Located in an elevated position overlooking the Mediterranean, in El Poble Nou de Benitatxell, Casa L5 is conceived as a belvedere-like architecture in which the landscape is not merely a backdrop, but the true conceptual core of the project. The house emerges from the collaboration between Pasqual Giner and Auñón Cabrera as an exercise in integral coherence, where architecture, interior design, and materiality form part of a single language.
The composition is articulated through white horizontal volumes resting on natural stone plinths, establishing a balance between lightness and weight, between formal abstraction and tectonic presence. Every decision responds to a clear intention: to create a serene, precise, and timeless architecture capable of engaging with its surroundings without imposing itself upon them.
The entrance introduces a vertical dimension through a double-height hall that organizes the spatial experience from the very first moment. The staircase, conceived as a sculptural element, is not merely functional but also a key piece structuring both the circulation and the perception of space. Natural light, carefully controlled through cantilevers and overhangs, shapes the interiors and reinforces the architectural depth of the project.
Large glazed surfaces dissolve the boundary between interior and exterior, projecting views toward the sea horizon from the main living spaces. The infinity pool, aligned with the plane of the sea, visually extends the landscape and reinforces the continuity between the built environment and nature.
Materiality is approached through continuity and coherence. The flooring, extending seamlessly from interior to exterior, unifies the project and blurs the physical limits between spaces. Natural stone on façades and walls provides a sense of grounding and density, while wood introduces warmth and a domestic scale. Every material, finish, and piece of furniture forms part of the overall concept of the project, understood not as interchangeable elements, but as essential components of the architectural language.
Casa L5 is a contemporary interpretation of Mediterranean living: an architecture that does not seek protagonism, but coherence, finding its strength in the unity between idea, material, and landscape.

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