Flexible friends: textiles in architecture
Across a broad range of projects, whether office, retail space or school, interior designers and architects recognise textiles as a flexible, viable alternative to concrete, plaster and wood.
August 4, 2020 | 10:00 pm CUT

The monochromatic wool tapestries and pivoting metal frames of DBAA – Diego Baraona Arquitectos y Asociados’s Office Space project in Santiago, Chile. Photos: © Erieta Attali



The textile curtain in Francesc Rifé-designed ASH Mallorca creates a sensual nude backdrop for the wares, but also hides the door to the shop's storeroom. Photos: David Zarzoso



DBAA – Diego Baraona Arquitectos y Asociados' Office Space uses colourful textile partitions to ensure flexibility, as well as a comfortable space for the employees. Photos: © Erieta Attali



Using brightly coloured textile curtains in their Rosemary Works School, Aberrant Architecture have created a playful, multipurpose space fit for young pupils. Photos: Simon Kennedy



Sphera Beauty Co-Working salon by Eduard Eremchuk uses iridescent textiles to create a new kind of hybrid, shared workspace for beauticians with a penchant for minimalism. Photos: Inna Kablukova
Project Gallery















