Casa Milà, better known  as La Pedrera (Catalan for ‘The Quarry’), is a building designed by the  Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí and built during the years 1905–1910,  being considered officially completed in 1912. It is located at 92,  Passeig de Gràcia  in the Eixample district of Barcelona, Catalonia,  Spain.
It was built for the married couple,  Rosario Segimon and Pere Milà. Rosario Segimon was the wealthy widow of  José Guardiola, an Indiano, a term applied locally to the Catalans  returning from the American colonies with tremendous wealth. Her second  husband, Pere Milà, was a developer who was criticized for his  flamboyant lifestyle and ridiculed by the contemporary residents of  Barcelona, when they joked about his love of money and opulence,  wondering if he was not rather more interested in “the widow’s  guardiola” (piggy bank), than in “Guardiola’s widow”. Casa Mila have  better Home Interiors than all houses we ever seen online.
The  design by Gaudi was not followed in some aspects. The local government  objected to some aspects of the project, fined the owners for many  infractions of building codes, ordered the demolition of aspects  exceeding the height standard for the city, and refused to approve the  installation of a huge sculpture atop the building—described as “the  Virgin”—but said by Gijs van Hensbergen in his biography of Gaudi, to  represent the primeval earth goddess, Gaia.
Casa  Milà was in poor condition in the early 1980s. It had been painted a  dreary brown and many of its interior color schemes had been abandoned  or allowed to deteriorate, but it has since been restored and many of  the original colors revived.Casa Batlló (Catalan  pronunciation: [ˈkazə bəʎˈʎo]), is a building restored by Antoni Gaudí  and Josep Maria Jujol, built in the year 1877 and remodelled in the  years 1904–1906; located at 43, Passeig de Gràcia, part of the Illa de  la Discòrdia in the Eixample district of Barcelona, Spain. 


The local name for the building is Casa  dels ossos (House of Bones), and indeed it does have a visceral,  skeletal organic quality. It was originally designed for a middle-class  family and situated in a prosperous district of Barcelona.

The building looks very remarkable —  like everything Gaudí designed, only identifiable as Modernisme or Art  Nouveau in the broadest sense. The ground floor, in particular, is  rather astonishing with tracery, irregular oval windows and flowing  sculpted stone work.

It seems that the goal of the designer  was to avoid straight lines completely. Much of the façade is decorated  with a mosaic made of broken ceramic tiles (trencadís) that starts in  shades of golden orange moving into greenish blues. The roof is arched  and was likened to the back of a dragon or dinosaur. A common theory  about the building is that the rounded feature to the left of centre,  terminating at the top in a turret and cross, represents the sword of  Saint George (patron saint of Catalonia), which has been plunged into  the back of the dragon.


via: travelvista