
This episode looks at the Sagrada Família — currently in its 144th year of construction — and what it means that a building has been continuously built across generations, with full completion not expected until the early 2030s.There's a surprising detail at the center of it: the construction isn't funded by the Spanish government or the city of Barcelona, but by ticket sales, donations, and merchandise. When tourism fell during the pandemic, construction slowed. In that sense, it's a crowdfunding campaign that has been running since 1882.It touches on the contrast between the Apollo program — massive institutional funding, a hard deadline, a goal achieved within a decade — and a cathedral that has outlasted every person who ever worked on it, with contributors for most of its history giving money toward something they knew they'd never see finished.There's also a quiet observation about the LEGO lunar rover sitting nearby, and how both projects, as different as they are, involve building something larger than any single lifetime.A small reflection on whether it's only finished things that move us — or whether there's something particular about the act of continuing, year after year, that pulls at something deeper.
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