Architects
In lieu of a corridor, contrasting bold shapes lead from one room to another. Two angular, freestanding columns in the living room form a symbolic entranceway. A semicircular ‘studiolo’ connects the living room and bedrooms, while a perpendicular space leads to the bathroom, each clad from floor to ceiling in orange-speckled black
Two central walls divide the apartment into two halves, one with bedrooms and the other with kitchen-living rooms. These walls are clad with sheets of cork, the speckled texture mirroring the rubber, though with reversed light-to-dark tonality. Storage is hidden between the central walls, which also serves as sound insulation between the kitchen-living space and the bedrooms. The architects incorporated insulation to the interior walls, as well as a new floor that cools throughout summer and heats during winter, considerably reducing the occupants need for air conditioning or heating.
Besides the bright yellow bathroom, natural cork, black rubber, and the pale orange living room columns provide the only tonal colour throughout the common areas of the apartment. Stark white surfaces lead all attention to direct toward the architects unconventional material choice and daring use of shape.
The architects looked to the cork oak forests of Southern Europe for sustainable inspiration, which led to their using
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