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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.

Born House in Barcelona, Spain by GOKO ESTUDIO DE ARQUITECTURA

 
July 3rd, 2018 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: v2com

The residence is located at the heart of the Ciutat Vella district just metres away from the former Born market, in one of Barcelona’s most fashionable neighbourhoods.

From the beginning, one of the most interesting propositions was the client’s focus on what her home should be like: an open free-flowing space.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

  • Architects: GOKO ESTUDIO DE ARQUITECTURA
  • Project: Born House
  • Location: Barcelona, Spain
  • Photography: Valentín Hîncu
  • Surface Area: 50 m2
  • Refurbishment Date: 2017

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

From a functional point-of-view

Functional requirements recommended the complete redefinition of the space. The owner was keen to avoid floorplans typical of conventional homes. She was looking for flexibility in the use of space. A limited surface area of 50 m2 had to become her refuge, her work area, and a place to welcome friends without that requiring areas designed exclusively for each function. A guiding principle was the creation of various areas without establishing hierarchies to prioritise their versatility and conserve the intimacy of certain areas such as the bedroom.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

From a spatial point-of-view

As far as the owner was concerned, SPACE is the height of luxury. Space based on order and discipline, which eschews abundance and manifests itself in an exercise of distillation that places a value on emptiness as a form of spatial wealth in which people are more able to live life to the full.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

The diagnosis

It was clear from the U-shaped floorplan with its stumpy legs that the home’s outline had a huge potential: the possibility of a single free-flowing and light space with no need for physical partitions. The bends of the U inevitably reduced the sense of a ‘single space’ and endowed each sector with a ‘little intimacy’.

The functional and spatial proposal

On the basis of this observation, the proposal sought to respond to the following question: How can the different zones of the home be connected to achieve a single space and ensure the privacy of the night-time area?

The main idea was to design a free-flowing space so that the owner could move freely around the house while guaranteeing the intimacy of the night-time area. This requirement contradicted the idea of creating a single space, but there was a solution.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

A system of consecutive interconnected spaces was proposed. The flat would be organised around a central area in which all the life of the residence would be lived.

The interplay between these two juxtaposed ideas, a free-flowing space and the preservation of intimacy, was resolved with the location of the bathroom (shower-walk-in wardrobe).

The bathroom (shower-walk-in wardrobe) hinged between the bedroom and toilet, resolves the interconnection between the social zone and the night-time zone, enabling the twofold function of the toilet (as a visitor’s toilet and en-suite bathroom). The bend in one of the U’s legs ensures the intimacy of the bedroom without the need for a door.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

This functional layout makes it possible to walk through the shower-walk-in wardrobe in a circular fashion that provides a private route from the bedroom to the toilet.

And a glass door between the bedroom and the walk-in wardrobe (sealing in the water vapour), means the bathroom benefits from the bedroom’s natural light.

In order to obtain as large an interior space as possible, the kitchen was designed lineally and equipped with a lot of storage capacity (5 metres in length) with two large gaps along the way: a horizontal one for the countertop, sink and cooker, and a vertical one framing the window onto the interior courtyard. One of the kitchen cabinet doors provides access to a laundry room.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

The use of colour also contributes to setting the scene. The spatial unity was enhanced with wooden flooring.

The walls and ceiling constitute a white canvas backing for several pre-Columbian artefacts and works of art, which break up the rigidity of the home and provide Casa Born with personality.

The project overcame existing limitations to reveal the soul of the space and respond to the aspirations of its inhabitant in the best way possible.

Image Courtesy © Valentín Hîncu

Image Courtesy © GOKO ESTUDIO DE ARQUITECTURA

Image Courtesy © GOKO ESTUDIO DE ARQUITECTURA

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Categories: Apartments, House, Interiors, Residential




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