, Besos is to the right and Llobregat to the left

  • @S-a-t-u-r-n
    @S-a-t-u-r-n 2 месяца назад

    Great work! But I am kinda surprised that you haven't mentioned about Hippodamus of Miletus, basically whole reason behind "grids"

  • @emilandersenaudio
    @emilandersenaudio 2 месяца назад +1

    Bullet shaped skyscraper. Nice way of putting it 😝

  • @jordicorfont
    @jordicorfont 25 дней назад +3

    Fun Fact: Eixample means to widen in catalan. So Barri de l'Eixample is the widening quarter

  • @neptunusatalanta2330
    @neptunusatalanta2330 2 месяца назад

    Nice video! Shame this channel does not get more views...

  • @peterking8085
    @peterking8085 14 дней назад

    "It's the only avenue that runs parallel to the equator" it's also the only 90 degree angle in the entire country

  • @polarbear3940
    @polarbear3940 2 месяца назад

    Do beirut next pls

  • @user-wb2jm8vm8g
    @user-wb2jm8vm8g 2 месяца назад

    4:19 is that in canary islands? i would love you to do a video about urbanism there. Great video!

  • @ferranportaa
    @ferranportaa Месяц назад

    There are a couple minor mistakes which do not cast a shadow on the accuracy of your presentation. You did a very good and interesting job. 👍

  • @carlotacorbella7305
    @carlotacorbella7305 20 дней назад

    The plan of Ildefons Cerdà was not approved by the Central Government! They actually wanted Antoni Rovira i Trias’s plan to keep Catalan population “under control,” as it was easier with one or two central loci than with an equalitarian neighborhood structure. Also, buildings structures proposed by Cerdà were much more spacious than they currently are.