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MADRID - A small glass tower channelling light into an underground chamber was unveiled as a memorial to victims of the Madrid train bombings, metres away from where the blasts killed 191 people exactly three years ago today.
King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia inaugurated the memorial -- a glittering cylinder of glass brick -- less than a month after 29 suspects went on trial in the attack that ripped apart four rush-hour trains approaching Madrid's Atocha railway station.
Around 1,800 people were injured by 10 bombs, which had been stuffed into sports bags and set off by mobile phones. One woman remains in a coma and hundreds others are still plagued by medical and psychological problems.
On a sunny spring day, relatives of victims and survivors bowed their heads in silence as the king laid a wreath at the foot of the 11-metre tower -- its height a reference to the date Spain suffered its worst peace-time attack.
The tower's architects -- five friends working on their first commission -- said the design's main ingredient was light.
Sunshine hitting the column of 15,000 glass bricks focuses light into an empty, blue chamber below a busy highway, which the public can access via Atocha station.
From below, visitors can peer skywards to read hundreds of messages of condolence and support wrapped around the inside of the cylinder.
"When the sunlight completely fills the chamber, it's like an explosion of light. It's a calm environment, a place of reflection," one of the architects, Esau Acosta, from firm Estudio FAM told Reuters.
Three days after the bombs, Spain held general elections and voted out the conservative Popular Party (PP), a close US ally, putting in its place a Socialist government that quickly fulfilled a pledge to pull Spanish troops out of Iraq.
The trial of those accused of carrying out the attacks will hear from more than 600 witnesses and 100 experts before a panel of three judges gives its verdict, probably in early autumn.
Separate commemorations were held at two other stations hit by blasts today.
- REUTERS