Reus
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Situated in south-eastern Catalonia, Reus is the region's major
commercial and cultural centre. During the eighteenth century, it
was the international point of reference for the brandy trade (hence
the saying 'Reus, Paris, and London'), and as such became Catalonia's
second city. With the advent of the industrial revolution in the
nineteenth century, the city underwent a boom, fuelled by the textile
industry.
The emergent middle classes, emulating the great capitals of Europe,
transformed the face of the city by creating the infrastructure
vital to its development. It was as part of this process that during
the end of the nineteenth century and the first decade of the twentieth,
Reus was redesigned in the most avant-garde style of the day: Modernism.
This new artistic trend established itself in every domain (art,
literature, decoration), but particularly architecture.
New buildings were put up: luxurious private houses, weekend/holiday
homes, blocks of flats, factories, shops, and public buildings.
Oddly, although Reus is Antoni Gaudí's home town, it boasts
no example of his work. The fines Modernist creations are by Lluís
Domènech i Montaner. In 1897, Domènech began work
on a psychiatric hospital, the Pere Mata Institute (1897-1912),
which is one of the most remarkable set of buildings in the Modernist
style. He later designed the Casa Navàs (1901-7), the Casa
Rull (1900), and the Casa Gasull (1911). Domènech tried out
a number of new architectural approaches in Reus, and, as a result,
the city boasts the greatest number of buildings by him after Barcelona.
Domènech i Montaner served as a role-model for other local
architects who helped fuel the city's creative vitality at this
time. These included Pere Caselles, who designed most of the Modernist
buildings in Reus, and Joan Rubió i Bellver, a pupil of Antoni
Gaudí.