Project

Social Housing . Igualada

- Igualada, Spain

An innovative social housing project in Igualada, Spain, designed to integrate urban infrastructure with sustainable living.

Modern building with white facade and wooden shutters, surrounded by greenery and pathway.

A modern multi-story building with a white facade and numerous windows, each featuring wooden shutters. The building is surrounded by greenery and a paved pathway, with a clear blue sky overhead.

Story

Social Housing . Igualada

Integrating Urban Infrastructure with Sustainable Living On a site shaped by unfavorable urban constraints, the 24-unit social housing building in the Les Comes neighborhood of Igualada proposes an architecture that refuses to surrender to regulatory or programmatic limitations. The project is conceived as a transitional piece between an existing residential complex and an adjacent urban park, exploring new relationships between collective housing, public space, sustainability, and community life. Beyond addressing a residential brief, the building acts as urban infrastructure, capable of activating its surroundings, promoting sustainable mobility, and testing circular economy strategies applied to public housing. The volume completes the existing built frontage while simultaneously opening toward the park, reinforcing the continuity of public space. An open, naturally ventilated central courtyard organizes the ensemble and allows urban space to penetrate into the heart of the building, rising visually from the ground floor to the roof. This void functions as a climatic, spatial, and social mediator, establishing a direct dialogue between interior and exterior. The ground floor is deliberately freed to become the true heart of the project. Rather than adopting a conventional layout, this level concentrates access points, technical spaces, communal areas, and a large bicycle parking facility, shaping a collective domain connected to both the park and the neighborhood. To make this possible, the housing typology was rethought: the six dwellings initially planned per floor were increased to seven on the typical levels, while the ground floor accommodates only three units, prioritizing shared space over strictly quantitative efficiency. Within this context, the bicycle assumes a leading role. In a neighborhood historically separated from the city center by industrial areas, the project incorporates a generous bicycle parking facility conceived not as a residual service, but as strategic infrastructure that promotes active mobility and strengthens everyday connections with the city. Facing the park, this element acts as a hinge, filtering and mediating between the domestic scale and the green space. The resulting dwellings are compact yet seek to transcend dimensional limitations through precise spatial strategies. The “destroyed corner” approach breaks conventional visual boundaries, expands interior perspectives, and enhances spatial continuity, generating bright and flexible homes despite their limited surface area. The building’s architectural identity emerges from a contemporary reinterpretation of Igualada’s industrial past. Exposed metalwork, prefabricated systems, and dry construction methods engage in dialogue with a technological aesthetic reminiscent of the hi-tech imagination of the 1970s and 1980s. This industrial character is balanced with the domestic warmth of materials such as recycled OSB, used in common areas to reinforce the collective and habitable nature of the ensemble. Sustainability informs every project decision. Reduced energy demand is achieved through a high-performance envelope with very low thermal transmittance values, advanced insulation, passive solar protection, low-emissivity glazing, and cross ventilation supported by the central courtyard. The building completely eliminates fossil-fuel-based thermal systems. The roof is conceived as an active plane: a photovoltaic pergola and a large central skylight crown the building and define its silhouette, making the project’s energy dimension visible. The installation reaches an annual production of 11,153 kWh, sufficient to cover the entire communal energy demand. Water management follows a circular logic, incorporating a greywater reuse system that collects water from showers and washing machines to supply toilet cisterns, along with permeable exterior paving and a separate drainage network prepared for future urban-scale rainwater reuse strategies. The construction process embraces industrialization and circular economy principles: dry systems, modular openings, workshop-fabricated metalwork, and large laser-cut steel components reduce construction time, minimize waste, and facilitate future adaptation. More than 70% of non-hazardous waste generated is recovered, reinforcing a responsible life-cycle approach. Far from merely fulfilling a public housing program, the project proposes an architecture capable of adding to the city, activating public space, and delivering high domestic quality. Where there was once a challenging plot, there now stands a building that understands social housing as an opportunity to construct community, landscape, and sustainability.

Design Highlights

Transitional architecture between residential complex and urban park Open, naturally ventilated central courtyard Ground floor as a communal hub with bicycle parking Compact dwellings with “destroyed corner” approach Industrial aesthetic with recycled OSB for warmth High-performance envelope and passive solar protection Photovoltaic pergola producing 11,153 kWh annually Greywater reuse system and permeable paving Emphasis on circular economy and reduced construction waste

Key Facts

Attribute Detail
Location Igualada, Spain
Architects MBM arquitectes, 4RQ arquitectura
Completion Year 2025
Gross Floor Area 2,632.28 m²
Client INCASOL

Technical summary

Updated 3/7/2026

Finishes

  • Wall Finish: Exposed OSB panels and metal framing in interior spaces.
  • Facade Finish: White facade with wooden shutters and metal railings.

Materials

  • Wood — Used for window frames, shutters, and interior paneling.
  • Metal — Used for railings, framing, and structural elements.
  • OSB — Used in common areas to reinforce the collective and habitable nature of the ensemble.

Construction / Systems

  • Structural System: Prefabricated systems and dry construction methods.
  • Facade System: High-performance envelope with low thermal transmittance values.

Products

  • Energy System — Photovoltaic Pergola (Generates renewable energy for the building.)

Palette / Lighting

  • Colors: White, Wood tones, Metallic
  • Lighting: Bright and naturally lit spaces with large windows and skylights.

Images

Modern building with white facade and wooden shutters, surrounded by greenery and pathway.
Building facade with large windows, wooden frames, and blinds, surrounded by greenery and a paved walkway.
Facade of a residential building with wooden shutters and balconies, surrounded by greenery.
Facade of a modern residential building with wooden shutters and metal railings, surrounded by trees.
Outdoor patio with wooden table and chairs next to a modern building with large windows and wooden blinds.
Aerial view of a modern white building in a residential area with greenery and hills in the background.
Interior view showing a mailbox system, a door labeled 'Accés Parquing,' and walls with OSB panels and metal framing.
Interior view of a building entrance featuring metal gates and wooden doors.
Interior of a building with a staircase, concrete columns, and wooden paneling.
Interior of a building with a courtyard, metal railings, OSB panels, staircase, and elevator.
Interior of a multi-level building with metal staircases and OSB panel walls, featuring open corridors and a central atrium.
Interior of a building with metal railings, OSB walls, and a central staircase.
Interior of a building with open walkways, staircases, wood paneling, and metal railings.
Interior view of a building with metal staircases and wooden paneling, featuring numbered doors and a potted plant.
Interior of a residential building with OSB walls and metal railings around a central courtyard.
Interior of a building with open courtyard, metal stairs and railings, wood-like cladding, and numbered doors.
Interior view of a building's central courtyard featuring metal staircases and a skylight.
Interior corridor with OSB walls and ceiling, a potted plant, and a door numbered 4.
Interior space with wooden flooring, large windows, a folding door, a chair, a plant, and a guitar.
Interior room with large windows, wooden flooring, potted plants, and a radiator.
Interior of a bright, minimalistic apartment with wooden flooring, white walls, large windows, and a small kitchen area with plants.
Rooftop view with metal louvers and flat roof structure, tiled surface, clear sky.
Floor plan showing rooms, central open area, and bicycle parking.
Architectural floor plan showing residential units around a central courtyard.
Floor plan of a residential unit with two bedrooms, living area, kitchen, and bathroom.
Top view architectural floor plan showing a square building with a central courtyard.
Section drawing of a multi-story building with central courtyard and staircase, featuring parking and bicycle storage.
Architectural diagram of a social housing project with a building, trees, and pathways, featuring colored arrows indicating movement.

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