©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
Artist Edoardo Tresoldi creates extravagant sculptures using metal wires.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
For his newest project, he reconstructed a previously destroyed ancient church in Puglia, Italy.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
The structure is built using hundreds of yards of wire mesh.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
It took three months to complete the €3.5 million ($3.9 million) artwork.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
The artist's transparent basilica is exactly the same size as the original that stood in its place centuries before.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
This is Tresoldi's largest installation to date.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
The installation was erected to coincide with the opening of a nearby archaeological park.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
Tresoldi describes the project as "the return of this great building as if it was part of the historical memory of the place."
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
The ghostly structure also features metal wire versions of sculptures that stood within the original church.
©BlindEyeFactory/EdoardoTresoldi
Tresoldi's recent projects include a metal wire archway for Milan Fashion Week, and a hovering dome for the Secret Garden Party festival in Abbots Ripton.

Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by The Spaces, a digital publication exploring new ways to live and work.

CNN  — 

Artist Edoardo Tresoldi has created a ghostly reconstruction of a destroyed basilica at the Santa Maria Maggiore di Siponto church in Puglia, Italy.

The permanent installation – made from transparent metal wiring – marks the opening of a new archaeological park beside an existing church.

Built in three months, the €3.5 million ($3.96 million) structure corresponds to the original size of the Paleo-Christian basilica that once stood on the site.

Tresoldi, who conceived similar works for last year’s Secret Garden Party and Milan Fashion Week, describes his installation as ‘a return of this great building as if it was part of the historical memory of the place.’

Visit The Spaces for a look at more incredible installations.