XAVIER CORBERÓ HOME

  • Xavier Corberó
  • Esplugues de Llobregat, Barcelona, Spain

Xavier Corberó was born in Barcelona in 1935 and became one of Catalonia's most celebrated sculptors. He began creating his extraordinary home and studio complex in Esplugues de Llobregat, just outside Barcelona, in 1968. The project became an obsession that consumed 40 years of his life, and he was still working on it when he died in 2017 at age 82.

The complex is a surreal masterpiece divided into six descending floors that together occupy 15,000 square meters carved into a hillside. Each room is built around a glass skylight, flooding the subterranean spaces with natural light. The design creates a labyrinth of studios, living areas, artist residencies, galleries, and a subterranean workshop, all connected by corridors, staircases, and unexpected passageways.

The centerpiece is a tower with a hollow atrium where plants dangle from various levels and light streams through arched windows. The interior spaces feature massive stone walls, vaulted ceilings, and Corberó's own sculptural works integrated into the architecture. The complex includes 300 windows of varying shapes and sizes, each framing specific views like living paintings.

Corberó used local stone and traditional Catalan building techniques, but the overall effect is utterly contemporary and dreamlike. The complex recalls both medieval castles and futuristic underground cities. Beyond his architectural masterpiece, Corberó achieved international recognition for his sculpture. His most famous public work is the set of medals he designed for the Barcelona 1992 Summer Olympic Games.

The home functioned not just as Corberó's personal residence but as a creative community. He hosted artist residencies, allowing other artists to live and work within the complex. The workshops and studios were always active with projects in various stages of completion. After Corberó's death in 2017, the Casa Museu Xavier Corberó opened to the public, managed by his foundation. Tours must be booked in advance. The complex remains as Corberó left it, with his tools, unfinished works, and personal objects.