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Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillAbandoned <a href="http://www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Johnson_Wax_Building.html" target="_blank">factories</a> often look to me like abandoned castles: grandiose in size, with silos resembling turrets, and ominous defensive structures of unspecified purpose left to remind us of days long past. Perhaps architect <a href="http://www.ricardobofill.com/" target="_blank">Ricardo Bofill</a> shares this idea -- in 1973, he purchased an <a href="http://inhabitat.com/renzo-piano-redevelops-former-michelin-factory-site-into-new-museum/">abandoned turn-of-the-century cement factory</a> in Barcelona and commenced a two-year renovation to transform it into a spectacular architecture office.1
Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillSimply dubbed the Cement Factory, the complex hosts Bofill’s architectural offices, archives, a model laboratory, exhibition space, his personal apartment, guest rooms, and extensive gardens. The property was originally comprised of 30 silos, gigantic engine rooms and many underground structures. However Bofill’s renovations look as if he simply shaved away part of the existing structures, removing certain elements and buildings to reveal previously unexposed textures beneath.2
Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillThe factory possessed both <a href="http://inhabitat.com/oaklands-renovated-museum-is-a-green-roofed-urban-gem/" target="_blank">Brutalist</a> and Surrealist elements, which Bofill used as inspiration.3
Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillThe harsh <a href="http://inhabitat.com/abandoned-industrial-silo-becomes-beautiful-residences-in-denmark/" target="_blank">silos</a> were planted with <a href="http://inhabitat.com/bike-lock-disguised-as-beautiful-crawling-ivy/" target="_blank">ivy</a> and transformed into The Cathedral. The factory’s front lot was planted with beautiful <a href="http://inhabitat.com/intexure-architects-transform-parking-garage-into-a-rooftop-zen-garden/" target="_blank">gardens</a>, which include eucalyptus, palm trees, olive trees and cypresses.4
Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillBofill embraced the factory’s cavernous rooms, leaving many of the interiors at their original two and three-story ceiling heights. Interior structural receptacles, once used to contain who knows what, hang awkwardly in the vast voids throughout, creating tension within the space, yet they are so enormous in scale that one cannot help but feel disoriented.5
Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillThe complex’s main building has been renovated into Bofill’s personal apartment. The interiors throughout have been kept simple, letting the architecture do the talking. White slip-covered sofas, canvas sling chairs, oriental carpets, framed architecture prints, and simple leather upholstery create a muted palette so that the structural and architectural elements may sing.6
Cement Factory by Ricardo BofillBofill has transformed an abandoned industrial ruin into a complex with the magic, wonder, and grandeur evocative of a historical chateau7







