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Iterare Arquitectos Turns a Preserved Brick Shell into the Nest for a New House in Valencia’s Torrefiel

Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, corner exterior in Torrefiel with preserved brick base and new white upper volume above ornate stucco cornice

David Zarzoso

Valencia’s building code would have let Iterare Arquitectos demolish the existing house outright, and Casa Nido exists because the studio refused, keeping the humble brick-and-lime shell on its Torrefiel corner instead. The name — Nested House in English — describes the move precisely: a new volume raised inside a preserved envelope, in one of the city’s poorest northern districts. The choice reframes what counts as protectable heritage in a neighborhood the rest of Valencia tends to overlook.

Close view of Casa Nido's preserved brick corner facade by Iterare Arquitectos, showing the original stucco relief cornice under a new white wall
The zigzag brick parapet was left uneven on purpose, a scar the new volume was never asked to smooth over

Permission to demolish is not the same as reason to, and the studio treated the distinction as the project’s founding question. Rather than exercise the code’s allowance, it preserved the original solid brick and lime mortar envelope and built within it — the same conviction behind another Valencia renovation that began from the fabric already on site rather than replacing it. Keeping the shell asked more of the design than clearing it would have.

Ground-floor kitchen and dining area of Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, double-height courtyard window, round wood table and three chairs
The table seats three where the room could hold more, keeping the courtyard’s height as the real occupant

In a district like Torrefiel, built heritage is scarce and rarely monumental, which is precisely why the studio frames its protection as urgent. The house occupies a corner plot in a peripheral neighborhood in the city’s north, where the few surviving older structures hold the area’s memory without any claim to grandeur. Casa Nido makes the case that heritage preservation does not require a landmark — only a fabric worth continuing.

Mezzanine view over the kitchen in Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, pendant light and trailing plant beneath an open bedroom door
A single pendant marks the boundary where the double-height volume gives way to the private floor above

The preserved skin becomes structural to the idea, not only to the building. In the studio’s account, the intact skin has become “the foundation (or perhaps the nest) for a new, emergent architecture” — the phrase that gives the house its name. The new volume does not sit beside the old; it rises out of what was kept.

Courtyard of Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, tall glazed wall, two lounge chairs and a planting bed against a white perimeter wall
Glazing runs almost to the ceiling here, so the courtyard reads as a room the house borrows light from

Distilled to a single volume, the interior organizes itself around one decisive absence: the courtyard. The studio describes it as “a regular and perfect void at the back of the plot,” carved from the built mass to act as the backdrop for the entire project. What reads as subtraction is the plan’s most generous move, giving every room its orientation and its light.

Stairwell of Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, limestone-clad stair core viewed from the upper landing with a desk chair at left
The stair narrows exactly where the house asks for privacy, before opening onto the bedroom floor

A near-seven-meter window turns that void into the engine of the house. Rising almost 7 meters (nearly 23 feet) along the courtyard, it pulls light, cross-ventilation and views into every room, so that even the deepest interior spaces borrow from a single source. It does the work a peripheral plot rarely allows, making a modest footprint feel unbounded.

Bedroom corner in Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, single vertical window with slatted blind beside an unmade bed
One window is enough here; the room’s proportions do the work daylight elsewhere is asked to do

A single stair core at the center connects the two levels and gathers the service areas around it, keeping the rest of the plan free — the same logic by which another Valencia house concentrated its services into inserted volumes to leave the floor open. Deliberately narrow and inward-looking, the core is crafted in limestone and leads to the most private part of the house. The compression is intentional, a held breath before the release above.

Bedroom built-in wardrobe wall in Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, floor-to-ceiling timber-toned cabinetry beside a corner door
Two discreet knobs are the only interruption on a wall built to disappear into storage

On the first floor, the open-plan room doubles as living space and study, lit by a prominent skylight that keeps a constant, gentle breeze moving through it. Its surfaces catch the sun as it travels across them through the day, which the studio likens to a canvas registering the movement of light. It is the house’s reward for the narrow ascent, and the clearest statement of what the preserved shell was protecting all along.

Bathroom in Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos, limestone-clad shower niche, wall-hung toilet and a towel hung on a hook
The shower sits in an unenclosed niche, trusting the stone finish to do a glass door’s job

The real provocation of Casa Nido is not architectural but civic: it insists that a plain brick shell in a poor district carries the same claim to preservation as any protected façade in Valencia’s center — and that treating it otherwise is a judgment about people, not buildings.


Casa Nido by Iterare Arquitectos | Location: Torrefiel, Valencia, Spain — Year: 2026 — Key materials: solid brick, lime mortar, limestone

Image courtesy of David Zarzoso

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