La Fusteria | Clara Crous Studio
Vilamacolum / Spain / 2025
La Fusteria (Catalan for “carpentry”) is a project that transforms a former carpentry workshop into a contemporary residence. Located in a small village in the Alt Empordà, the project respects the building’s original character: two Catalan vaults on the ground floor retain the memory of the workshop that occupied the space for decades and serve as the main spatial driver of the intervention.
The owners, long settled in the village, acquired the property to host family members who do not live locally, particularly during the long winter months. Combined with its use as a vacation rental, these dual functions have guided the project’s decisions, ensuring comfort, spatial quality, and careful attention to detail.
The intervention updates the building with a contemporary approach, improving functionality and efficiency without compromising its identity. Renovated installations and exterior joinery enhance thermal comfort and the connection with the outdoors, while the front courtyard regains its role as a transitional space between the street and the home. Custom-designed railings integrate safety with aesthetic coherence.
A key change was concentrating daytime living on the ground floor, relocating the kitchen next to the living area to create an open space that interacts with the vaults, while freeing the upper floors for bedrooms and private areas.
Materiality has played a central role: added finishes were removed, and original walls were restored with lime mortars and plasters that allow the masonry to breathe and bring light and texture to the interiors. The restoration of handmade toba floors and artisanal tiles reinforces the connection to traditional materials and craftsmanship.
La Fusteria reflects on how to inhabit built heritage: an architecture that accompanies, updates, and extends the life of a building, transforming a former workshop into an efficient, comfortable home deeply connected to its place.
[ES]
La Fusteria (carpintería en catalán) es un proyecto que transforma una antigua carpintería en una vivienda contemporánea. Localizado en un pequeño pueblo del Alt Empordà, el proyecto parte del respeto por la huella del edificio original: las dos bóvedas catalanas en planta baja conservan la memoria del taller que ocupó el lugar durante décadas y se convierten en el principal argumento espacial de la intervención.
Los propietarios, ya arraigados al pueblo, adquirieron la finca para acoger a familiares que no residen allí, especialmente durante los largos meses de invierno. Combinando este uso con el de vivienda de alquiler vacacional, las decisiones del proyecto se han centrado en garantizar confort, calidad espacial y un cuidado preciso en los detalles.
La intervención actualiza el edificio desde una mirada contemporánea, mejorando funcionalidad y eficiencia sin renunciar a su identidad. La renovación de instalaciones y carpinterías refuerza el confort térmico y la relación con el exterior, mientras que el patio delantero recupera su papel como espacio de transición entre la calle y la vivienda. Nuevas barandillas, diseñadas ad hoc, integran seguridad y coherencia estética.
Un cambio clave ha sido concentrar la vida diurna en la planta baja, trasladando la cocina junto al estar para crear un espacio abierto que dialoga con las bóvedas, liberando las plantas superiores para dormitorios y espacios privados.
El trabajo sobre los materiales ha sido esencial: se eliminaron revestimientos añadidos y se recuperaron paramentos originales con morteros y acabados de cal que permiten la transpiración de los muros y aportan luz y textura a los interiores. La restauración de pavimentos de toba manual y baldosas artesanales refuerza la conexión con los materiales tradicionales y el oficio.
La Fusteria plantea una reflexión sobre cómo habitar el patrimonio construido: una arquitectura que acompaña, actualiza y prolonga la vida de un edificio, transformando un antiguo taller en una vivienda eficiente, confortable y profundamente vinculada a su lugar.
Photography: Montse Capdevila
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Clara Crous Studio
Principal Architect
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Clara Crous
Founder
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PR/Marketing Agency
La Fusteria (Catalan for “carpentry”) is a project that transforms a former carpentry workshop into a contemporary residence. Located in a small village in the Alt Empordà, the project respects the building’s original character: two Catalan vaults on the ground floor retain the memory of the workshop that occupied the space for decades and serve as the main spatial driver of the intervention. The owners, long settled in the village, acquired the property to host family...
- Year 2025
- Work started in 2023
- Work finished in 2025
- Client Ca-liu
- Status Completed works
- Type Apartments / Interior design
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