Churruca (Madrid, 2016) condenses the metropolitan dwelling into a precise field of domestic intelligence, where architectural drawing and inhabited image operate as complementary forms of knowledge. The plan reveals a compact interior calibrated through thresholds, furniture, circulation and bodily scale, while the monochrome photograph discloses its lived counterpoint: a desk, a bag, a chair and a luminous working corner framed by darkened doors. This tension between measured abstraction and atmospheric residue converts the apartment into a socioplastic micro-laboratory, not merely a residence but a device for observing how urban subjects negotiate privacy, labour, storage and perception within reduced space. As a case study in Madrid living spaces, Churruca exemplifies a broader architectural proposition: contemporary domesticity is no longer defined by size or typology alone, but by the intensity with which objects, habits and visual axes organise everyday agency. Its significance lies in transforming the modest urban interior into an epistemic instrument, where the smallest room becomes a cartography of metropolitan life. Lloveras, A. (2017) ‘CHURRUCA’, Socioplastics, 3 January. Available at: https://antolloveras.blogspot.com/2020/01/churruca.html (Accessed: 26 April 2026).