In the blue-collar suburb of Mejorada del Campo, Spain, a 94-year-old ex-monk named Justo Gallego has been building a cathedral with his bare hands since 1961. He has no formal training as an architect, no construction permit, no endorsement by the Church, and no government fundingand yet, against all odds, he has erected a monumental temple that receives thousands of visitors each year.
The scale of the building is jaw-dropping: Picture a nave the size of two basketball courts surrounded by arcaded walkways and colorful frescoes. Portals on either side lead to two cloisters and four living quarters, presumably for monks. Twelve brick turrets tower above the roof. There are courtyards, chapels, stained glass windows, a crypt, and a cupola that reaches 130 feet. Gallego built all of this, virtually alone, brick by brick.
The thing is, its nowhere near finished. There are building materials and scrap metal everywhere, and the central dome is nothing more than a metal skeleton, exposing the interior to the elements. With Gallegos health ailing, his lifes work stands to be lost: Who, in his absence, will step up to finish the job? Will the government or Church intervene to protect the cathedral, or will it be bulldozed to make way for chain stores or shiny new condos for commuters?
The more I learned about Gallegos cathedral, the more enthralled I became. This, I thought, was a tale that needed tellingbefore it was too late. So I tracked down ngel Lpez, Gallegos right-hand man, and shot him a text to schedule an interview. His response caught me off guard: How much are you willing to donate?
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Mejorada del Campo is situated 15 miles east of Madrid. Cathedral aside, its like any other Spanish suburb built in the postwar era. Low-rise apartments spoke out from a plain central square, where kids kick soccer balls and abuelos chit-chat on park benches. Laundry dangles from clothes lines above narrow, treeless sidewalks overgrown with weeds.
Gallego was a schoolboy here when the Spanish Civil War broke out. He watched in horror as the Republican forces razed religious buildings, their ruthless acts solidifying his Christian faith from an early age. At 26, he left Mejorada to become a Cistercian monk, only to be expelled eight years later due to a bout of tuberculosis. (Its worth noting that one monk who studied with Gallego claims that he was dismissed because he fasted and worked too hard, adding that the other brothers were worried about his healthabove all, his mental health.)
Back in Mejorada, with monastic life behind him, Gallego resolved to honor God in the only other way he knew, by building. He had inherited a plot of land on the outskirts of town, and there, he decided, he would erect a temple to the Virgin Mary. People in the village thought he was insane: How could a man with so little education and so few means construct a cathedral from scratch? El loco de la catedral, they called him, convinced that hed fail.
But Gallego was undeterred. He toiled day and night, hoisting bags of concrete and hauling truckloads of assorted scraps. Long before the term sustainable construction was coined, Gallego was fashioning battlements out of hairspray canisters and archways out of industrial springs. Tomato cans, water bottles, tires, soda cansyou name it, he found a place for it. Purportedly, some 90 percent of the building materials are recycled or reused.
As Gallego worked, he prayed constantly, remained celibate, and ate a sparse vegetarian diet. The asceticism ingrained in him at the monastery never left him. He devised his building plans not through physics or mathematics but rather through visions that came to him in prayer supplemented by tips from rudimentary architecture manuals.
What slowly rose from the rubble surprised everyone. The cathedral had a whiff of Gaud to itall rounded arches, brightly painted columns, and stained glass with pagan motifs. It was a window into a rich imagination. Orbs painted in gold and cobalt led the way to the entrance. I love circles, Gallego told the Spanish news network Telecinco. It reminds me of planet Earth.
By the early 2000s, with much of the buildings framework in place, it was clear that Gallegos cathedral was no folly. People wanted to know more about the hermit builder of Mejoradahow he worked, what made him tick. Spanish reporters started showing up with camera crews, and international institutions took notice, too: MoMA highlighted the building in a 2003-2004 exhibition. More fame came in 2005 with a far-reaching commercial for the soft drink Aquarius that spotlighted the cathedral. Suddenly, Gallego was a household name in Spain.
It was around that time that Lpez (the guy who asked me to pay up) arrived on the scene. Lpez, a Mejorada native, had long been fascinated by the cathedral and, on a whim, wandered over to the construction site. Gallego promptly put him to work. Fast-forward to the present, and Lpez is Gallegos trusty sidekick, the Sancho Panza to Gallegos Don Quixote. They forged such a close bond over the years that Lpez stands to inherit Gallegos estate.
All of this I gleaned from scouring newspapers and watching old TV segments, not from speaking with Gallego face to face: Ultimately, Lpez wouldnt let me near Gallego after I refused his pay-for-play proposal. (My subsequent interview requests went unanswered.) Lpezs contrariness left a bad taste in my mouth, since pay up or shut up didnt strike me as a particularly Christian attitude. No matter, I took the R-3 freeway to Mejorada, eager to immerse myself in Gallegos fantasy world.
Churches are often the tallest buildings in small-town Spain, but Gallegos cathedral looms over Mejorada like a ragtag Notre-Dame, its naked metal spires jutting high above the one-story houses below. As I got closer, the faade came into view, a jumble of bricks of all shapes and sizes stacked willy-nilly around an enormous blue rose window. Rounded red-painted steps slicked with moss curved lazily up to the entrance, which was, happily, open.
I stepped inside behind a family of four. Nobody greeted usjust a donation box beside a sign that read, DO NOT ASK JUSTO ANYTHING. HE CANT TALK. ASK NGEL ANY QUESTIONS. Neither Gallego nor Lpez were anywhere to be found. When I looked up and around, I had to blink a few times to believe what I was seeingbeyond the sheer magnitude of the space, which echoed with every footstep, there were bizarre bits and bobs everywhere. To my right, a chapel contained spray-painted busts of the Apostles. Behind me, mauve spheres adorned an altar bearing a motley crew of idols and crucifixes hung as if in a hurry. Then I noticed odder things: a rusting water boiler, yellowed mattresses, gilded mirrors, defunct TVs...
At first I was dumbstruckits sobering to stand in such a sprawling building and realize that nearly every column, every stone, every brick, was put there by one sole person. But the more I explored, the more my admiration turned to concern. In one of the chapels, a gaggle of kids roughhoused unsupervisedmere inches from a mountain of broken glass and pointy rusted springs. Out in the cloister, a girl juggled a soccer ball beside a skein of electrical wires that passed through a puddle. In the second-story choir, I spotted a pothole-size gap in the floor covered only with chicken wire. Piles of dog shit sat decaying in the corners.
This is a fantasy land for our kids, a mother told me, gesturing toward her two boys inspecting a rock pile beneath the Disney-esque turrets. Its our third visit. When I cracked a joke about forgetting my helmet, she laughed. Its a little scary, sure, but nobodys ever gotten hurt here that I know of. Just then, a chestnut fell through the open roof onto the floor behind us. Both of us jumped.
Though the cathedral receives scores of visitors each day, its still private property under Spanish lawwhich means it doesnt have to abide by the same safety codes as, say, a public museum. In fact, the cathedral has never been formally evaluated by a surveyor and is illegal by todays standards, since no building license for the structure exists.
But Gallegos defenders maintain that such permits werent required when he broke ground in 1961, and therefore shouldnt apply today. A local official, who asked to remain anonymous, told me over the phone that Mejoradas city hall cannot prevent people from visiting the cathedral, just as it cannot prevent people from visiting anyone elses private residence in Mejorada. He added that, while the local government sees no real danger in allowing people to tour the cathedral, it would obviously be preferable that the building be adapted to current safety standards. Sadly theres no budget for such a massive undertaking.
The lack of documentationfrom blueprints to safety certifications to other necessary licensesalso precludes the cathedral from becoming, well, a cathedralor even a church, for that matter, in the eyes of the local bishopric of Alcal de Henares. Gallegos dream, that his creation be an active place of worship (as opposed to a tourist attraction), is out of reach.
If the bishopric doesnt want the cathedral and the town cant afford to modernize it, what will happen when Gallego passes? Thats up to Lpez, who has made vague promises about not allowing the cathedral to perish yet avoids the particulars of what that would entail. According to the town official, Mejorada has been in talks with a UNESCO affiliate about granting the building special status, which would ensure its survival and conservation. Whatever the cathedrals fate, Gallegos legacy will endure. This spring, he will be named Mejoradas favorite son in a first-of-its-kind ceremony celebrating his contributions to the town. In the end, el loco de la catedral will go down as a local hero.
In the cathedral, in front of the main altar, a staircase winds down to a dank, unlit crypt. Beyond a sea of cement bags, tools, and paint buckets, theres a long, deep hole cut into the earth. A modest wooden crucifix hangs above it and a shovel rests beside itthis is Gallegos grave, which he dug himself. Ever a builder, he built his way into the afterlife, too.
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One Man Spent 60 Years Building a Mysterious and Sketchy Cathedral - The Daily Beast
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