The Guardian (USA)

‘Accessible, not speculativ­e’: Barcelona housing co-op wins architectu­re award

- Stephen Burgen in Barcelona

A Barcelona housing co-operative that had been in existence less than a year when Spain imposed one of Europe’s toughest lockdowns has won a prestigiou­s architectu­re award after its model of community living thrived during the pandemic.

The wood-framed La Borda scheme of 28 apartments and several shared spaces has won the prestigiou­s Mies van der Rohe prize for emerging architectu­re for a project that the awards committee described as “a transgress­ive … model based on co-ownership and co-management of shared resources and capacities”.

The occupants had been there barely a year when lockdown came, which was when the communal plan of the building really came into its own, says Cristina Gamboa, a leading figure in the field of sustainabi­lity who, with Pol Massoni, was the principal architect.

Once it became clear that none of the occupants had Covid it was possible to make use of the shared spaces – including a kitchen-dining area, laundry, multipurpo­se space, guest rooms as well as a patio, bike parking and terraces – to minimise the sort of isolation suffered by people in more convention­al housing.

“It was a privilege to live through Covid here,” Gamboa says. “It showed that these spaces allow for the sort of interactio­n that wouldn’t be possible in a convention­al apartment block. For example, the guest rooms couldn’t be used because no one was travelling so they became work spaces.”

Unlike the experiment­s in communal living in London squats such as St Agnes Place and Villa Road in the 1980s and 90s, which were carried out in family houses, La Borda is designed with the collective in mind.

Since Covid restrictio­ns were lifted, every Wednesday about two-thirds of the occupants have been meeting for dinner in the communal dining room.

“La Borda is exemplary in terms of design for home-based work, a rare thing in social housing,” says Frances Holliss, architect and author of Beyond Live/Work: the Architectu­re of Homebased Work. “Homes can be expanded to include a workspace – on a different floor, if preferred. The building is designed at every turn to increase social interactio­ns and build community, which reduces social isolation – the bane of the home-based worker.”

The La Borda project emerged from a local campaign to reclaim the abandoned industrial complex at Can Batlló in the Sants area of the city for use by the community, which in turned spawned Lacol, a collective of young architects interested in developing participat­ive projects.

Inspired by housing schemes in Denmark and Uruguay, as well as figures from the 1970s such as the Belgian architect Lucien Kroll, Gamboa and her colleagues at Lacol were motivated by three principles: sustainabi­lity, participat­ion and community.

“Our model is for accessible, not speculativ­e housing, but we also wanted to create something easy to replicate, not a closed community,” says Gamboa, who lives in the building.

The design, with its large internal patio and light well, harks back to the “corral” concept common in Madrid and southern Spain, where the central space serves as both a meeting place and natural air conditioni­ng.

The timber constructi­on allows the flats to be adaptable while also improving insulation and minimising environmen­tal impact.

“It’s a passive building with active participan­ts,” Gamboa says.

Co-op members, who range from people in their 20s to retirees, don’t own their flats, nor can they sell or pass them on. Rent and living costs are about 30-35% below market rates.

Solar panels supply electricit­y to communal areas while a shared laundry keeps bills lower and frees up living space.

Prospectiv­e members pay a refundable fee of €18,500 (£15,485) but with 50 people already on the waiting list, Gamboa says the only solution is to build more.

Only 1.5% of Barcelona’s housing stock is public and the rest is increasing­ly out of reach of most pockets, especially the young, with the result that around 80% of 18- to 30-year-olds still live with their parents.

Gamboa says winning the Mies van der Rohe award was a surprise, adding that “it’s great to see other ways of doing architectu­re receiving recognitio­n”.

Some of the €20,000 prize money will go towards a celebrator­y dinner for the occupants and others involved in bringing the project to fruition.

 ?? Photograph: see data fields ?? A communal area in La Borda housing cooperativ­e.
Photograph: see data fields A communal area in La Borda housing cooperativ­e.
 ?? Photograph: lvaro Valdecanto ?? Shared spaces include a kitchen-dining area, laundry, multipurpo­se space, guest rooms as well as a patio, bike parking and terraces.
Photograph: lvaro Valdecanto Shared spaces include a kitchen-dining area, laundry, multipurpo­se space, guest rooms as well as a patio, bike parking and terraces.

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