Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Original floor tiles were relocated to highlight seating areas during designer Laura Bonell Mas’ renovation of this Barcelona apartment (+ interview).

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Local designer Laura Bonell Mas completely refurbished the 100-square-metre apartment, located among the grid of buildings in the city’s Eixample district.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

She uncovered patterned tiles beneath newer ceramics and reused them throughout the property as they were in good condition.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

“All the hydraulic tiles in the apartment were there from the beginning,” Bonell Mas told Dezeen. “Most of them had been covered by a brown ceramic flooring for years, which probably explains why they were in a relatively good state.”

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Some of the tiles were kept in their original location, while others were relaid in other spaces to denote seating areas at angles to the walls.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

“We put back the tiles in the living room and dining room as they were before, and then we used the ones that had originally been in the corridor and entrance of the apartment for the carpets and paths,” said the designer.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Wooden boards frame the tiled areas and cover the remainder of the floor, except for large black tiles used in the kitchen and bathroom. Ceiling mouldings on the suspended ceilings were also restored where possible, along with the balcony doors.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

The rooms by the entrance were reorganised and partition walls removed to make the flat more open-plan. A walk-in cupboard was installed between the bedroom and hall to keep clutter hidden away.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

As the front door and hallway are positioned at an angle to the rest of the apartment, a curved shelving unit and desk were installed to remedy the awkward junctions.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

After noticing a few apartments in the Catalan capital that feature decorative tiles, we published a slideshow and roundup of our favourites. “Lately their popularity has gone up and when doing a renovation, finding beautiful pieces in a good state is almost like finding little jewels,” Bonell Mas said.

See more apartment interiors »
See more architecture and design in Barcelona »
See more design with tiles »

Here’s our short interview with the designer about the history of tiles in Barcelona:


Dan Howarth: Did you move tiles from elsewhere in the apartment, or were they bought new to match the existing?

Laura Bonell Mas: All the hydraulic tiles in the apartment were there from the beginning, we didn’t have to buy any new ones.

Most of them had been covered by a brown ceramic flooring for years, which probably explains why they were in a relatively good state.

Nevertheless, we had to take them all out in order to reinforce the floor with a thin layer of concrete, as it is an old building, and the floors had some problems – some unlevelled parts and sound isolation in general.

So we put back the tiles in the living room and dining room as they were before, and then we used the ones that had originally been in the corridor and entrance of the apartment for the carpets and paths. In the rest of the rooms, the tiles were not very beautiful – maybe they had already been changed before.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Dan Howarth: Why were patterned tiles used in Barcelona apartments historically?

Laura Bonell Mas: Initially, these tiles were created as an alternative to natural stone for floorings. The fact that they didn’t have to be baked like ceramic tiling probably had an impact in their development.

Despite the fact that they were used in other Mediterranean areas, the hydraulic tiles seems to be found more often in Barcelona and the rest of Catalonia, and that is probably due to the art nouveau movement of Gaudí, Domènech i Montaner, Puig i Cadafalch, etc. In their search for a new architecture, decoration played an important part and hydraulic tiling was very versatile in terms of geometries and colours.

Their use went far beyond the age of modernism though, probably because the industry was already quite advanced by then. It has to be said that the more colours a piece has, the more expensive it is because it takes more time to do it. For instance, you can see that the flooring in the living room and the dining room is more noble or was at least more expensive than the ones in the corridor, which only have three colours and its geometry is far more simple.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Dan Howarth: Why are they still implemented today?

Laura Bonell Mas: Around the 1960s their implementation decreased and most of the factories that produced the pieces do not exist anymore.

But lately their popularity has gone up and when doing a renovation, finding beautiful pieces in a good state is almost like finding little jewels. New ones can also be used, even though they are quite expensive, but they don’t look exactly the same. They don’t look aged and the colours are much brighter. Also, because the colour has a four to five millimetre thickness, unlike painted ceramics, you can polish and lower them a little so that they have an even surface.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas

Dan Howarth: How do the tiles affect the atmosphere of a space?

Laura Bonell Mas: I think this kind of tiling affects the atmosphere in many ways. They always add colour, so using relatively neutral furniture and walls you still get a joyful result.

Their cold materiality is also important to note. We decided to combine the tiling with wooden floors, especially in the parts of the house that have little natural light, or none at all, to add some warmth. I think, as a result, the atmosphere you get in the bedroom or the study is completely different to that of the living room.

But mainly, I think this kind of flooring gives an aged kind of feeling. It seeks to maintain the old character of this kind of building but with a twist. The combination of old and new gives an interesting atmosphere to the space, and by recycling some of the existing materials, it also allowed us to reduce the expense in new ones.

Read on for Bonell Mas’ project description:


Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona

The project consists in the complete refurbishment of an apartment of about 100m2, in the Eixample area of Barcelona.

The geometry of its original plan layout responded to the building typology of the Eixample, with load-bearing walls parallel to the façade and the distribution of the rooms to each side of a long corridor. At the same time, though, it was partially determined by the fact that it is a corner building, which means that the entrance space is rotated 45º relative to the rest of the apartment.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas
Scheme isometric

The main strategy of the project was to enhance these different geometries to allow visual continuity and greater amplitude of space, by defragmenting the excessive compartmentalisation.

Partition walls were removed (bearing walls were not modified in any case) and the bathrooms and the kitchen were redistributed around one of the inner courtyards, so that the spaces or rooms are concatenated and the idea of a long corridor is destroyed. The needs of the client and future user, who would be living alone or with a couple, influenced decision making: less rooms, and bigger.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas
Floor plan before renovation – click for larger image

The presence of the original building components was especially important to preserve the atmosphere of an Eixample apartment. The suspended ceiling, with its existing cornices, was kept where possible, and the wooden balcony doors were restored. The windows that had to be changed and the interior doors that had no use anymore were recycled into the enclosures of a new piece of furniture.

The hydraulic tile floor, which had been covered for years with another ceramic pavement, was recovered and reattached following new guidelines: it is maintained as it was in the living room and dining room, while in the rest of the apartment it is combined with an oak parquet flooring, with the intention to create “carpets” that point out some of the liveable areas and suggest paths.

Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona by Laura Bonell Mas
Floor plan after renovation – click for larger image

This old materiality is complemented with some made to measure furniture, which shows autonomy from the original structure with its curved shapes and directs the user through the space. These are various tables made with recycled teak wood and a big piece of furniture situated at the entrance of the apartment, and which has a double function of bookshelves and coat wardrobe on the outer side and closet for the master bedroom in the inner side. Its height emphasises the will of a fluid space as it doesn’t reach the ceiling, which allows the visual continuity of the structure of ceramic vaults and wooden beams, which in this part of the apartment was left uncovered.

The post Renovation of an apartment in Barcelona
by Laura Bonell Mas
appeared first on Dezeen.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Perforated metal screens conceal rooms and storage space in this Tel Aviv apartment by Israeli studio Paritzki & Liani Architects (+ slideshow).

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Paritzki & Liani Architects lined two walls of the 110-square-metre flat with hinged translucent panels to hide away everything except the kitchen counter and a sofa.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

“The idea was to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be opened and closed, forming a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat,” said the architects.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The walls open up to reveal kitchen units, the master bedroom and bathroom on one side of the main living space, and shelving along the other.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

These spaces remain obscured until lights within are switched on and the glow emanates through the panels.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Larger windows are left unmasked, but smaller ones are consumed by the screens or covered with similar translucent blinds.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Doorways and corridors leading from the entrance and into the bedroom are lined with the same wood as the floor.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Positioned in front of the bedroom, the bathroom sits right up against the panels but is still separated from the living area by large sheets of glass.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Elliptical lights suspended at different heights look like hovering UFOs and are reflected in the shiny ceiling.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

A walk-in wardrobe is located completely out of view behind the kitchen and an L-shaped balcony faces west to look out over the city’s skyline.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Also in Tel Aviv, Paritzki & Liani have squeezed a house with an exposed brickwork interior into a space between two existing properties and installed a PVC ceiling at an apartment to mirror a panoramic view of the harbour.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

Photography by Amit Geron.

See more apartment interiors »
See more projects by Paritzki & Liani Architects »
See more architecture and design in Israel »

The architects’ project description follows:


In an anonymous high-rise building, among many of those surrounding our skyline; we’ve decided to use the interior of this 110 sqm flat to elaborate, with simple elements, walls and lights, an experiment on the nature of perception.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects

The idea here is to thicken the existing walls with vertical perforated metal panels that may be open and closed; forming this way a thick wall that contains functions of the habitat (kitchen, closets, library, bathroom, storage). Above all, this wall is an optical device that transforms, depending on the type of light used, and modifies the height and depth of the space. In the light of day this thick perforated wall, composed of variable thicknesses, becomes a three dimensional veil that makes opalescent the different areas of the flat. Niches and deep spaces create visions of transitional forms.

O Apartment by Paritzki & Liani Architects
Floor plan – click for larger image and key

In the dark we’ve drawn attention to a ritual passage, familiar to all of us, once we enter our home at night; the passage from darkness to illuminated space. Here we create a second view to the inhabitants. Our device adds new parts to the space, transforming itself into a remote architecture with new and profound windows: the vision exceeds the measurable borders of the flat.

The appearance of this new place vanishes once the lights are turned off.

The post O Apartment by
Paritzki & Liani Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Joan D’Austria by External Reference

Spanish firm External Reference has converted a taxi garage in Barcelona into a home and studio for an art director with a wire framework for showcasing objects and a bed concealed inside an island seating area (+ slideshow).

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

The converted warehouse was designed by External Reference for art director Chu Uroz, who wanted a home where he could also hold meetings, fashion shows, castings and photography shoots. “The space becomes a kind of inhabited scenery where public and private interact with few apparent limits,” said the architects.

dezeen_Joan-DAustria_External-Reference_ss_6

The living area is an open-plan space located on the first-floor mezzanine. It features a white panelled floor broken up into zig-zagging contours, which appear to flow over a series of angular seating units.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

The largest of the two sofas conceals a bed, which can pulled out or hidden away as required, as well as storage areas for magazines and portfolios. This allows the room to be used as a bedroom, a living area, or as a space for castings and fashion shows.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

A kitchen, bathroom and walk-in wardrobe are located along one side and can be concealed behind a series of sliding doors.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

The staircase linking the mezzanine with the ground floor is fronted by white metal-frame structure, used by the resident to exhibit different objects and design collections.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

The ground floor accommodates a large open space for photography shoots. There’s also an office and meeting area tucked beneath the mezzanine.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

External Reference are an architectural design firm based in Barcelona, Spain, founded by Nacho Toribio and Carmelo Zappulla.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

We’ve previously featured a photography studio in Brazil with walls that fold open and one in London with Herringbone parquet across the walls and floor.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

See more studios on Dezeen »
See more architecture and interiors from Spain »

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects

Photography is by Lorenzo Patuzzo.

Here’s more information from External Reference Architects:


Joan D’Austria, Barcelona 

Domestic space affects the user very personally and has been discussed extensively over the history of architecture. At present new lifestyles, new families and more flexible professional routines, have favoured the emergence of a unique user profile, one that is complex and involves having a clear understanding on personal needs.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
First floor axonometric plan – click for larger image

This is the case of the inhabitant of this residential and work space: an industrial designer, active art director and one who is very involved in the world of fashion, advertising and performing arts.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
Cross section – click for larger image

Our user raised the idea of devoting a warehouse to hold a photoshoot studio, office space, meeting room, space for auditions, castings, fashion shows and a home. Therefore, creating a space that one would be able to live, work and play in.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
Floor layouts – click for larger image

Due to this the project acquired exceptional guidelines. The spirit of all design decisions were based on giving shape and structure to a domestic space, that seeks to be understood mainly, as a space to share. In this sense, the social, outgoing and energetic personality of the user is reflected in the project. The space becomes a kind of inhabited scenery where public and private interact with few apparent limits.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
Seating unit diagrams – click for larger image

The project exists over two floors, the ground floor and the mezzanine area.

GROUND FLOOR: On the entrance level there is a large space for photoshoots to take place in. The ground floor also includes the users work space, which incorporates a meeting area that sits below the living space in the loft.

FIRST FLOOR: The mezzanine holds a large liveable space in which domestic programs hybridise with common spaces. The kitchen, bathroom and walk-in wardrobe areas are positioned on the side of the space, creating a service area which can be covered by sliding doors when necessary. The central space is occupied by a group of island-sofas, the larger island-sofa acts as an object that conceals the sliding bed, which slides in and out as the user needs. This space can also be used as a casting and catwalk area.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
Seating unit diagrams – click for larger image

As a link between the two levels, we integrated a light and large structure made of steel within the project; it serves as a display area for the user’s collection of pop and kitsch objects.

OSB white painted panels, metal rods, polycarbonate and black painted bricks are the main materials used in the project. Every element of the design was hand-crafted; no CNC cutting machines were used for making any part of the refurbishment.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
Kitchen layout – click for larger image

The original building, a taxi garage, offers a powerful industrial spirit, which serves as a reference for the project and its future evolution. All in all, the functional program, the reduced budget and the client ambitions leads to low cost systems but to eloquent dramatic effects.

Joan D'Austria by External Reference Architects
Original taxi garage

Project: Joan d’Austria, Barcelona
Architects: External Reference Architects
Design architects: Nacho Toribio and Carmelo Zappulla
Team: Poppy Boadle, Nimi Gabrie, Daniel Rodriguez, Elsa Rodriguez, Katinka Szodenyi
Building contractor: Crafts Art Labor
Client: Chu Uroz
Area: studio 400 m2; apartment 80 m2
Constructor: Laboor Crafts and Arts

The post Joan D’Austria by
External Reference
appeared first on Dezeen.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

Our latest Spanish apartment with a colourful tiled floor is this renovated residence in Toledo by local studio Romero Vallejo Arquitectos (+ slideshow).

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

During the refurbishment of the second floor apartment in the Spanish city, Romero Vallejo Arquitectos covered the floor in patterned ceramics to remind the couple living in the apartment of their childhood homes.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

“The concept of the floor is rooted in our clients’ family memories,” architect Sara Romero told Dezeen.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

New green and pink tiles were designed in reference to the historic colours and patterns of Spanish ceramics, with the help of local craftsmen.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

“The tiles were produced in close collaboration with local artisans, who we usually work with in designing new products based on traditional elements,” said Romero. “For this project, we carried out colour research based on a traditional tile design.”

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

A border of green tiles separates each block of patterned designs and links each space together.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

All other surfaces including built-in cupboards, cabinets and full-height doors are white, apart from kitchen units picked out in a bright pink colour from the tiles.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

As the clients have no children, the original layout has been opened up by reducing the number of bedrooms.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

One of the two bathrooms has a translucent glass wall that creates a silhouette of whoever is in the shower.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

We recently created a new Pinterest board full of apartment interiors, which features a loft conversion in north London with a combined staircase and bookshelf plus a Japanese home with a sunken circular living room.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

Other projects from Toledo in our archive include the refurbishment of a museum dedicated to Renaissance artist El Greco and four new concrete apartment blocks that already look abandoned.

Photography is by Juan Carlos Quindós.

See more apartment interiors »
See more architecture and design in Toledo »
See more design with tiles »

Romero Vallejo Arquitectos sent us the following text:


Internal renovation of an apartment in the neighbourhood of Santa Teresa, Toledo, Spain

Located on the second floor of a block of flats in a residential area of Toledo, the apartment has six small rooms comprising of a living room, kitchen and four bedrooms, which are all connected via a dark and narrow corridor.

Our clients, a couple with no children, require more spacious, comfortable and lighter living areas, without completely changing the original layout of the apartment.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos

Our proposal is, therefore, to reduce the number of bedrooms and reorganise the rooms in order to make better use of the existing sources of light and ventilation, which will also improve accessibility and energy efficiency.

The main challenge is how to combine the traditional layout with a modern and functional design and how to provide continuity between the various rooms, whilst also allowing them a suitable degree of independence. In order to achieve these objectives, all woodwork will be made to measure: floor-to-ceiling doors disguised within the furniture, wardrobes, chest-of-drawers, bookcases, shelving, kitchen units, etc.

Renovated apartment by Romero Vallejo Arquitectos
Floor plan – click for larger image

A coloured carpet, contrasting with the pale coloured walls and ceilings, covers the entire floor of the home, reinforcing the continuity between the various spaces. Whilst the size, type and colour of the decorative floor tiles correspond to the scale and identity of each room. As such, the layout works as both a sequence of individual units as well as a singular, continuous space.

The use of traditional material for joining, such as hydraulic cement tiles, is closely linked to the owners’ family memories. This type of flooring is produced locally by hand, allowing us to qualify the pigmentation of the decorative motifs according to needs.

The post Renovated apartment by
Romero Vallejo Arquitectos
appeared first on Dezeen.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bülow

Berlin architect and designer Sophie von Bülow knocked through walls between two residences to create this spacious apartment in her home city (+ slideshow).

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

Sophie von Bülow had to start from scratch when renovating the two apartments in the Prenzlauerberg district of Berlin, which hadn’t been touched since the Second World War.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

“The apartments were totally time-worn,” Von Bülow told Dezeen. “Everything had to be done new, which was a lovely challenge.”

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

Two full-height gaps were created in the walls separating the adjacent apartments and the layout was rearranged to encompass both.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

Von Bülow strived to restore and preserve the original features in the property. “We tried to keep the lovely details like the old art nouveau stucco, parts of the old timber piling and the beautiful windows,” she said.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

Peeling wallpaper was removed so the walls could be replastered and painted neutral colours, while wooden floors was sanded and oiled.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

The bathroom floor was replaced with a screed-like material created by German company Concreed, which was also formed into a sink mounted on a wall of white tiles.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

Tables in the living spaces were also designed by Von Bülow, including the coffee table made from square steel tubes and topped with pigmented prestressed concrete.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

Rooms are filled with an eclectic mix of furniture, fittings and ornaments including metal toolboxes used for storing small items and a scuffed red pig.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

We’ve recently created a new Pinterest board full of apartment designs, which includes a renovated home in Barcelona with triangular floor tiles and a loft conversion in London with a combined staircase and bookshelf.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

More projects in Berlin on Dezeen include a museum of architectural drawings with sketches etched into the concrete facade and an interior covered in wrinkly mirrors.

Prenzlauerberg apartment by Sophie von Bulow

See more apartment interiors »
See more architecture and design in Berlin »

The post Prenzlauerberg apartment
by Sophie von Bülow
appeared first on Dezeen.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Italian architect Antonino Cardillo used roughly textured plaster to create lumpy brown surfaces across the upper walls and ceilings of this apartment in Rome (+ slideshow).

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Using the geometric ratio of the golden section, Antonino Cardillo designed House of Dust with a horizontal division that separates living spaces and furniture from the coarse plaster walls and ceilings above.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

The architect wrote: “[I was] craving for primordial caverns, for Renaissance grotesques, for nymphaeums in Doria Pamphilj, for faintly Liberty façades in the streets off Via Veneto.”

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Windows are sunken within deep recesses and together with a series of rectangular doorways they emphasise the line dividing top and bottom.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

The architect also added a series of arched doorways, intended to reference fourteenth century Italian paintings, which conceal both rooms and cupboards.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

One of these doorways features a pink glass doorknob that signifies the entrance to the master bedroom and bathroom, tucked away in the corner of the residence.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

The rough plaster surfaces are missing from these spaces, where instead walls and ceilings are coloured in a pale shade of pink. There are also concrete washbasins and a cylindrical shower concealed behind a ghostly white curtain.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

The kitchen surrounds the perimeter of the bedroom and can be screened behind a pivoting wall.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

The living room is just beyond and features a wooden floor resembling a large rug. Furniture here includes small green tables designed by the architect, large grey sofas and a marble dining table.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Other residential interiors we’ve featured from Italy include a renovated house with honeycomb-patterned floors and an apartment with a rooftop swimming pool. See more architecture and interiors from Italy »

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Photography is by the architect. The short film (below) was directed by Pasquale Marino and features a pair of boxers sparring in the apartment, while the ceiling above them appears to be crumbling away:

Here’s a project description from Antonino Cardillo:


House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo architect

In this house classical orders and proportions celebrate dust. The golden section divides the sides of the living room: a light grey base supports a ceiling of rustic plaster of the colour of the bare earth. Craving for primordial caverns, for Renaissance grotesques, for nymphaeums in Doria Pamphilj, for faintly Liberty façades in the streets off Via Veneto. A balanced sequence of compressions and dilatations makes up the space of the house.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

On the walls, passages and windows appear, now dug out of the base, now like carvings in a baguette. A series of arches, abstract memories of fourteenth century Italian painting, disguise doors and cupboards. Among these, one studded with a pink glass doorknob introduces the intimate rooms, which too are distinguished by the palest pink on the walls: yearning for dawns and flowers, the colour of beauty, the colour of beauty that dies.

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Design and project management: Antonino Cardillo
Client: Massimiliano Beffa

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

Date: September 2012 – March 2013
Address: Rione Ludovisi, Rome, Italy
Surface: 100 square metres – 1,076 square feet
Featuring ‘Triumviro’ tables designed by Antonino Cardillo

House of Dust by Antonino Cardillo

The post House of Dust by
Antonino Cardillo
appeared first on Dezeen.

New Pinterest board: apartments

New pinterest board apartments

Our new Pinterest board features beautiful apartments and loft interiors from around the world, including Napoleon I’s old apartment, a renovation in Mayfair featuring a staircase that merges with the kitchen and bathtub, and lots more.

See our new apartments board »
Follow Dezeen on Pinterest »
See all our stories on apartments »

The post New Pinterest board:
apartments
appeared first on Dezeen.

Dezeen archive: floor tiles in Barcelona apartments

Dezeen archive: here’s a roundup of some of the most beautiful Barcelona apartments we’ve featured with decorative geometric floor tiles (+ slideshow).

Dezeen archive: floor tiles in Barcelona apartments
Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

The most recent story from the Catalan capital to include ornate tile work is an apartment laid with triangular floor tiles that gradually change colour from green to red.

Apartment Refurbishment in Consell de Cent by Bach Arquitectes

In the city’s Ensanche district a home has had its original flooring uncovered to show off the patterns, along with ceiling mouldings.

Apartment refurbishment in Gràcia by Vora Arquitectura

Also we’ve published an interior with polished mosaics that reveal its original layout and a pad with modern kitchen and bathroom fittings that contrast with the intricate flooring.

Casa Roc by Nook Architects

Among our most recent archive stories are a round-up of modern additions to castles, a look back at staircases combined with bookshelves and a series of projects that feature strata and striations – see all our archive stories.

Apartment in Barcelona by Arquitectura G
Apartment in Barcelona by Arquitectura G

See more architecture and design in Barcelona »
See more apartment interiors »
See more design with tiles »

The post Dezeen archive: floor tiles
in Barcelona apartments
appeared first on Dezeen.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

Triangular floor tiles gradually change colour from green to red inside this renovated Barcelona apartment by London studio David Kohn Architects.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

Located in the city’s Gothic Quarter, the apartment is owned by two brothers that currently live in London and Hong Kong. The pair asked David Kohn Architects to design them a holiday home in the city they grew up in.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

The architects began by stripping away most of the apartment’s internal partitions, creating an open-plan living space that makes the most of the large windows, high ceilings and ornate mouldings.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

The new decorative floor tiles – made up of 25 different designs – offer a splash of colour to the space. Their gradual change in tone loosely defines the realms of each occupant, with the green tiles surrounding a stack of two bedrooms and the red tiles framing a kitchen with a bedroom above.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

Indoor balconies form a corridor between the two first-floor bedrooms and their en suite bathrooms, but also creates the bookshelves for an informal library.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

A custom-made table is positioned at the apex of the plan, providing a large family dining area at the spot where the green and red tiles are most mixed.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects

David Kohn launched his studio in 2007. Other projects completed since then include a rooftop events space in London and an arts venue in a former sweet factory. See more architecture by David Kohn »

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects
Design model – concept for new bedrooms and connecting balconies

We’ve featured a host of renovated Barcelona apartments on Dezeen, including one where the tiled floors reveal the original layout. See more architecture and design in Barcelona »

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects
Axonometric diagram

Photography is by Jose Hevia Blach.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects
Floor tile patterns

Here’s a project description from David Kohn Architects:


Carrer Avinyo, Barcelona

Refurbishment of a piano nobile apartment on Carrer Avinyó in the Gothic Quarter of Barcelona. The apartment is situated at a major crossroads in the city. Like the Flatiron Building in New York, where Broadway meets the city’s orthogonal grid, the triangular plan of the apartment’s interior registers a similar moment in Barcelona’s historic quarter; Plaça George Orwell. Our first intervention is to strip back the internal partitions to reveal the junction and so reconnect living in the apartment to the streets beyond.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects
Ground floor plan – click for larger image and key

The apartment will be the holiday home of two brothers who grew up in Barcelona but now live in London and Hong Kong. New bedrooms are created inside large pieces of furniture that have the appearance of small buildings – the city beyond the apartment walls is mirrored by a diminutive city within. The high-level library becomes balconies that connect each bedroom to their en-suite bathrooms. Beneath a balcony a glazed lobby provides a threshold between the apartment and the city.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects
First floor plan

The new mosaic floor of the apartment is decorated with a triangular pattern that matches the geometry of the plan. The tile pattern is graded in colour from green at one end of the apartment to red at the other to differentiate the brothers’ private spaces. The tiles were being made by Mosaics Martí who supplied the product for Gaudi’s projects in the city. A large, specially designed dining table stands at the street corner where the red and green are most mixed and will become the meeting place for family and friends.

Carrer Avinyo 34 by David Kohn Architects
Site plan

Project Name: Carrer Avinyó
Architect: David Kohn Architects
Executive Architect: Ángel Martín Cojo Arquitecto
Structural Engineer: Area 5
Client: Private

Main Contractor: Brick Serveis D’interiorisme
Joinery: Soldevila
Metalwork: Enmometall
Hydraulic Tiles: Mosaics Martí

The post Carrer Avinyo 34 by
David Kohn Architects
appeared first on Dezeen.

Loft Space in Camden by Craft Design

The latest residence to feature a combined staircase and bookshelf is this loft conversion in north London by British design studio Craft Design. (+ slideshow)

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

Craft Design renovated a former office to create the open-plan residence, inserting a central bathroom that separates the kitchen and dining area from the living room, while also providing the framework for a first-floor bed deck.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

The gabled end wall is covered with bookshelves, providing storage for three different areas. The staircase is formed from a series of extruded shelves and leads up from the living room to the mezzanine sleeping area.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

“The idea was to maximise the sense of space as well as keeping a simple and efficient layout,” said designers Hugo D’Enjoy and Armando Elias.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

The designers kept to a simple palette of wooden flooring with white walls and fittings, allowing the owner to add colour by displaying books and other collected items.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

We’ve recently featured a renovated apartment in Barcelona that also uses a bookcase as a staircase. See more interiors that combine staircases with bookshelves »

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

Photography is by Craft Design.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

Here’s a project description by Armado Elias:


London based Studio Craft Design led by Hugo D’Enjoy and Armando Elias has transformed a loft space in Camden into a bright and dynamic living-working space.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design

Originally used as an open plan office space, the challenge was to convert the property into a bespoke and innovative environment that efficiently and creatively responds to the demands of living in London.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design
3D diagram

In response to the brief, the idea was to maximise the sense of space as well as keeping a simple and efficient layout. The solution successfully achieved this with the introduction of a single volume located central to the loft where all the services are accommodated. Detached from the facades and ceilings this element has divided the open plan into several spaces for different uses such as kitchen-dinning, living room, storage, bathroom and a mezzanine for the sleeping and working area.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design
Ground floor plan – click for larger image

The 4.5 m height party wall and roof eaves have been fully used with shelves and storage, which serve the whole space. The stair to access the mezzanine level was cleverly integrated into this single piece of furniture. The rest was about keeping a simple palette in terms of materials and colors to allow the owner collection of objects, art and books give the wall an authentic personality to the space.

Loft conversion in camden by Craft design
Mezzanine plan – click for larger image

The post Loft Space in Camden
by Craft Design
appeared first on Dezeen.