Berned House
= Berned House by panoramah!
Arturo Berned architects =
[edit] The architecture of the Berned House could be considered cinematic, conceived to be seen and experienced by a spectator in movement. Sliding panoramah! windows and doors bring a beautiful balance between the home and its natural surroundings, creating a harmonious dialogue between them
Exchanges between sculpture and architecture are always challenging and productive. Berned's artistic work seeks to reinterpret both shapes and space by exploring mathematical laws and geometrical layouts. Arithmetic, Euclidean space, and the golden ratio, are the main compositive tools used to shape steel, the material in which he produces most of his sculptures, giving form to a very personal formal universe.
Dealing with the concepts of balance, light, mass, emptiness, contradiction, touch, dialogue, or tension, Berned uses sculpture as an organizing element, a device that facilitates the understanding of space. Whether operating inside buildings or at an urban scale with monumental works, his artistic proposal explores scale, size, and the arrangement of forms to create permanent complicity between the city, architecture, and sculpture.
Often dealing with the ambiguities that emerge from the translation of two-dimensional forms into a three-dimensional world, Bernard's geometric shapes seem to mirror the abstract production of the Russian avant-garde, particularly El Lissitzky's Proun studies and the Suprematist experimentations of Kazimir Malevich. Albeit with different grammar and geometric language, one can find the same concepts of light, mass, emptiness, or contradiction in the architecture of the Berned House. Only instead of steel, its shapes are made of concrete, wood, and glass.
The house is in Mirasierra, a ward belonging to the district of Fuencarral-El Pardo, north of downtown Madrid, bordered by the Cuenca Alta del Manzanares Regional Park. Its name translates into "view the mountains" and derives from the panoramic nature views of the mountainous landscape that one can enjoy from the privileged location of the neighbourhood.
Mirasierra was founded under the name of Colonia Mirasierra in 1950, aiming to build a residential area that combines the presence of nature with proximity to the city. Until 1960, it saw the construction of luxury villas for consuls and diplomats of various nationalities and, in the 1970s, housing schemes for workers of the national telecommunications company, partly built by political prisoners, in what constitutes today a somewhat controversial debate. The neighbourhood is now a high-end area, home to colleges, universities, tennis clubs, golf courses and natural parks.
Located in the urban fabric of the original Colonia, the Berned House is a 330 sqm two-story home composed of a solid 20.5-metre-long concrete block standing above a permeable prism. The living and dining areas occupy the ground floor, which is wood-clad towards the street, communicating with the plinth that defines the entrance by a central pivot door while fully opening to the opposite garden and the 20-metre-long pool through large floor-to-ceiling sliding panoramah! minimalist glass doors.
The upper floor, with the bedrooms and the study, is a massive solid concrete volume, with only some openings carved out as if the artist had carefully sculpted them. When approached during the daytime, it offers a convincingly opaque impression. The board-formed concrete reveals a wood grain pattern on the finished face, a horizontal texture that perfectly combines with the vertical rhythm of the timber louvres. However, upon entering or at night, our perception contradicts this. As the inner lighting dissolves the solid brise-soleil of the upper floor, the building reveals its true nature as a tenuous, almost ambiguous barrier between the front access and the private protected space of the back courtyard.
The pure geometric shapes and the rigorous formal minimalism of the house appear closer to Malevich's grammar of fundamental geometric forms than to the articulate El Lissitzky's Prouns that bear so many affinities with Arturo Berned's sculptural works. One could quickly think of the house as the perfect setting to expose artworks rather than an inhabited sculpture where one could dwell or visit. Yet, one must read the relations between art and architecture beyond formal aspects. The obsession with the economy of means and spaces, with movement and circulation through the ample areas, is vital to this house. It is an architecture that one could consider cinematic, conceived to be seen and understood by a spectator in movement, therefore strongly echoing the concerns with space translated in the sculptures of its author.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- 100 years of the Bauhaus.
- Architectural styles.
- Art Moderne.
- Brutalist London Map - review.
- City Beautiful.
- Concept architectural design
- Form follows function.
- Genius loci..
- International Style.
- Landscape urbanism.
- Masterplanning.
- Modernist architecture.
- Modern building.
- Neo-futurism.
- Postmodern architecture.
- Spanish brutalism.
- Speculative architecture.
- Worcester sculptor William Forsyth.
Featured articles and news
Key points for construction at a glance with industry reactions.
Functionality, visibility and sustainability
The simpler approach to specification.
Architects, architecture, buildings, and inspiration in film
The close ties between makers and the movies, with our long list of suggested viewing.
SELECT three-point plan for action issued to MSPs
Call for Scottish regulation, green skills and recognition of electrotechnical industry as part of a manifesto for Scottish Parliamentary elections.
UCEM becomes the University of the Built Environment
Major milestone in its 106-year history, follows recent merger with London School of Architecture (LSE).
Professional practical experience for Architects in training
The long process to transform the nature of education and professional practical experience in the Architecture profession following recent reports.
A people-first approach to retrofit
Moving away from the destructive paradigm of fabric-first.
International Electrician Day, 10 June 2025
Celebrating the role of electrical engineers from André-Marie Amperè, today and for the future.
New guide for clients launched at Houses of Parliament
'There has never been a more important time for clients to step up and ...ask the right questions'
The impact of recycled slate tiles
Innovation across the decades.
EPC changes for existing buildings
Changes and their context as the new RdSAP methodology comes into use from 15 June.
Skills England publishes Sector skills needs assessments
Priority areas relating to the built environment highlighted and described in brief.
BSRIA HVAC Market Watch - May 2025 Edition
Heat Pump Market Outlook: Policy, Performance & Refrigerant Trends for 2025–2028.
Committing to EDI in construction with CIOB
Built Environment professional bodies deepen commitment to EDI with two new signatories: CIAT and CICES.
Government Grenfell progress report at a glance
Line by line recomendation overview, with links to more details.
An engaging and lively review of his professional life.
Sustainable heating for listed buildings
A problem that needs to be approached intelligently.
50th Golden anniversary ECA Edmundson apprentice award
Deadline for entries has been extended to Friday 27 June, so don't miss out!
CIAT at the London Festival of Architecture
Designing for Everyone: Breaking Barriers in Inclusive Architecture.
Mixed reactions to apprenticeship and skills reform 2025
A 'welcome shift' for some and a 'backwards step' for others.