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Adhesive, the key to completing Sagrada Familia’s central towers

By staffJune 17, 20263 Mins Read
Adhesive, the key to completing Sagrada Familia’s central towers
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Published on 17/06/2026 – 14:00 GMT+2•Updated
15:41

For Antoni Gaudí, finishing the Sagrada Familia was always a question of time, not imagination. He knew exactly what the six central towers should look like. What he did not know was that, more than a century later, technology would prove him right.

The towers have now been completed, just in time for the centenary of the architect’s death. But behind this visual milestone there is a protagonist no one expects to find in a cathedral of such scale: an adhesive. Specifically, Loctite EA 9497 from Henkel (source in Spanish), the element that has made it possible for stone and steel to behave as a single material.

The challenge was enormous. The towers have been built using a modular system of prestressed stone panels, 826 in total, incorporating more than 2,100 stone elements joined to metal structures. Each panel requires around 30 kilos of adhesive. In all, 24 tonnes applied in liquid form, able to fill every cavity and secure the joint before a curing process of around 24 hours begins.

Up to 100,000 people per square metre

The result is not only aesthetic, but structural as well. The bond withstands loads equivalent to 100,000 people per square metre, the full capacity of a stadium such as Camp Nou, or the weight of 1,600 African elephants. A figure that explains why the Tower of Jesus Christ, the tallest in the complex, can support the large cross that crowns it without compromising a single millimetre of stability.

In this respect, the surroundings also matter. The basilica is just over two kilometres from the Mediterranean, exposed to constant salinity and a permanent risk of corrosion. And underground, two metro lines send constant vibrations through the entire structure.

The collaboration between Henkel and the Sagrada Familia did not start yesterday. It has been under way for more than a decade, with tests exceeding usual standards and a logistics supply chain that has had to adapt to something rare in the construction world: a project funded solely by its visitors’ contributions, with no fixed timetable or final budget.

The tallest temple in the world

The outcome of all this is already part of history. At 172.5 metres, the Sagrada Familia is now the tallest religious temple in the world, ahead of Ulm Minster in Germany.

“This project highlights how innovation and collaboration continue to drive progress,” says Adrián Orbea, president of Henkel Ibérica. The phrase, who knows, might well have been penned by Gaudí himself if he had had another century ahead of him.

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