{"id":118811,"date":"2018-07-22T15:21:54","date_gmt":"2018-07-22T15:21:54","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/lagranja-design-brings-beachy-grandeur-to-spain-s-me-sitges-terramar-hotel\/"},"modified":"2022-12-05T14:52:36","modified_gmt":"2022-12-05T19:52:36","slug":"lagranja-design-brings-beachy-grandeur-to-spain-s-me-sitges-terramar-hotel","status":"publish","type":"id_project","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/projects\/lagranja-design-brings-beachy-grandeur-to-spain-s-me-sitges-terramar-hotel\/","title":{"rendered":"Lagranja Design Brings Beachy Grandeur to Spain\u2019s ME Sitges Terramar Hotel"},"content":{"rendered":"

Fabrica is a creative boot camp near Venice funded by Benetton. It’s there that Gerard Sanmarti and Gabriele Schiavon met, studying under the expert eye of photographer Oliviero Toscani, who shot the brand’s advertising campaigns. Like many Fabricantes<\/i>, Sanmarti and Schiavon went on to form their own business, theirs being Lagranja Design<\/a>, a multidisciplinary studio focusing on interiors, furniture, and installations. Its name, Spanish for the farm<\/i>, was copied from the street where their first studio was located. With Sanmarti being Spanish and Schiavon Italian, coupled with their unorthodox training, their initial projects brimmed with color and southern European irreverence. At Singapore restaurant Pim Pam by Foc, for instance, Catalan folkloric characters painted on walls have an anime aesthetic. “More than a style,” Schiavon says, “Lagranja is an attitude.”<\/p>\n

> Project Resources<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n

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