The fabric can be pulled across the apartment’s open-plan to create dramatically staged dining and living areas.

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Project Details:
Location: Madrid, Spain
Architect: Estudio Reciente / @estudioreciente
Footprint: 753 square feet
Photographer: German Sáiz
From the Architect: “The house is located on the third floor of a unique building built in 1927 by the architect Luis Ferrero. With five balconies to the street, the house was distributed in two small rooms, a dining room, living room, kitchen and bathroom.
“In contrast to the regionalist style of the building’s façade, the inspiration for the interior project was the Sonneveld House (Rottherdam 1930), due to the use of color and materials in the different rooms. The new distribution aims to give priority to spaces with an obvious social function, uniting the dining room, living room and kitchen in a single 484-square-foot room. This space is characterized by being the only one whose walls have a neutral, light beige base. For the floor, a green-based lime mortar is chosen. This floor, together with the metal pillars, the partition curtain and part of the furniture, manage to generate a dynamic space where color is strongly present, but only occasionally.
“The integration of the kitchen stands out in this space. It is partially partition that features a mirror on one side facing the living room and on the other contains the refrigerator, oven and pantry. This element also helps hide the stove and the sink so that they are not visible from the living room.
“The bathroom is distributed in such a way that the toilet and the shower are almost hidden from the sink, thus allowing their simultaneous use. This space is conceived in a blue with a green base in the same shade as the intense green as the entrance. Playing with the different color relationships between the rooms, the ceiling is the same color as the walls of the room, but in a high-gloss finish, which generates an interesting interaction with the natural light that comes from the large window overlooking the patio.
“Finally, the bedroom, the warmest and most welcoming space in the house, is where the use of color becomes the protagonist. In this refuge space, the blue color of the carpet on the floor blends with the green of the custom-made wardrobes, the terracotta of the bedding and the maroon of the bedside tables. Thanks to the warm color of the walls and the use of indirect light, a sense of continuity is achieved that helps rest.”

Photo by German Sáiz

Photo by German Sáiz

Photo by German Sáiz
See the full story on Dwell.com: A Crimson Curtain Makes This Madrid Flat Look Like a David Lynch Set
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