House Between Party Walls / Josep Ferrando


© Adrià Goula

© Adrià Goula


© Adrià Goula


© Adrià Goula


© Adrià Goula


© Adrià Goula

  • Architects: Josep Ferrando
  • Location: Carrer de Bailèn, 232 bis, 08037 Barcelona, Spain
  • Area: 225 sqm
  • Project Year: 2014
  • Photographs: Adrià Goula
  • Client: Miriam y Eduard
  • Builder: ROOM S.L.
  • Technical Architect: Toledo-Villarreal
  • Structural Engineer: Josep Nel.lo
  • Collaborators: Marta Arias, Carol Castilla, Jordi Pérez, Félix Platero, Goun Park, TaeGweon Kim, Adrià Orriols, Clara Vidal, Borja Rodríguez
  • Budget: 300.000 €

© Adrià Goula

© Adrià Goula

From the architect. Located in the historic center of Sant Cugat del Valles, a house between party walls becomes a city project and a way of life.


Site Plan

Site Plan

A piece that fits complex urban conditions: Monastery surroundings, Cultural Heritage, the main facade and the roof to preserve, 5 meters width and topographical unevenness that leaves the plot in between two streets in different heights.

Inside the existing space, a concrete block house is inserted. It party walls increase their thickness to serve as a filter and server space, generating storage space  in one side and “promenade” space in the other.


Model

Model

Model

Model

Model

Model

These thicknesses creates interior facade walls in the longitudinal direction that increase the spatial feeling in the transverse direction of the house.


© Adrià Goula

© Adrià Goula

Inside the concrete house the wooden plans adapt to the topography and the gaps of the existing facades.


© Adrià Goula

© Adrià Goula

Section

Section

© Adrià Goula

© Adrià Goula

The offset is used to generate visual cross and flood with light all plants to the basement through the vacuum of the upper bounds.


Model

Model

The house program is fragmentated avoiding the continuity of the horizontal plane of the floor as Adolf Loos’s “Raumplan”.


© Adrià Goula

© Adrià Goula

The sequence of houses within the house goes from more urban materials to domestic materials, constructing an empty space that lets light in and configures visual spaces all together. The inner emptiness becomes the square or public space of the house. That space where all eyes are crossed and relationships are built through railings furniture-turn to it.

http://ift.tt/2eV6LiF

Leave a comment