mirrored surfaces broaden HANGHAR’s Seventies residence renovation in madrid
HANGHAR RENOVATES 65 sqm apartment in MADRID
HANGHAR has renovated a 65 sqm apartment situated in a 1970s building in madrid with a flexible spatial configuration and a simple, direct material palette. the original apartment is subdivided into four equal rooms, each measuring 3.5 x 3.5 m, creating a spatial isotropy connected through large, central openings. mirrored surfaces across the home expand the sense of space and highlight the presence of the original fireplace, which has been preserved. a continuous, scale-less red linoleum sheet covers the apartment’s floor, conceived as an abstraction of the traditional clay tile commonly found in homes of the area. meanwhile, the ceiling has been covered in enamel to amplify the lights and colors present in the home while the cooking area, made out of stainless steel and mirrors, simply disappears.all images by luis díaz díaz
‘LARA HOUSE’ offers a flexible spatial system
following the spatial investigation firstly carried at the local studio’s ‘ronda house’ (see more here), the project is understood as a spatial system indifferent to the site in which is implemented.‘in response to the rapid real estate bubble the city is currently in, the home distances itself from market driven logics and offers a flexible system capable of evading prefixed and conventional definitions,’ explains HANGHAR. conceptually generic whilst physically specific, the system negates any relationship to perimeter, program nor orientation. the only two elements that create a visual reference and ground one’s presence in the space are the preserved fireplace and the cooking area.
mirrored wall expands the sense of space
a continuous, scale-less red linoleum sheeting covers the apartment’s floor