In the quiet village rhythms of Spain’s Alt Empordà, La Fusteria stands as a tactile dialogue between history and inhabitant. Clara Crous Arquitectura has stripped away layers of time to reveal the honest character of this former carpentry workshop, where sweeping Catalan vaults now shelter a fluid sequence of living spaces. The air feels cooler against the lime-plastered walls, and the sunlight plays across the irregular, sun-baked textures of handmade "toba" floors.
The experience is one of sensory permanence—the weight of the masonry overhead provides a sense of grounding often lost in modern construction. From the central kitchen island that mirrors the workshop’s original curves to the reclaimed front courtyard that negotiates the threshold between home and street, every detail is a tribute to craft. La Fusteria is a living vessel for collective memory, proving that the most resilient architecture is that which listens to the whispers of its past.
via #urdesignmag
architects @claracrousarq
images @montsecapdevila_
#ClaraCrousArquitectura #SpanishArchitecture #InteriorDesign #AdaptiveReuse #CatalanVaults
Fa poc algú em va preguntar què és el que més m’agradava fotografiar. Li vaig respondre i avui, revisant aquestes fotos, m’he adonat que una de les coses que més gaudeixo és buscar la bellesa en el procés. Honrar allò que no està acabat i guardar el record de la lentitud. I m’ho emporto a la vida: mirar amb cura els passets petits i les obertures per on comença a entrar la llum.
Seguiment d’obra per @peeeerf
Fusteria @sancas_showroom