Birger wasn’t essentially trying to find a brand new undertaking when she got here throughout her present residence, Casa Birger—an 18th-century townhouse that had gone uninhabited for 40 years. “Once I noticed it, I knew instantly it had potential,” she says, including that when she first stepped inside, the home was fully stuffed with furnishings throughout all three flooring. “The area had a beautiful ambiance, though it was in want of care.” Although she is not any stranger to residence renovations (thus far, she has accomplished eight), this was the most important of all of them. The home is 600 sq. meters, and there have been a number of unique particulars that Birger and her workforce had been decided to maintain intact.
“I’ve all the time felt a duty to respect the historical past of the buildings I work on,” she says, pointing to conventional craftsmanship distinctive to older houses as an important high quality to take care of. “My position was to carry the home again to life with out dropping its character.” One among her most cherished vignettes is the central iron staircase that contains a picket handrail and ornate gilded detailing. “Additionally, the unique hexagonal tiles from the primary ground had been salvaged and reinstalled on the second ground.”
Picture: Jean Marie del Ethical
Within the e book, Birger describes the home’s historical past as guiding its future. “For me, each previous home already holds the blueprint for what it needs to change into,” she says. With Casa Birger, the historical past of the constructing was her start line. “I didn’t need to erase something. You’ll be able to really feel its age, however all the pieces features for the way I dwell in the present day. That stability between preservation and renewal is what guided each choice.”
Along with defending the historic particulars, Birger additionally wished to maintain an genuine Mallorquín feeling. “The handmade glass lamps from the Gordiola manufacturing facility add a powerful sense of place,” she says. These lighting fixtures have been domestically made for the reason that 1700s and possess imperfections that Birger describes as notably stunning. “Additionally, for me, the mixture of the unique picket double doorways, internal picket shutters, ceramic tiles—and the materials, cushions, and carpets—are all a tactile connection to Mallorca.”
