The team at Madrid’s Estudio Reciente, led by architect Carlos Tomás, didn’t have to resort to noisy demolitions and a serious construction project when they recently reimagined a 753-square-foot apartment in the city’s lively Lavapiés neighborhood. Not surprisingly, the neighbors were grateful that the project was so small in scope, but the owner was as well, after seeing the final result.
This project was more subtle than many of the studio’s renovations, more of a touch-up than a total transformation, but it still stays true to the firm’s identity. Even though it was only a partial renovation with some small interventions, there is no question that the team at Estudio Reciente was behind it.
The client, a young man who loves books and art, gave the studio a challenge: Update the apartment without losing any of its original essence while working on a limited budget and on a tight schedule—two requests that architects and designers hear more than they might like.
While the studio generally works on larger projects, the team set their watches and embarked on the mission with an approach that Carlos describes as “a minimal intervention that enhances the value of the existing unit and, with only a few elements, changes and updates the way of using the space.”