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“Flat Eleven”: comfort and functionality in 50 sqm

The Italian Studio Pierattelli Architetture interprets a small apartment in the centre of Florence, designing a new idea of functionality.

Florence | Studio Pierattelli Architetture has designed a 50-square-metre flat in the heart of Florence: a private residence where the absence of square metres is not a limitation but an opportunity to interpret the theme of contemporary living by combining absence and presence, function and form, comfort and perspective.

Developed on two levels, the flat has been completely reconfigured compared to its original condition. The furnishings are all tailor-made and their millimetric precision has freed up spaces, that domestic life can now enjoy, as they are not occupied by previous structures or facades.

A restrained entrance opens onto a surprisingly large, double-height room, in which the vertical dimension contrasts with the horizontal main room below, used as a living area.

A round arch characterizes the spaces, giving depth and proportion to the area: a true focal point around which both the gaze and living functions rotate. The arch becomes a scenic backdrop framing both kitchen and living room and determining the volumetric relationships between different spaces. In the centre, the Arclinea kitchen watches over the living area.

“We thought the apartment would have more breathing space without furniture scattered all over the place, which would have restricted freedom of movement and contributed to reducing the perception of space” say architects Andrea and Claudio Pierattelli.

A lacquered wooden bench forms the base of the large made-to-measure sofa with its denim cushions; at the end of the structure a flower box gives life to a surprise green corner. A wall-mounted bookcase, also in lacquered wood, seamlessly connects the lower and upper rooms, giving character and function to the flat.

You go up to the sleeping area by a cantilevered staircase whose lacquered iron structure also supports a craftsman-made fixed bike. A glass balustrade provides protection for this upper level, delimiting the spaces lightly and with discretion. Its transparency and light permeability also contribute to create a uniquely harmonious room. The apartment jewel is the tiny window through which you can admire the dome of the Renaissance church of Santo Spirito.

The walk-in closets, located on both the lower and upper levels, ensure the necessary capacity without taking space away from the rooms.

The choice of materials, colours and finishes is dictated by the need to maximise the permanence of light and desaturate the space by amplifying the perception of room depth. The French herringbone parquet expands the apparent surface and helps illuminate the whole flat, thanks also to the natural shade selected. A palette of pale colours has been favoured throughout the dwelling, with the exception of the indigo blue wall and the matching sofa, which, by contrast, characterise the entire project.

Attention to detail is also reflected in the choice of furnishings, true design icons: the Taccia lamp by Achille Castiglioni by FLOS, the work of the contemporary photographer
Wolfgang Uhlig, the Fort Knox projectors by Philippe Stark by FLOS, the elliptical Tulip coffee table by Charles and Ray Eames by Knoll (which, thanks to a simple basic replacement, can easily be converted into a dining table for six people).

Facts & Figures

Developer: Private

Year: 2018

Project: Arch. Claudio Pierattelli, Arch. Andrea Pierattelli

Dimension of intervention: 50 sq.m.

Photos: Iuri Niccolai

Furniture: Made to measure and to design

Lighting: Flos, Artemide

Kitchen: Gamma by Arclinea

Appliances: Siemens Furnishings: Dinner table Eames chair by Vitra, Tulip table by Charles and Ray Eames by Knoll, Flou bed headboard to design

Kitchen fittings: Foster

Pierattelli Architetture
Eclecticism, research and mutation are the cornerstones of Pierattelli Architetture’s work, a studio founded in Florence in the ‘80s by Massimo Pierattelli. Each piece of architecture is conceived as a taylor made creation, shaped not only around the client, but also around the context in which it is placed. Reinterpreting the past and imagining the future become, therefore, the main foundation of Pierattelli Architetture’s works and realizations. The projects of the studio, with almost 40 years of experience behind it, range from directional centres to large infrastructures, from hotels to houses, from industrial spaces to design. Among the most famous are: the Arval offices at Scandicci (Florence), the Learning Center, Auditorium and Turbine Building for GE Oil & Gas in Florence, the Kortimed business centre in Valencia, UnipolSai Villa Cicogna and Learning Center in Bologna, the luxury apartment hotels Domux Home, M7Contemporary Apartments and the hotel Number 9 in Florence, the Cariprato headquarters in Prato.

Source: Nemo Monti

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