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Vasto Gallery

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Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
JURY VOTES
Large Apartment
6.97
6.89
7.38
7.42
7.16
Ad de Hond
Ad de Hond Founder and Creative Director at ADH.design
7.07
8.12
7.56
7.61
7.59
Simon Schmolling
Simon Schmolling Head of Architecture at Meiré und Meiré
I like the ton sur ton design and t...
6.55
7.99
7.8
7.9
7.56
Darren Xu
Darren Xu Founder and CEO at Spider Creative
6.64
6.98
7.14
7.73
7.12
Katie Kasabalis
Katie Kasabalis Cofounder at Kasawoo
7
8
8
7.5
7.63
Asha Sairam
Asha Sairam Principal at Studio Lotus
Every former function of the space...
7
6.5
7.2
8
7.18
Daniel Kaven
Daniel Kaven Co-Founder at William Kaven Architecture
6.86
2.66
7.57
7.38
6.12
Philip Staszewski
Philip Staszewski Partner Architect at Ivy Studio
7
7
7.5
8
7.38
Mauro Brigham
Mauro Brigham Founder and Creative Director at ncbham
Beautiful ambiance and spaciousness...
7.5
7.5
8.5
7.5
7.75
Catalina Soffia Baeza
Catalina Soffia Baeza Creative Director at Yáneken
7.55
6.16
7.15
7.15
7
Mark Bithrey
Mark Bithrey Founder and Creative Director at B3 Designers
6
7
6
6
6.25
Andrew Martin
Andrew Martin Founder and Creative Director at AMD Interior Architecture
I love the re use of buildings and...
7
7
7.5
8.5
7.5
Zhongli Wang
Zhongli Wang Partner at Catanian
6.41
6.96
7.01
7.01
6.85
Lindsay Roth
Lindsay Roth Design Director at Gensler
The idea of reuse and giving an unw...
8
7
8
7
7.5
Pengzhan Du
Pengzhan Du Chief Architect at Engineering Design Management Center of Bureau of public works of Shenzhen Municipality
7
7
7.2
7
7.05
Steve Lastro
Steve Lastro CEO and Future of Living Advisor at Linq-X
Beautiful layout and space. Feel it...
7
7.5
6.5
7
7
Comments
Innovation
Functionality
Creativity
Eco-Social Impact
Total
GRAND JURY VOTES
Shortlisted - Large Apartment of the Year
7.45
7.24
7.93
7.60
7.55
Kamna Malik
Kamna Malik Design Curator & Content Strategist at Kamna Malik
Love love love. The fact that it's...
8.59
7.75
10
7.75
8.52
Stephanie Lund
Stephanie Lund Cofounder and Creative Director at toi toi toi creative studio
Love seeing the reuse of old space,...
6.97
6.89
7.38
7.42
7.17
Felipe Mora
Felipe Mora Founder and Creative Director at F05 Studio
as a gallery there is no doubt it w...
6.97
6.89
7.38
7.42
7.17
Allison Rowe
Allison Rowe Former Head of Design at SPACE10
Really beautiful take on a live-wor...
7.72
7.65
7.38
7.42
7.54
Jocelyne Sacre
Jocelyne Sacre Design Strategist at Consultant
The simplicity and efficacy of this...
7
7
7.5
8
7.38
Designer
Client
Vasto Gallery
Floor area
487 ㎡
Completion
2022
Social Media
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Furniture
Furniture
Furniture

An intersection between domesticity and art, this project transforms an industrial studio into a comfortable home that doubles as an art gallery. By maintaining some of its original vagueness, this intervention is adapted to the client’s way of life by using spatial indetermination to blur the limits of the domestic sphere.

SUSTAINABILITY: FROM INDUSTRIAL WORKSPACE TO CONTEMPORARY LIVING

Poblenou is an old neighbourhood in Barcelona whose proximity to the sea and low land prices made the area attractive for factories and industries during the 18th century. This process led the site to consolidate as the city’s industrial district over time. However, during the 60s and 70s, de-industrialization took place, and vacant buildings sprung up, giving room to Barcelona’s new creative hub.

The project materializes in this setting, giving a new life to a vacant industrial space to set up a home and an art gallery. The flat features a single generous and diaphanous space with windows on three of its walls and an open plan only interrupted by two rows of steel columns.

FUNCTIONALITY: FREEDOM OF USE AND SPACIOUSNESS AS A PRIORITY

Acknowledging that the strengths of the apartment lie in its light, spacious atmosphere and distinctive structure, the project follows the simple premise of reducing the spatial divisions to a minimum. Thus, the floor plan is split in two: a private and public area, with the latter acting as a living room and exhibition space. To emphasize lightness and fluidity, these areas are divided by a service core detached from walls and ceiling. Built in wood, this central volume stands out not as a wall but as a free-standing element that allows one to perceive the space as a whole.

The living area is a flexible room with only two fixed pieces: an 8-meter-long stainless-steel kitchen counter and a long off-white table along the opposite wall. The rest of the room spans uninterrupted, allowing the exhibition space to adopt different configurations.

Even though smaller in size and different in use, the private room follows the boundless premise of the project too: bedroom and bathroom are merged into a single unit, where the bed, bathtub, and sink become loose elements within the room. A shower, a walk-in closet and a toilet are accommodated at the core.

INNOVATION: INTERIOR DESIGN AS A CONSTELLATION OF OBJECTS

The intervention encompasses two distinct actions. One is the restoration and enhancement of the existing qualities of the space through construction work. The other involves the design of site-specific interior elements offering new capacities.

In this way, the project’s interior design is reinterpreted as a constellation of unique objects detached from the apartment’s limits. These elements contrast with the white-washed walls and light-wood furnishing to emerge as accents of colour and form, weaving a cohesive and contemporary identity throughout the project, drawing focus to the pieces and artwork.