
"Morsa Taller has distilled the essence of mobility into seven square meters, creating a structure that moves between sites with the ease of rolling luggage yet operates with the seriousness of a permanent studio. The design reads like architectural origami. Six prefabricated pieces arrive separately, then snap together within a single day using nothing more than a screwdriver and a riveter."
"What makes Castillo remarkable is its refusal to compromise on craft despite its temporary nature. Every junction required its own insulation and mechanical connection, transforming the project into an exercise in layered logic. The team at Morsa Taller, working alongside fabricator Santiago Legnini, custom-built each interior element, from carpentry to storage systems to equipment mounts. The result feels less like a portable shed and more like an inhabitable machine, where form follows the internal demands of function rather than external architectural conventions."
Castillo Mobile Office is a seven-square-meter, wheeled studio by Morsa Taller, stationed in Buenos Aires and designed for rapid relocation. Six prefabricated panels snap together within a day using only a screwdriver and riveter; four detachable facade panels modulate light and ventilation while a curved roof channels rainwater. Every junction includes bespoke insulation and mechanical connections to maintain craft despite portability. Morsa Taller and fabricator Santiago Legnini custom-built interior carpentry, storage, and equipment mounts so the volume functions as an inhabitable machine. The design emphasizes metalworking, modular precision, and the coexistence of independence and integration in contemporary workplaces.
Read at Yanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
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