

Had you been in Logroño,
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The project captures a feeling of eerie familiarity as the elongated volume, articulated around a series of square rooms measuring 3.6 metres squared, mimics the disposition of a typical house. Held within the public realm, the domestic scale of the rooms feel alien as the occupant transforms from casual visitor to inhabitant as they move throughout the space.
Open to the sky, the volumes explore spatial possibilities through a rotund
Square format thermo-clay bricks form the spaces “programmatically generic but spatially specific” walls. This combination of scale and an everyday material so typical of our collective imagination leaves a warmly unifying impression on guests. “Moreover, the brick block is both material and spatial unit of the project,” explain the designers, “generating a system of stereotomic appearance capable of veiling its tectonic logic thanks to the massiveness of its pieces.”


On the floor, broken pieces of discarded bricks create a sense of material continuity. This textural inconsistency underfoot was also a way to slow down those who passed through as the leisurely experience offered an opportunity to reflect on this overlooked part of Logroño away from the hustle and bustle of the city.
With the red-brick chimney standing tall as a totem, Palma and Hanghar have reconsidered what public space could be and how we interact with it, as they embody the festival’s mission to form a dialogue between the city, its heritage and the rise of contemporary architecture.
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