Berro House / Jimenez Linares

Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Interior PhotographyBerro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 3 of 32Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 4 of 32Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 5 of 32Berro House / Jimenez Linares - More Images+ 27

  • Architects: Jimenez Linares
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  240
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2021
  • Photographs
    Photographs:David Zarzoso
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Piedra paloma, Baxi, Cortizo, Daikin, FARO Barcelona, Tres, Velux
  • Lead Architects: Abelardo Linares, Elena Jiménez
  • Collaborator: Paloma Marquez
  • Technical Architect: Francisco Melchor
  • Builder: Serviteco
  • City: Madrid
  • Country: Spain
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Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Exterior Photography
© David Zarzoso

Text description provided by the architects. Next to the Quinta de Fuente del Berro Park, on a street bordered by Castaños de Indias, we find this house built in the late 1920s. The house, which was the residence of the sculptor Jorge de Oteiza in the 1950s, was very deteriorated, and its facades had undergone numerous modifications.

Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Interior Photography
© David Zarzoso
Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 7 of 32
© David Zarzoso

We began by carrying out research in the Archivo de la Villa de Madrid, which allowed us to discover the plans of the original project. Based on this documentation, we decided to recover the original image of the house: a white volume, with large windows to the outside and a Roman ceramic roof, surrounded by a garden that seems to climb up the facade, through the incorporation of wrought steel planters.

Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 23 of 32
© David Zarzoso
Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 31 of 32
Floor Plan
Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 4 of 32
© David Zarzoso

Inside the house, we find a central staircase that tries to incorporate the garden into the interior. This space is wrapped in a perforated mesh in the shape of palm trees that act as a large screen that casts different shadows depending on the light. The result is something like walking along a large vine that connects the different spaces of the house by means of double heights. 

Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 17 of 32
© David Zarzoso
Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Image 30 of 32
Axonometric
Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Interior Photography
© David Zarzoso
Berro House / Jimenez Linares - Interior Photography, Chair
© David Zarzoso

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Cite: "Berro House / Jimenez Linares" [Casa del Berro / Jimenez Linares] 27 Mar 2022. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/978161/berro-house-jimenez-linares> ISSN 0719-8884

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