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When, as an architecture student in Barcelona 35 years ago, Ignacio Herrero was asked to draw Casa Vicens, Antonio Gaudi’s first significant building in the city, he knew the house better than most. He’d grown up there.
“I was born in this room, delivered by my father, who was a doctor,” says Herrero, now 56, indicating the downstairs dining room – faded but still overwhelming, with African marigold-motif tiles, painted birds flying across the walls and papier-mâché foliage spilling out from between the beams.
The ground floor, which includes a conservatory with Japanese shutters overlooking the short, palm-lined driveway, remains as it was in 1883, when Gaudi designed the house – the year he was commissioned to build the Sagrada Familia cathedral.
Yet Herrero, who dismisses the suggestion that growing up in a Gaudi house inspired him to become an architect, admits to having been a little slapdash with the measurements in his student design. “A few details in my drawings weren’t very exact,” he says. “But they were copied in every textbook about Gaudi for years. It was only when we started restoring some parts of the house, several years ago, that the place was finally measured correctly.”
Built by Gaudi as a family home for Manuel Vicens, a tile-factory owner whose ceramics were put to lavish use on every wall, inside and out, Casa Vicens has been in Herrero’s family since 1899, when his grandfather, Antonio Jover – a doctor and the deputy mayor of Barcelona – bought it as a summer house and rerecruited the up-and-coming architect to complete his flamboyant vision.
The Jovers have lived there ever since: Herrero’s parents until they died a few years ago; and currently two of his brothers, Antonio and Javier, with their families, as well as Herrero’s 31-year-old son, Nacho, who is also an architect.
Now, after 108 years of keeping it in the family, the Herreros have decided to sell, with a guide price of €35m(£24.1m).
“It’s a pretty house, but it’s uncomfortable and none of us particularly wants to keep it up,” Herrero says. “We four brothers own the house, but two of us have families and live elsewhere [Carlos, the fourth brother, is a doctor in Girona]. To run the house as a Gaudi museum, with 2,000 people tramping through the door every day, would mean full-time dedication, so we have agreed to sell,” he says.
Tucked away on a residential back-street in the Gracia district, the house – which overflows with what would become the architect’s trademark fairy-tale flourishes, seen in later commissions such as Parc Guell and La Pedrera – is now incongruously crowded by neighbouring apartment blocks.
Back when Gaudi was poring over the plans, however, Gracia was a separate village, surrounded by fields, and Casa Vicens was an occasional retreat for Antonio Jover and his family, whose main residence, until they moved into the house permanently in 1924, was in the city centre, just two miles away.
In 1925, with Gaudi’s approval, the upper floors of the 12-bedroom, 10-bathroom house – which spans 1,260 square metres, including two terraces – were converted into three separate flats.
“When my parents were growing up in the house, there was a small theatre where they would perform family plays,” Herrero says. As children, he and his brothers would play hide-and-seek in the opulent Arabian-style smoking room, with its gold honeycomb ceiling, and run through the brightly tiled rooftop turrets and rooms interconnected by doorways at unexpected angles, the floor levels dipping and rising.
“As it was a summer house, the idea was to blur the boundaries so you never quite knew if you were indoors or out, with flowers, trees and birds everywhere, and trompe l’oeil columns and domes on the ceiling,” says Herrero, who now lives in a 15th-century farmhouse near Girona, which he spent a Gaudi-like 20 years restoring from a ruin.
“The more you understand about Gaudi, the more you appreciate this house. Every detail has a meaning.
Otherwise, you just look and wonder, ‘Why are all the floors at different levels?’” Growing up in Casa Vicens, Herrero never thought the house was anything special. “I knew it was big compared with my friends’ apartments, so we would always play here, but I couldn’t have told you whether it was dogs or people on the murals that I passed by every day,” he says. “The ground floor was the family hub, where, when my brothers and I were all training to be architects or doctors, we would gather at the end of the day to catch up.”
Casa Vicens is one of only two of Gaudi’s Barcelona buildings that is not open to the public. The other is Torre Bellesguard, a neogothic pile under Tibidabo mountain. Two others are in private hands: La Pedrera, owned by Caixa Catalunya bank, and Casa Batllo, which is in the possession of the Bernat family, the former owners of Chupa Chups lollies.
Without the Gaudi connection, Casa Vicens would be worth about a third of its asking price, says Alfonso Aguilera, who represents Altadicion, which has been appointed to sell the property. “And if you take La Pedrera as an example, which has about 1m visitors a year paying £4 each, Casa Vicens could bring in about £4m a year as a tourist attraction,” Aguilera adds. “People have shown interest in buying this house for about 20 years, but this is the first time it’s been for sale. We have a French client who is interested in buying it – along with the convent next door, for about £7m – and converting both into a big Gaudi museum.”
Selling houses at this level in Barcelona, however, is a covert operation – and Casa Vicens is thought to be the most expensive property on the market. “It’s our home, but it also feels like it belongs a bit to everyone, as it is part of the Catalan heritage,” Herrero explains, “so we don’t want to publicise too much locally the fact that it’s for sale.”
Tellingly, Altadicion’s website for Casa Vicens has been translated into Russian, Arabic, Chinese, Japanese and English – but not Spanish or Catalan. “They aren’t our target markets,” Aguilera says.
Alex Vaughan, from Lucas Fox estate agency in Barcelona, observes that most high-end properties in the city change hands between Catalan buyers without hitting the market. “There are rumours of a house in Pedralbes, in the Zona Alta, on sale for £55m, but I’ve never seen it,” he says. He also questions whether Casa Vicens offers what Russian and Arabic buyers are looking for in Barcelona.
“We deal with a lot of Russian clients. They look for privacy and security, and tend to go for properties on the coast. Arab buyers want at least 2,500 square metres, as they often bring large families and entourages for the entire summer.” Barcelona is a compact city, where, if you want a house, you are limited mainly to the Zona Alta.
“Even with this Gaudi house, the location isn’t brilliant,” Vaughan concludes. “I doubt it would be that comfortable as a family house, but it will probably be of interest to a foreign collector.”
If you are interested, don’t forget that DIY becomes a headache when the property in question is listed as a Unesco World Heritage Site. Asked how he managed, Herrero replies: “Blackmail and bargaining. It’s the only way. There are numerous organisations you have to approach if you want to change anything – and nobody wants to take responsibility for granting permission.
“I spent two years being refused permission to renovate the dome on the roof. When the local government approached me, asking if they could open up the house to visitors during Gaudi Year, in 2002, I said only if they gave me planning permission. So they did.”
After five boom years, in which property prices were rising by about 20% a year, Barcelona’s housing market saw a slowdown in 2006, with prices stabilising or rising only a little – although, at €621,000 (£428,000), according to the Spanish property website Kyero.com, the average house price is still 2½ times the national average.
“The good stuff is still selling, but properties are taking longer to sell and buyers are being more cautious,” says Vaughan. John Taylor estate agency, whose high-end properties appeal to footballers relocating to play for Barcelona – “especially ones from the UK”, according to the agency’s François Carrière Pastor – has houses in the hills overlooking the city for up to £9m, and city-centre penthouses for up to £2m, including flats at PG45, next door to Gaudi’s Casa Batllo, from €12,000 (£8,275) per square metre.
Casa Vicens’s price tag bears no relation to the going market rate, Carrière Pastor says. “This price is not realistic. It has prestige, but it is by no means the best house in Barcelona.”
The Gaudi touch makes for a fascinating property, but one that appeals to a niche market. Buyers with multi-million budgets to blow in Barcelona can find larger, lower-maintenance and more secluded houses elsewhere in the city.
Yet security, assures Herrero, is not a problem. As he hovers by the lavish iron gates and fences, their palm-frond designs curling into theatrical spikes, he says: “There’s no problem with intruders. I think most people are more scared of what’s inside than we are of them.”
Casa Vicens; www.casavicens.es . Altadicion; 00 34 93 467 0477, www.altadicion.com . Bective Leslie Marsh; 020 7589 6677, www.bectivelesliemarsh.co.uk
Find homes for sale in Catalonia on propertyfinder.com by clicking here
To search properazzi.com for properties in Barcelona, click here
Spanish affair
In Vallvidrera, a bourgeois enclave, this four-storey house needs renovation. Built in 1926, it was used by the Red Army during the Spanish civil war, and later by Tito.For sale for £8.82m, with John Taylor; 00 34 93 241 3082, www.johntaylorspain.com
In San Just, this four-bedroom, 420-square-metre house has a separate guesthouse, a fitness centre with a heated swimming pool, and a turret linked to the first floor by a stairway. For sale for £7.2m, with John Taylor; 00 34 93 241 3082, www.johntaylorspain.com
A late-19th-century mansion in a pedestrianised passageway in St Gervasi, in the Zona Alta district, on seven floors, with four bedrooms and a dining room that holds 60. There is a heated pool on the roof terrace. For sale for £3.45m, with Lucas Fox; 00 34 933 562989, www.lucasfox.com
This designer three-bedroom villa with guest bungalow in Alella, 20 minutes from Barcelona, has panoramic views and an infinity pool. It commands up to £2,400 a day for film shoots.For sale for £1.35m, with The Property Finders; 020 7518 0335, www.thepropertyfinders.com
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