Casa Costeres
In Calpe, facing the Mediterranean horizon, Casa Costeres unfolds as a habitable sculpture. Its architecture, designed by Pasqual Giner Arquitectura and Auñón Cabrera, does not simply create a shelter, but seeks to express a clear idea: geometric precision can coexist with natural warmth.
Pure volumes, carefully arranged, define a composition that plays with weight, natural light and lightness. The home adapts to the terrain, engages in dialogue with the landscape and turns each transition into a serene and continuous visual experience.
In this balance between architecture and surroundings, material plays an essential role. The Bera&Beren collection by Livingceramics, specifically the Bera White porcelain tile, covers the entire home and becomes the guiding thread of the project. Its presence acts as an architectural base capable of unifying the spaces and reinforcing the overall reading of the house. The soft tone of Bera White captures the Mediterranean light and reflects it back with subtle nuances, bringing clarity, spaciousness and a constant sense of calm. Its surface, inspired by limestone, enhances the sober and precise language of the home, adding an elegant, timeless texture that is deeply connected to its surroundings.
One of the project’s greatest achievements is the continuity between indoors and outdoors. Bera White extends uninterrupted from the interior rooms to the terrace and pool area, creating a fluid transition between architecture and landscape. In the outdoor areas, its anti-slip finish preserves the same aesthetic while also ensuring safety and functionality. The result is a flooring solution that naturally accompanies everyday life without disrupting the visual coherence of the whole.
The bathroom introduces another nuance within this same material sensitivity. The large-format Ductile Allure Sand wall tile adds a layer of warmth to this intimate space, bringing calm and well-being.
In this way, Casa Costeres finds in Livingceramics’ materials a key tool for creating continuity between rooms and landscape, while also enhancing the light of the Mediterranean.
Photos: Eugeni Pons
