Barcelona is an art-lover’s dream, in no small part thanks to Antoni Gaudí, one of Catalonia’s most famous artists of Modernism. He is known for creating many sites in Barcelona, most notably the unfinished Sagrada Familia. While construction is still in progress for the cathedral, there actually remains another somewhat unfinished project of Gaudí. Surprisingly, this is Park Güell, one of the most well-known and awe-inspiring parks in the world, and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. When long-time friend Eusebi Güell commissioned Gaudi to create Park Güell in 1899, he intended it to be a residential neighborhood with beautiful gardens, inspired by English Garden Cities, hence the English spelling of park in Park Güell. This project failed however due to poor location and unpopular leasing contracts, and construction stopped in 1914 on the onset of WWI. Only two houses of the intended sixty were built. After Eusebi Güell’s death in 1918, his heirs decided to sell the unfinished project to the city of Barcelona, and it opened in 1926 as a public park.