Nook’s Barcelona apartment refurb removes walls but leaves original tiled floors intact

Spanish architects Nook have renovated a small apartment in Barcelona‘s gothic quarter, leaving decorative floor tiles in place to reveal the original layout of the flat (+ slideshow).

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

Called Roc3, the conversion is the third that Nook Architects have carried out in the same building, following Casa Roc and Twin House.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

“We have followed the same conceptual thread in all three projects, highlighting the original envelope,” the architects told Dezeen. “We have retained all original floors as much as possible, and they have been left exactly in the original place, so you can read the old distribution of the apartment.”

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

It has become fashionable to retain old tiles in Barcelona apartment conversions; see more projects that use this technique in our slideshow.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

Nook removed some of the original internal partitions to optimise space, creating a combined living room and kitchen on the street side of the apartment, and a bedroom and bathroom on the courtyard side.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

“We thought it correct to once again incorporate the washbasin in the bedroom to make a better use of natural light and to enlarge the sensation of open space,” the architects said.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

The bathroom of the one-bedroom apartment has a second door into the entrance hall, meaning that guests sleeping over in the lounge can access it without disturbing the owner.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

Nook used a more industrial palette of materials than in the previous two conversions, in order to save money and create longer-lasting fixtures.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

A row of suspended steel storage boxes backed with chicken wire separates the bedroom from the bathroom. The waist-high partition is made of white-painted clay bricks.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

Much of the furniture was sourced from a local second-hand store while the dining table is topped with an old door. Walls are left unpainted in places, revealing layers of faded plaster and old tile adhesive.

Roc 3 apartment in Barcelona by Nook

“In all three projects, we have used modular furniture for the kitchen and the bath, concrete floors, ceramic tiles and translucent polycarbonate for interior doors,” the architects said. “The other furniture, door frames and accessories have been made in steel, not like in the other two first projects which were made of wood. The idea is to use neutral materials which can last and get older in a good way.”

Photography is by Nieve.

Here’s some text from the architects:


ROC3 | apartment in Barcelona, third intervention | nookarchitects

With ROC3 we reached the end of a cycle, the renovation of three, very similar, but different apartments on a single building in Barcelona’s gothic quarter.

We were recently advised that in times of economic crisis, as architects, we had to look for a formula to obtain products with scalability to optimise our resources. We understood that a product with scalability was the repetition of valid solutions from one project to the other, a difficult approach within the refurbishment industry. In the midst of that search for a common denominator the opportunity to rehabilitate ROC3 arrived- another diamond in the rough on the very same building where we had done two previous interventions: CASA ROC and TWIN HOUSE.

Floor plan before renovation of Roc Cubed apartment conversion in Barcelona by Nook
Floor plan before renovation – click for larger image

We approached the project thinking that we could apply the same parameters as in TWIN HOUSE due to the fact that it was a very similar apartment in terms of dimensions, orientation and pre-set requirements.

This meant placing the daytime space towards the Street, the bedroom towards the interior courtyard, and placing the kitchen and bathroom against the median Wall in the form of a humid strip. What seemed obvious, however, was not possible due to the fact that the sanitary drainpipe changed its position on this apartment from the one in TWIN HOUSE, so we had to look for a new solution for placing the bathroom.

Floor plan after renovation of Roc Cubed apartment conversion in Barcelona by Nook
Floor plan after renovation – click for larger image

We thought it correct to once again incorporate the washbasin in the bedroom to make a better use of natural light and to enlarge the sensation of open space. This time we separated it from the rest of the room with a low Wall and suspended iron cubes that allow storage from both sides. These same cubes were also used to create night tables and extra storage space for recipe books and utensils in the kitchen.

The shower and water closet have independent entries, but can be closed using a single sliding door, a solution first use don CASA ROC. The water closet can also be accessed from the main entry through a second door, which gives the option of guests using this space without having to enter the bedroom. This way, boundaries were set between one space and the other without creating a visual barrier.

Long section of Roc Cubed apartment conversion in Barcelona by Nook
Long section – click for larger image

The building’s structure and closings are very irregular, so we introduced lineal elements that counterpoint these irregularities and set order within the space. Amongst these elements are a close hanger that integrates lighting (borrowed from TWIN HOUSE) and connects itself with the support of the suspended cubes and the sliding door’s guide. Wood was used to set limits on the pavement which regulates the traces of the previously existing partition walls. This was also synthetised on the living room lamp.

ROC3 was about applying new ideas to new challenges, but maintaining the spirit behind CASA ROC and TWIN HOUSE in which we searched for the original spirit of the building and subtly intervened to achieve today’s levels of comfort while harmonising with the building’s history.

Roc Cubed apartment conversion in Barcelona by Nook
Section – click for larger image

Architects: Nook Architects
Location: Barcelona, España
Year:  2013
Furniture: Casa Jornet, Sillas-Muebles

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but leaves original tiled floors intact
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Vaulted brick pavilion in Barcelona by Map13

Spanish architecture collective Map13 combined a traditional Spanish construction technique with digital design tools to create this vaulted brick pavilion in a Barcelona courtyard (+ slideshow).

Bricktopia by map13

Named Bricktopia, the structure was designed by Map13 using a Catalan vault – a method where plain bricks are laid lengthways across gently curved forms to create a series of smooth low arches.

Bricktopia by map13

“Unlike the construction that can be seen these days, this project aims to restore the expertise and imagination of the building hands,” explained the architects.

Bricktopia by map13

The structure was conceived using three-dimensional modelling software program Rhino and a plugin called Rhinovault. This enabled the architects to test the geometries of the structure and adapt it so that only compression stresses act on the vault.

Bricktopia by map13

This approach is based on a prototype developed by researchers Philippe Block, Matthias Rippman and Lara Davis at the Technical University of Zurich.

Bricktopia by map13
Photography by eme3

“This research collects the material tradition and the constructive knowledge of tile vaulting and combines them with contemporary computational tools,” said the designers.

Bricktopia by map13
Photography by eme3

The structure was built by architecture students and volunteers, who used criss-crossing metal rods and pieces of cardboard to outline the basic frame.

Bricktopia by map13

The completed structure comprised four vaulted spaces with curved openings that form doors and windows.

Bricktopia by map13

Bricktopia was constructed as part of the Eme3 International Festival of Architecture, which took place in June, and was used to host a programme of summer events including talks, activities and film projections.

Bricktopia by map13

Photography is by Manuel de Lózar and Paula López Barba, unless otherwise stated.

Here is some more information from the architects:


Bricktopia, Contemporary Crafts Festival EME3

Bricktopia, by the architects of the international collective Map13, is the winning project in the “Build-it” category at the International Festival of Architecture Eme3 held from the 27th to 30th of June in Barcelona. It can be visited during this summer at one of the courtyards of the former factory Fabra i Coats, in the district of Sant Andreu.

Bricktopia by map13

This intervention configures a new square where different activities can be performed, both under the building and around it. It includes bathing public spaces and sundecks, a bar and a stage for enjoying the summer 2013.

Bricktopia by map13

It is a vaulted structure made of brick using a traditional construction technique called tile-vault (or “Catalan vault”). It has been designed with new digital tools to optimise the structure through geometry. The proposal is the result of the academic research currently carried out by Marta Domènech Rodríguez, David López López and Mariana Palumbo Fernández, co-founders of the group Map13, with the help of different Professors from different fields and various schools of architecture.

Bricktopia by map13

This construction takes as a reference the prototype built by Philippe Block, Matthias Rippman and Lara Davis at the Technical University of Zurich, with which they demonstrated the reliability of “RhinoVault”, a plug-in for Rhinoceros, used to design the pavilion.

Bricktopia by map13

As “Bricktopia” is a pilot project which makes this traditional technique work to its limits, its implementation has required the expansion of the team, which has been enlarged with Paula López Barba and Josep Brazo Ramírez. The construction has also required the effort of Eme3 festival that gives support to young talented people to carry out their projects, the sponsorship of the companies that contributed with workforce and materials and the help of volunteers and students of architecture.

Bricktopia by map13

This research collects the material tradition and the constructive knowledge of tile vaulting and combines them with contemporary computational tools. This project, developed in the enclosed area of a nineteenth-century factory made of brick, uses the same material raising a new topography in the old courtyard. However, it is opposed to the industrial construction offering a concave and protected space that links the origins of all cultures.

Bricktopia by map13

The vaulted pavilion sets out the contemporary validity of this traditional system, native of Catalonia and widely used in various parts of the world for centuries. It is economical, sustainable, with formal and functional versatility and nowadays it is also offering the possibility of being built in developing countries for roofs, stairs, drainage systems, etc.

Bricktopia by map13

Unlike the construction that can be seen these days, this project aims to restore the expertise and imagination of the building hands. “Bricktopia” has been built by excellent builders who have made an unprecedented craftsmanship. The challenge that requires good layout in tile vault construction, specially with a complex shape like this one, suggests the work as an opposite to the mechanical work.

Bricktopia by map13
Site plan – click for larger image
Bricktopia by map13
Plan – click for larger image
Bricktopia by map13
Concpet drawings – click for larger images
Bricktopia by map13
Section and perspective

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“There was all this potential but it was being held back by the architecture”

Movie: architect David Kohn explains how his studio transformed a neglected Barcelona apartment into World Interior of the Year 2013 in this exclusive video interview Dezeen filmed at Inside Festival in Singapore.

Carrer Avinyó by David Kohn Architects

Carrer Avinyó by London studio David Kohn Architects is a renovated apartment in a triangular block in Barcelona’s Gothic Quarter.

Carrer Avinyó by David Kohn Architects

“The apartment is in a nineteenth-century apartment block on a very cute corner, but it was in a pretty poor state of repair,” Kohn explains.

“It was subdivided into many small rooms so there was no gathering space, nor was there any sense of this rather unusual triangular plan and it’s relationship to the city.”

“There was all this potential, but it was all held back by the architecture.”

Carrer Avinyó by David Kohn Architects

To rectify this, Kohn’s studio stripped away most of the apartment’s internal partitions, creating an open-plan living space to make the most of the large windows and high ceilings.

“We wanted to change the apartment to focus on the pleasure of gathering,” explains Kohn. “The architecture of the apartment now is about creating the right setting for that kind of social encounter.”

Carrer Avinyó by David Kohn Architects

Two of the bedrooms are contained within a wooden tower at one end of the apartment, which Kohn describes as “a kind of scale replica” of a 1950s apartment block by Spanish architect Josep Antoni Coderch in the La Barceloneta neighbourhood of the city.

“The bedrooms in this tower block have louvred windows so when you want to go to bed you can close the building,” he says.

Carrer Avinyó by David Kohn Architects

The apartment’s most striking feature is its tiled floor, which is made up of 25 different triangular designs.

“We basically did research on how we can make a tiled floor using traditional technologies that would be affordable for this project, but introduced something new,” says Kohn.

“We asked Mosaics Martí, who made all the tiles, to use varying amounts of green and red pigment. Now you see it laid, the apartment has a graded floor that goes from green at one end to red.”

Carrer Avinyó by David Kohn Architects

Kohn says that the transformation has been received well by the clients, two brothers who grew up in Barcelona but now live in London and Hong Kong.

“The clients love it because because their lives were very pragmatic in the way they used the flat,” he says.

“What we were able to reintroduce into their lives was a pleasure of being in this interior, celebrating their time in Barcelona.”

David Kohn
David Kohn

Inside Festival 2013 took place at Marina Bay Sands in Singapore from 2-4 October. The next Inside Festival will take place at the same venue from 1-3 October 2014. Award entries are open February to June 2013.

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being held back by the architecture”
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Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

Spanish firm YLAB Arquitectos has completed a faceted house on the outskirts of Barcelona that appears to have been stretched down a hill.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

Located beside the Collserola Natural Park, the three-storey family home is constructed on a small plot, so YLAB Arquitectos designed the building as a simple cube then distorted it to make better use of space and viewpoints.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

“The objectives of the project were to get the maximum possible building area within a tight budget and an optimised orientation of all openings while protecting the privacy of the owners,” said the architects.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

“The upper faces are extruded upwards to form the roof,” they continued. “The side faces rotate to frame significant scenic moments, mindful of the neighbours’ privacy.”

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

The house is constructed from concrete and features a white-rendered exterior with seamless edges.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

Windows and doors can be concealed behind perforated aluminium shutters that sit flush with the walls.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

A double-height kitchen and dining room is positioned on the upper-ground floor and includes drawers, cupboards and counters built from dark-tinted elm, while the lower-ground floor contains a living room and studio with access to the garden.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

Stone provides flooring throughout the the house and lines the walls of a top-floor bathroom. The main bedroom is also on this floor.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

A Corten steel fence encloses the site and features vertical slits that offer glimpsed views of the house from the street.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

Other Spanish houses we’ve featured include a residence comprising a cluster of concrete cubes, a family home in a renovated stable and a house with a glazed living room that thrusts outwardsSee more houses in Spain »

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

Photography is by Marcela Grassi.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Vallvidrera House

The project is situated in the Vallvidrera neighbourhood, a residential area with views overlooking the city of Barcelona, surrounded by the Collserola natural park, in a very sloped and small plot situated between a valley and a pine forest.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

The objectives of the project were to get the maximum possible building area within a tight budget and an optimised orientation of all openings while protecting the privacy of the owners. To achieve this, a compact three level volume was created.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

The geometry arises directly from the plot given geometry and slope, reinterpreting the aesthetic of the site’s vernacular architecture with its sloped roof, widening on the upper floors to gain some additional area. Formally the volume is a single cube in which every face has been divided into four quadrants. The upper faces are extruded upwards to form the roof. The side faces rotate to frame significant scenic moments, mindful of the neighbours’ privacy.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

The façade consists of a continuous skin that provides the same matt white aspect to walls, roofs and openings. The fixed windows are made of glass panes totally flush with the façade, and the operating ones have a white perforated aluminium shutter also installed flush with the skin.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

A perforated Corten steel front fence at the low end of the plot gives pedestrian and car access to the property. The exterior spaces are formed by two terraces and the sloped areas have been modelled forming triangulated ramps. Pavements are made in multi-coloured slat, typical of this area, using long narrow tiles for the plane zones, and smaller irregular pieces on sloping ones.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

The entrance level is composed by the first dormitory, the bath and the kitchen with a dining room area. The kitchen is in a double height space with two large windows that offer the best views over the valley. In the upper level there is the master bedroom and its bath, both oriented to the pine forest at the back side of the plot.

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos

The semi-buried lower floor is formed by the technical and storage rooms, a living room and a studio both with access to the garden. In the interior of the house the floors and bathroom walls are covered with Capri natural stone and the walls and doors are finished in ivory white colour paint. In the double height area, large built-in dark tinted elm furniture builds the kitchen and dining area wall furniture and the island, ascending to the upper floor to form the master dormitory cupboards. 

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos
Front elevation – click for larger image

Architecture and interior design: YLAB Arquitectos, Barcelona
Authors: Tobias Laarmann and Yolanda Yuste
Project: One family house edification
Client: Private
Area: 286.91 square metres
Location: Vallvidrera, Barcelona

Vallvidrera House by YLAB Arquitectos
Side elevation – click for larger image

Craftsmen: Coter de Construcciones, Ebanistería Agüera
Structure and walls: prefabricated pieces of celullar concrete by Ytong
Facade outer skin: single layer coating Weber.Pral Terra Cemarksa, white painted
Roof covering: ceramic pieces Colortech, by Tau Cerámica
Outdoor paving: Dark rusty grey slate
Metallic fence: Corten steel sheets cut and folded, designed by YLAB
Interior flooring: polished Capri natural limestone
Walls and ceilings: ivory white matt plastic paint

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YLAB Arquitectos
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New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Corten steel columns alternate with floor-to-ceiling glass to bring stripes of light and shadow into this funeral home outside Barcelona by Spanish firm Batlle i Riog Arquitectes (+ slideshow).

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Located west of the city in the town of Sant Joan Despí, the stark concrete building nestles against a hillside and was designed by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes with a sloping grass roof that appears as an extension of the landscape.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

At the front of the building, this roof pitches back up again to frame a long and narrow facade, where columns are arranged in two rows with a glazed perpendicular entrance in between.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

“The steel pillars generate a light gradient, establishing visual filters and protecting the interior from the direct sunlight,” explained the architects.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The interior is divided into two sections that separate ceremonial activities from preparation areas. At the front, a succession of spaces lead guests from a spacious reception area into the main auditorium, then out via a private courtyard.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Each of these spaces features an assortment of raw materials that include stone floors, concrete ceilings and timber wall panels, as well as the vertical Corten elements.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Small plant-filled courtyards also intersperse the interiors and are surrounded by glazing to allow them to function as lightwells.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

“The materiality generated by the assortment of exposed structural element textures together with the natural light qualify and determine the atmospheres of each space, accompanying the visitors’ mourning at every turn,” added the architects.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The rear spaces contain preparation areas where coffins can be housed before funerals take place.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Other funeral homes featured on Dezeen include a stone chapel with a sharply pointed gable in Germany and a whitewashed hall with a copper roof in Finland. See more memorial architecture »

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

Photography is by Jordi Surroca.

Here’s a project description from Batlle i Riog Arquitectes:


New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí

The building integration on site parts from the adaptation to the existing topography, with a set of pitched roofs on the terrain. The vegetation treatment of part of these roofs pretends to fade with the adjacent green slopes and improve the vision of the ensemble from the perimeter streets, on a higher level. With this strategy, in addition, the apparent building volume is reduced, lowering the vision of the construction and increasing the green surfaces.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The floor plan of the building, lays out an organisation in two areas clearly differentiated, by a public area composed by set of rooms designed to serve the users of the facility and a private area composed by the needed service rooms for the deceased preparation and the coffins movement between them. A system of patios completes the layout of the floor plan, these patios organise, rank and illuminate the spaces and establish filters between different ambiances.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes

The structural system is composed of walls and reinforced concrete slabs formed with pinewood boards and Corten steel pillars made of flat bars. All these elements define the building image and character providing simplicity to the materiality of the piece. The materialisation is completed with natural stone pavements and wooden vertical facing producing interior warmth. The steel pillars generate a light gradient, establishing visual filters and protecting the interior from the direct sunlight.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Site plan – click for larger image

The materiality generated by the assortment of exposed structural element textures together with the natural light qualify and determinate the atmospheres of each space, accompanying the visitor’s mourning at every turn. In this way each space is illuminated by a specific light different from the rest. In essence, light and matter.

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Floor and roof plan – click for larger image

Authors: Enric Batlle I Durany, Joan Roig Duran, Albert Gil Margalef, Architects
Collaborators: Miriam Aranda, Architect / Dolors Feu, Agricultural Engineer & Landscape Designer / Diana Calicó, Elisabeth Torregrosa, Technical Architects / Sj12, Albert Colomer, Installation Engineering / Static, Gerardo Rodríguez, Structural Engineering

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Site section – click for larger image

Builder: Vopi4
Surface: 700 Sqm
Location: Sant Joan Despí, Barcelona
Project & Execution Date: 2009-2011

New Funeral Home in Sant Joan Despí by Batlle i Riog Arquitectes
Cross section – click for larger image

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Animation shows completion of Antoni Gaudí’s Sagrada Família

News: the completion of Art Nouveau architect Antoni Gaudí’s Sagrada Família basilica in Barcelona is simulated in this movie released to show the final stages of construction anticipated before 2026, 100 years after the death of the architect (+ movie).

The one-minute video published on the Sagrada Familia Foundation’s Youtube channel shows each of the stages left and how the basilica will look when completed.

It combines helicopter footage of the current building with computer-animated renders to show spires, a central cupola and other remaining structures rise from nothing.

2026 completion of Gaudi's Sagrada Familia

The Sagrada Familia Foundation has also published six one-minute movies showing 3D animations of the completion dates for each phase, including the Sagristia in 2015, Torre de Maria in 2018 and Torre de Jesus in 2020.

When the basilica is finished it will have 18 towers dedicated to different religious figures, of various heights to reflect their hierarchy. There are eight towers completed so far.

2026 completion of Gaudi's Sagrada Familia

Work began on Sagrada Familia in 1882 and Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi took over the direction in 1914. The completed basilica is due to open in 2026, 144 years after it began, to coincide with the centennial anniversary of Gaudí’s death in 1926.

Since the mid 1980s, the build has been overseen by Catalan architect Jordi Bonet, whose father previously worked on the project with Gaudí.

2026 completion of Gaudi's Sagrada Familia

In June, Google celebrated Gaudi’s 161 birthday with a google doodle that depicted stylised versions of some of the architects most famous works, including Park Guell and Casa Mila in Barcelona.

See more design and architecture in Barcelona »
See more religious architecture »
See more churches »

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Barcelona Kaleidolapse

MyLapse nous présente une belle utilisation du Kaleidolapse, effet visuel permettant d’ajouter un effet kaléidoscopique à du time-lapse. Reprenant les plus grands lieux et monuments de Barcelone, cette vidéo permet de redécouvrir la ville catalane sous un autre regard. A découvrir dans la suite

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The White Retreat by Colombo and Serboli Architecture

This seaside studio apartment in Barcelona by Spanish studio Colombo and Serboli Architecture has an all-white interior that includes a tiled kitchen and bathroom that can be hidden away (+ slideshow).

The White Retreat by CaSA

Colombo and Serboli Architecture designed the apartment for an art historian and curator who asked for a plain space where he could display his art, music and books.

The White Retreat by CaSA

“The client envisioned a peaceful, open and essential space, furnished with a few carefully selected objects,” said the studio. “In sum, [it is] a peaceful place for introspection, flooded with light.”

The White Retreat by CaSA

The space contains a combined living room and bedroom, with a small kitchenette and bathroom on one side that can be hidden away behind a sliding door and folding panel.

The White Retreat by CaSA

Lighting fixtures are tucked out of sight in the kitchen shelves and around the bathroom, while a light suspended above the window frame illuminates the outdoor space.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The tiled walls are set against dark grey grouting, while other details include white furniture and a resin floor.

The White Retreat by CaSA

A glazed wall comprising a door and several windows leads out onto a shaded outdoor terrace.

The White Retreat by CaSA

Other apartments we’ve featured include a Sao Paulo renovation with cupboards and drawers resembling slices of Swiss cheese, a Ukrainian apartment with a combined bookshelf and stairs and a Barcelona apartment converted from an old laundry space.

The White Retreat by CaSA

See more apartment interiors »
See more Spanish architecture and interiors »

The White Retreat by CaSA

Here’s a project description from the architects:


The White Retreat, Stiges, Spain

The renovation of this 36 square metre apartment came with a defined brief. The client, a French Art historian and curator, professor at the Sorbonne University, came to us with very clear ideas for his small property.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The apartment, located in the city centre of the coast town of Sitges (a few steps from the beach) is completely introverted, facing only an interior courtyard. The lack of views is compensated by silence and light.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The client envisioned a peaceful, open and essential space, furnished with a few carefully selected objects; contemporary artworks, some books, and his records. In sum, a peaceful place for introspection, flooded with light.

The White Retreat by CaSA

An extremely reduced budget asked for simple, inexpensive solutions. The space is conceived through three different blocks: the bathroom/kitchen block, the living/bedroom one and the third, external, the terrace. The last two are extremely permeable, only divided by a large window and a long, oversized louvers one on the bedroom side, both existing elements that were preserved.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The big opening connects a small terrace (11 square meters), unified with the interiors through the use of the continuous white resin flooring and a blank parasol that provides privacy while diffusing the daylight. Indoor and outdoor are therefore connected as a continuous living space.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The Quaderna table (Superstudio 1970), a piece our client desired to incorporate since the project started, inspired the tiles that clad bathroom/kitchen block. The white matte 3x3cm tiles reproduce the table’s grid and are the only texture allowed in the whole project. This block is connected with the living/bedroom area through an opening that reveals the tiles used inside the bathroom.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The same texture was also used inside the kitchen unit, creating a continuous spatial sequence through the consistency of texture, which appears once opened its horizontal book- door. The tiles also disguise the sliding door that leads to the toilet. All containers, such as in the kitchen unit and the closet in the bedroom area, are carefully hidden through the use of white doors.

The White Retreat by CaSA

We took our client’s desire of an all-white space quite literally, to the extreme of choosing this colour for the kitchen sink and all the streamlined taps of kitchen, wash hand basin and shower are matt white (Via Manzoni series by Gessi). All the lighting has been solved through the use of florescent tubes, hidden into the kitchen shelves or displayed like in the bathroom. A line of florescent light suspended on the window frame dividing living and terrace illuminates the indoor and the outdoor space, unifying them. On the outer face of the terrace balustrade, a bright, evergreen, large climber plant covers the wall, defining the threshold of the white space of the project.

The White Retreat by CaSA

The apartment is brought to life through the pieces the client chose. French artist Fabrice Hiber, of which our client is curator, is to perform a graphic piece on one of the walls of the living. A Daniel Riera photo is upon the bed head. Two prints by Cuban artist Félix González-Torres (with the writings “Somewhere Better Then This Place” e “Nowhere Better Then This Place”) are on the bathroom wall. A Hedi Slimane photo, sandwiched in plexiglass became the music table. Next to it, a Muji sofa, futon-like, rigorously white. A military camp table that collapse to form a briefcase and two interweaved raffia wooden chairs from the ’60 furnish the terrace.

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and Serboli Architecture
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Casa by 2260mm Architects

Following a series of stories about Spanish residences with tiled floors here’s a renovated early twentieth-century house in Barcelona featuring a mixture of old and new tiles.

Casa by 2260mm Architects

Spanish studio 2260mm Architects designed the interior for a family, partially dismantling an old house in the neighbourhood of Gracia. The architects inserted an extra storey and added a tiled courtyard filled with potted plants to bring more light into the ground floor.

Casa by 2260mm Architects

Most of the decorative tiles were retained and surrounded by new, grey tiles, forming the floors of two bedrooms, a kitchen and dining room and the hallways.

Casa by 2260mm Architects

“The tiles are from the early twentieth century and were often used in houses and apartments in Barcelona,” architect Manel Casellas told Dezeen.

“Most of the tiles in the corridor and the bedrooms are located in the original place. In the living room and the kitchen we designed ‘carpets’ with some existing coloured tiles,” he added, explaining the arrangement.

Casa by 2260mm Architects

Part of the roof had to be removed to add the new first floor, providing a bedroom and indoor balcony with wooden floorboards.

Wooden ceiling beams are left exposed on both floors, but are painted white on the first floor.

Casa by 2260mm Architects

Other tiled Spanish apartments we’ve featured include one in Barcelona where floor tiles highlight seating areas, one in Toledo with green patterned ceramics and another in Barcelona with tiles that gradually change from green to red.

See more architecture in Barcelona »
See more architecture and interiors featuring tiles »

Casa by 2260mm Architects

Photography is by Lluís Bernat.

Here’s a short description from the architects:


Casa, Barcelona

A renovation of a ground floor house of the early XX century in Barcelona, partly renovated a few years ago, with ceilings that hide a great height.

Casa by 2260mm Architects
Long section – click for larger image

Although it was dark, its facades face to the street and the inner garden. The project partially disassemble the house and maintains structure and distribution: a new interior courtyard illuminates the ground floor and gives the kitchen some facade.

Casa by 2260mm Architects
Cross section – click for larger image

We added a floor into the existing volume and dismantled part of the roof, pulling some facade back and making a terrace for bedrooms.

Casa by 2260mm Architects
Long section two – click for larger image

We have used a dry construction system, with a new floor of wooden beams, OSB boards, wood fibre insulation and wooden floor. The new facade is isolated from the outside with wood fibreboard. We maintained pre-existing characteristics: interior woodwork and old tiles.

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Architects
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SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

This former butchers shop in Barcelona has been converted into a shoe shop furnished with wooden pallets, ropes and tyres (+ slideshow).

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Spanish firm Dom Arquitectura and Rwanda-based Asa Studio renovated the narrow interior by stripping away the tiles that used to line the walls then painting over the rough plastered surface and blobs of leftover adhesive with a grey glaze.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Display units made of pallets slung from the ceiling on ropes are used to showcase the Ethiopian brand’s range of shoes.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Tyres are hung from the ceiling by thick lengths of rope as decoration, while the ceiling is strung with extra lengths of rope and spotlights.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Metal work benches stretch down one side of the store with space to hold shoe boxes underneath, steel plates protrude from gaps in the pallets on the wall to form individual platforms for the shoes and a folded steel plate stretches in front of the window to display footwear to passersby.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

“We had a very small place and a very limited budget,” the studio said. “We decided to use natural materials and neutral colours to highlight the product. The colourful shoes should be the element that attracts and stands out to the street walker and the future client.”

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Other shop interiors we’ve recently featured include a Belgian fashion boutique with cacti, gravel and a wooden bridge, a shop and cafe in Vienna with a grid of white ceramic tiles and a fashion boutique in London lined with dominoes and a patterned iron facade.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

See more retail interiors »

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Photography is by Jordi Anguera.

Here’s a description from the architects:


SoleRebels Shoe Store, Gracia, Barcelona

SoleRebels is an Ethiopian brand of shoes from Africa. They surprise us with recycled materials, colourful shoes and originality. Its purpose was implant the brand in Barcelona for the first time.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

Located in Gracia, we had a very small place and a very limited budget. The place was an old butcher with white and bright tiled walls.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio

The coating did not fit with the brand and with the image that we wanted for the store. So we took out the tiles, but decided to leave the plaster gobs that held them, and paint in that textured walls with a stone grey with a grey glaze, so we keep alive part of the place history.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio
Store display design

Ahead the walls, as a new layer, we proposed a number of recycled items, such as pallets, ropes and wheels that fit with the brand image and the idea that we wanted to convey. With minimal resources we bet for a sustainable and original design.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio
Interior renovation and plans

We decided to use natural materials and neutral colours to highlight the product. The colourful shoes should be the element that attract and stand out the street walker and future client. One iron piece in “U” form wrap the space and allows us to exhibit the most outstanding shoes. One store side is lined with pallets, which helps to increase exposure while gives warmth to the space.

SoleRebels by Dom Arquitectura and Asa Studio
Interior plans – click for larger image

Some ropes tied to the pallets go up by the ceiling to come down to the other store side, where they also hold several wheels, reused to promote featured shoes. Everything is held between both sides and generates a sustainable tension.

Recycle step by step project: Dom Arquitectura + Asa Studio
Surface: 26 metres squared

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and Asa Studio
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