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First House

Hanghar

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Silver

1 / 20

Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
GRAND JURY VOTES
Shortlisted - Show Flat of the Year
6.92
7.49
7.23
6.67
7.08
P.C.Ee
P.C.Ee Editor & Creative Director at industry+
6.81
6.77
7.52
6.52
6.91
Amrita Mahindroo
Amrita Mahindroo Director at DROO - Da Costa Mahindroo Architects
Excellent functionality and great u...
7.67
8.38
7.88
8.45
8.1
Tiffany Yao
Tiffany Yao Regional Workplace Manager at Newmark
Simple, inviting and functional. Th...
7.06
8.02
6.77
5.85
6.93
Falco Webbink
Falco Webbink Head of Design at Wink
6.15
6.77
6.77
5.85
6.39
Designer
Floor area
160 ㎡
Completion
2020
Carpentry
Francisco Sandoval
Contractor
Jose Ignacio Fenoll
Photographer

The project consists of the renovation of a 160m2 apartment in a 1950s building in the south of Spain. The building, the first reinforced concrete high-rise in the city, was built with poor construction materials which lead to the decision of having to demolish the entire apartment and rebuild from scratch. The owners, a retired couple who wanted to move back to the city after years of living in the suburbs, wanted a space that could both accommodate everyday needs whilst simultaneously be able to host friends and family. Wonder and disguise played a crucial role in this project. The house’s storage, a series of linear built-in-place cabinets, organize and structure the space, defining a volumetric perimeter that carries the materiality of the project. The result is a finely delimited, open space that refuses to express its program but allow for multiple possibilities to co-exist. The apartment consists of two main spatial elements: six white oak wardrobes that organize the access to bedrooms and bathrooms and two deep-green metallic cabinets that act as storage and define the cooking area. Made of thin, perforated steel, these cabinets ambiguously mask and showcase the owner’s possessions. Tableware, linen, clothes, cleaning supplies or food are unintentionally staged together, a gentle reminder of the unbridled consumerism our societies face. The cooking area is highlighted by a green, terrazzo piece that serves as the kitchen countertop. The materials are refined but direct and simple. The flooring of the house is solved with one material: 10x60 cm off-white, ceramic tiles that are turned 45 degrees in order to express its independence. At the very end, a T-shaped space holds the most public area of the house. It is defined by large, oak windows, that frame the views towards the city’s main boulevard and flood the room with natural light.