Architecture in Madrid — sunlit courtyards, ceramic facades, and interiors of spare elegance. A city where modernism arrived late and stayed long, producing cultural institutions, apartment renovations, and restaurants designed with the same precision as museums.
Houses, cottages, studios, and flats where the daily rhythm is the design brief. Federation retrofits, dune villas, mountain cascades, Sukiya recalibrations, floodplain elevations, studio-homes built into warehouse shells. Light, air, circulation, and the boundary between private space and shared life — the quiet discipline that makes a dwelling hold its life rather than display it.