espacioSOLO / estudio Herreros


© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas
  • Architects: estudio Herreros
  • Location: Plaza de la Independencia, 5, 28001 Madrid, Spain
  • Author Architects: estudio Herreros, Juan Herreros – Jens Richter
  • Area: 1300.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2017
  • Photographs: Javier Callejas
  • Installations: Úrculo Ingenieros
  • Structure: Eduardo Barrón
  • Construction: Brunelar, S.L

© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas

Text description provided by the architects. espacioSOLO is the headquarters and archive of an art collection. It gives shelter to an artistic panorama linked to post-pop and post-street-art movements in all formats. It aims to bring artists closer to the people, to excite young people with the world of creativity, to stimulate a thousand conversations, and to explore new ways of looking and thinking. It is a place of work, an environment for the sheer pleasure of being lost in time, a multifunctional meeting point, and a scenario that allows people to connect and participate in multiple conversations.


© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas

Floor Plan

Floor Plan

© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas

The layout is organized into corridors that function as an urban system of streets and squares, invoking the context of urban art: grey concrete floors, walls of industrial cement panels and wood fiber have an impressive presence thanks to spectacular lighting. As in the city, these itineraries vary in width; from a narrow passage to an expanded plaza-like space where collective activity can be improvised.


© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas

© Javier Callejas

The series of spaces includes austere, museum-like exhibition halls, furnished spaces that introduce a domestic content into the experience, storage spaces, technical spaces for management, and high-rise spaces capable of housing large-format works (such as a lobby that connects the space with the city) or the welcoming auditorium that ends the visit in an enveloping configuration. It makes the trajectory feel like a Möbius strip and invites visitors to return to the exhibition circuit. The overall experience is one of continuous movement as if the collection is in permanent transformation.