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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

TFLATMATE | DWELLING in Barcelona, España by Nook Architects

 
September 1st, 2017 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Nook Architects

Following the years after the civil war, the economic perils did not allow the city to expand and yet Barcelona experienced a considerable increase of population.  Barcelona’s industrial past allowed it to recover slightly quicker than the rural, more agriculture-based economies of the rest of the country, attracting many families that were in search of highly sought after employment.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

  • Architects: Nook Architects
  • Project: TFLATMATE | DWELLING IN BARCELONA
  • Location: Barcelona, España
  • Photography: Nieve | Productora Audiovisual
  • Year: 2014

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

To solve the high demand for residential space, new, less strict, urban planning regulations were set, allowing buildings to grow taller; many buildings that were once 4 o 5 stories high, became 2 or 3 stories higher.  To avoid that the increased height of the buildings affected the amount of sunlight received by the buildings and the street itself, such surmounts partially retracted from the original facade plane, creating a stepped volume on the crown of buildings.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

As these typologies were built well after the original construction, the building techniques allowed for less compartmentalized and unusual distributions. Such is the case of this dwelling, which has a 3 x 4 m space aligned to the building’s original façade, with two adjacent terraces on each side.  Such space has always served as the bedroom because of its dimensions, and its position has left the dining and living rooms on a second plane, hiding behind a zigzagging façade- something very unusual in Barcelona.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

The owner had two main concerns: to add a new bedroom, and to optimize the storage space- this dwelling had to allow the possibility of sharing the flat, hosting guests or accommodate a young family.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

This has been the first case in which Nook Architects has had to add a new, separate space to the original scheme.  It was clear that this new space had to be the result of the fragmentation of the great living room, however it was important to maintain and strengthen the interior elevation of the living room’s facade, configured by three arches, to solve the living room’s unusual placement in regards to bedroom and to the building’s original façade.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

The new bedroom was then created by constructing a wall that did not reach the facade and its configuration is finished by using a large pocket door that, when opened, allows to visualize the entire length of the arched façade.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

To increase the amount of natural sunlight in the living room, and to create the sensation that  the arch that leads into the bedroom, leads to the exterior, the main bedroom was closed down with large, translucent pocket doors, which have parallel, opaque shutters to obtain full intimacy, when desired.  These double set of doors increase the possibilities of regulating natural lighting and privacy in both the bedroom and living room.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

The owner was also very concerned with storage space, therefore a strip of cupboards was placed, wrapping the three openings just below the starting point of the arches, letting these breath and strengthening the transition between the interior and the exterior.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

We had the opportunity of moving the entry door a few centimeters, which allowed us to accommodate a new row of storage space.  Following the same criteria as in the cupboards we placed on the arches, we grouped the entry closets with the tall kitchen cabinets on a single strip forming a homogeneous elevation that maintains visual order on such a small space, without compromising the amount and versatility of the storage uses.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

To set a limit between the open kitchen and the living room, we opted for changing the pavement from wood to an hexagonal hydraulic mosaic which is reminiscent of the ones we are used to finding in the buildings of Barcelona’s industrial, modernist era, such as the one that sits just below this apartment.  This change of material therefore responds not only to functionality, but to the desire to recognize the city’s past and to reject the anonymous character of the attics that hide from view from the street.

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nieve | Productora Audiovisual

Image Courtesy © nook architects

Image Courtesy © nook architects

Image Courtesy © nook architects

Image Courtesy © nook architects

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Categories: House, Residential




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