Layers · History · Color / Barcelona

The extensive renovation of a Barcelona residence from 1901 creates a flexible plan inspired by Coderch's "La Herencia" an uses color to point out the different layers of the building's history. A clear commitment to reuse rather than demolish.
 

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Photo: Jordi Pujol
Envuelto en color_estudiovilablanch_barcelona
Antes · Fotografía: Jordi Bernadó
A little history

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Located in the heart of the Quadrat d'Or neighborhood in Barcelona, this stunning home is situated in a modernist building built in 1901. Originally two separate floors, the property was combined into a single unit in the mid-20th century while retaining its two access doors. The house now spans 390 square meters on the ground floor, with an additional 65 square meters in the basement and 195 square meters of terrace. The property has also been enhanced with new neoclassical decorative elements.

Upon entering the house, we were struck by its solemn appearance. The original doors and windows were preserved, along with the hydraulic floors and two rooms with a gallery. The modernist past has been eliminated from most spaces. Modernism was replaced by neoclassical elements that were added in the main bays seeking an image of luxury and opulence (travertine marble floors, columns, pilasters, medallions, and figures...). In 1955, when the building was reconstructed and the two main bays were merged, structural reinforcements were added to the secondary bays. These reinforcements were covered with a neoclassical style to enhance and beautify the transit spaces.

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Después · Fotografía: Jordi Pujol
The assignment

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The couple, with three children studying abroad, sought an apartment to start anew in Barcelona. A spacious family home that accommodates each member's personal space, even as they reach the stage of "flying the nest." They also wanted to be able to meet everyone, even with their grandparents, on designated dates. Likewise, they needed to be able to host family and friends when they visited the city.

When they discovered the spacious ground-floor apartment, they were intrigued by many aspects, but concerned they would feel like they were living in a vast "neoclassical palace" when alone.

With a simple gesture of colour we point out the elements added 70 years ago in an originally modernist space and give them a second life.

INTERIOR ARCHITECTURE PROJECT

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The challenge was huge. How to make the floor plan flexible to the family's changing needs? What should be done with the neoclassical decorative layers that were added to the original modernist home? Should we eliminate them all in a more radical and costly intervention, also erasing their history? How to transform this “neoclassical palace” into a modern home?

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Flexible floor inspired by Coderch's "La Herencia"

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The home, with a total of 650 m2, had to become a space that adapted to the changing needs of the family. We had to find a way for them to enjoy a spacious home for 14 people, when the whole family got together, or a cozy apartment for just 2, when the children were away.

Master Coderch's teachings made us wonder: if people's lives change, why must plants remain rigid?

The legacy of “La Herencia” by Coderch, in which the architect designs a flexible floor plan where the living space grows and decreases according to the changing needs of a family, gave us an idea to solve the best floor plan layout. way possible.

We have designed sliding, watertight doors with locks that can be used to open or close different areas as per the requirements. This allows the space to be configured either as a single 7-room home or as two apartments with separate entrances. Additionally, by opening or closing these doors, the intermediate area can be expanded or reduced in one direction or another.

The traces of the past are preserved,
adapting the space to a new way of living in the 21st century.

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Color, key concept of the intervention

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Decidimos afrontar el reto con humor y honestidad, mostrando la historia del espacio, partiendo de lo existente. Apostamos por una intervención valiente y atrevida que emplea el color -o su ausencia- para señalar las distintas etapas que vivió la vivienda.

· Unas cintas de color intenso envuelven las crujías principales, de modo que suelos, techos y paredes paredes perpendiculares a fachada quedan "señalados" y las paredes paralelas a fachada conservan el color blanco que rocorre toda la vivienda. El azul y el verde son los colores elegidos para señalar los elmentos neoclásicos agregados; estos dos colores se escogen acorde con los tonos de las carpinterías originales de ambas fachadas.

· En las crujías secundarias, donde se habían añadido refuerzos estructurales, se eliminan los artificios decorativos buscando la piel original. Al hacerlo, quedan a la vista elementos que aportan una imagen más industrial: techos de vigueta y bovedilla, vigas y pilares de hierro.

· Los espacios que conservan elementos modernistas, se pintan de blanco cubriendo las carpinterías de madera y los techos con molduras de origen.

Vilablanch desarrolla una propuesta gráfica potente y atrevida que recorre toda la vivienda a modo de cortes contundentes entre el color y el blanco, dando como resultado un proyecto de gran personalidad y fuerza expresiva.

La intervención, basada en un concepto donde la aplicación del color va más allá de la simple estética, convierte un piso de falsa personalidad neoclásica en un hogar de gran potencia visual. Para llevarlo a cabo, encontramos un gran aliado en Kerakoll. Por un lado, los intensos colores de su colección nos despertaron la inspiración de grafiar aquello que queremos señalar; en este caso, la historia del espacio. Por el otro, técnicamente nos permitían envolver con un mismo color diferentes materiales (mármol, madera, yeso, hierro...) y dar una segunda vida a los elementos agregados hace 70 años en un espacio originalmente modernista. Reutlizar en lugar de demoler.

La casa envuelta en color_estudiovilablanch_barcelona

'COMING SOON', A LOOK BEYOND ARCHITECTURE

'Coming soon' is a short film linked to the "Layers · History · Color" project, which was created with the aim of showing the architectural intervention carried out in the home from a different perspective, but with the same beauty, daring and concreteness with which everything was executed. the project.
The work of the tandem formed by the vilablanch studio + the photographer and artist Jordi Bernadó, this audiovisual piece invites us to tour the space at a very specific moment: just when the work is finished, but not yet inhabited. That brief period of time in which everything is yet to come and everything is to be experienced.
The short film, with music by the composer and muisician Francesco Tristano, is a celebration of the moment 0. Without interruptions and through a single sequence shot, the different characters reveal the house to us, giving special prominence to the cuts, symmetries and continuities caused by the use of colors and its enveloping effect.
The images, with a great artistic component, are a trailer of the life to come; scenes of different moments that will occur between these centuries-old walls and that we will be able to share with you soon.