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  • Design
  • Interiors
  • Issue 42

STUDIO TOUR:
Fernando Caruncho

Gardens sit between the natural and the artificial. George Upton meets the man mediating between the two. Photography by Christian Møller Andersen.

From Fernando Caruncho’s desk, he looks out across dusty wheat fields to the mountains north of Madrid that were once painted by Velázquez. Framed by the double doors of the “kiosk”—a small pavilion where the landscape designer and his team meet to discuss projects from Florida to New Zealand—is a perspective typical of Caruncho’s work over the past 40 years: restrained, sober gardens merging seamlessly with the landscape and the vast changing sky of the Sierra de Guadarrama. 

When he came to the site 20 years ago, it was this view that informed the design of the studio and its gardens—the “point of gravity, ” as he describes it, around which the square, cream-colored buildings and the immaculate rows of boxwood and laurel were arranged. Now 62, Caruncho oversees a team of 12 that includes his sons, Pedro and Fernando. They work in the kiosk and an office where the firm’s global operations are coordinated. Between these spaces

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This story is from Kinfolk Issue Forty-Two

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