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Bonito: BURR Architecture Converts a Former Madrid Shop into a Ingenious Compact Home

The Bonito compact home by BURR Architecture, a transformed former ship in Madrid featuring a split-level living area, space-saving staircase, and a monumental vaulted ceiling.

Maru Serrano

In the heart of Madrid’s southern districts, where urban fabric is dense and space is a premium, BURR Architecture has executed a masterclass in transformative design. Their latest project, Bonito, challenges the conventional understanding of urban living by converting a disused former furrier’s shop into a fully-functional and luminous compact home. This project demonstrates that spatial intelligence, not square footage, is the true currency of modern domesticity.

Bonito Compact Home: BURR's Ship Conversion in Madrid
The sleek, integrated kitchen exemplifies the project’s space-saving ethos, flowing seamlessly into the main living area beneath the original four-meter ceiling.

The original layout presented a significant architectural puzzle. The floor plan was split into two narrow bands: one at street level with a generous four-meter ceiling, and another raised 1.8 meters above it, forming a mezzanine that allows vehicle access to a basement garage. This configuration created a challenging L-shaped section, making a staircase an absolute necessity. The architects, however, saw this not as a obstacle, but as the project’s central opportunity for innovative space-saving design.

Bonito Compact Home: BURR's Ship Conversion in Madrid
Tucked invisibly beneath the treads, a fully-equipped compact WC demonstrates the design’s ingenious use of every centimeter.

The resulting staircase is the undeniable heart of the Bonito home conversion. It transcends its primary circulatory function to become a multifaceted storage hub. The void beneath its treads is ingeniously packed with concealed compartments that house everything from major appliances and a pantry to a surprisingly efficient, compact WC. A series of stepped doors, seamlessly following the stair’s profile, render these essential utilities almost invisible, preserving the home’s clean, uncluttered aesthetic. This approach is a hallmark of multifunctional interior architecture.

Bonito Compact Home: BURR's Ship Conversion in Madrid
A stepped cabinet, following the stair’s silhouette, opens to reveal a curated storage wall for kitchen essentials and personal effects.

The split-level design naturally facilitates a smart organization of the domestic program. The circulation forms a graceful U-shape, guiding inhabitants from the public entrance on the lower level through to the more private upper mezzanine. This journey creates a natural gradient from public to private spaces, all within a remarkably compact footprint. The intelligent layout ensures that each area feels distinct and purposeful without the need for obstructive partition walls.

Bonito Compact Home: BURR's Ship Conversion in Madrid
The upper mezzanine level, bathed in light from the private terrace, houses the home’s more intimate living spaces in a cozy, elevated retreat.

A key to defeating any sense of claustrophobia is the home’s strong connection to the outdoors and its clever environmental strategies. Both levels open onto internal courtyards; the lower, more public space connects to a communal patio, while the upper, private area opens onto a dedicated terrace. Furthermore, strategically placed openings on both façades enable excellent cross ventilation, a passive cooling technique that is amplified by the open-plan nature of the interior. This creates a bright and airy atmosphere that defies the home’s modest dimensions.

Bonito Compact Home: BURR's Ship Conversion in Madrid
A floor-to-ceiling custom wardrobe in the bedroom seamlessly conceals the entrance to the bathroom, maintaining the room’s serene and uncluttered aesthetic.

One of the project’s most distinctive features is its creative response to an existing constraint. Located beneath a large residential block, the ceiling was traversed by an unavoidable tangle of shared building services. BURR Architecture’s solution was both practical and poetic: they introduced a sweeping half-barrel vault in the public portion of the home. This elegant intervention acoustically and visually shields the utilities while lending an ironic, yet welcoming, sense of monumentality to this ingeniously transformed urban dwelling in Madrid.

Image courtesy of Maru Serrano

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