The top floor MUST be visibly stepped back 3 meters from the main facade plane. This creates an exposed terrace/balcony running the full width of the building. The step-back should cast a clear shadow on the terrace floor. This is the most important architectural feature — make it obvious. Look carefully at the uploaded photo. This is the CURRENT back facade of a property at Fernández de los Ríos 59, Madrid, seen from Abdón Terradas street. The low building with graffiti is an old industrial warehouse former cinema that will be COMPLETELY DEMOLISHED and replaced with a new residential building. The tall building visible BEHIND the warehouse is the existing residential tower 22.55m, 5 floors + attic — that tower STAYS and is being renovated. You can see it rising above the warehouse. It must remain visible in the render, behind and above the new building. I need a photorealistic render showing the NEW BUILDING that replaces the warehouse, as seen from Abdón Terradas street. THE NEW BUILDING EDIFICIO 2 — WHAT TO SHOW: Height: 13.5 meters total, 4 floors above ground. Significantly LOWER than the tower behind it the tower is 22.55m, almost twice as tall. The tower must be visible rising above. Width: 18 meters same as the current warehouse, wall to wall between neighboring buildings. SEMI-BASEMENT LEVEL partially below street level, about -0.50m: - Small windows at ankle height along the street facade — these are high windows for studio apartments below. - The windows are horizontal format, about 0.5m tall, with frosted or translucent glass for privacy. - There are 6 of these windows evenly spaced along the facade. GROUND FLOOR street level: - A residential entrance door on the right side: glass + dark metal frame, minimal and elegant. - The rest of the ground floor facade has regular windows for apartments inside. - No commercial spaces — this is purely residential. FLOORS 1 AND 2: - Regular residential floors with generous windows. - Balconies with dark metal railings and some potted plants. - The facade rhythm is clean and modern but not cold. FLOOR 3 TOP FLOOR — KEY FEATURE: - This floor is SET BACK 3 METERS from the main facade line, creating a row of TERRACES in front of it. - The terraces have glass railings, outdoor furniture hints, and planting. - This setback is clearly visible as a step-back in the building volume — it is the most distinctive feature of this facade. - Behind the setback, the top floor has floor-to-ceiling windows. ROOF visible above the setback: - Partially green roof sedum/plants and partially solar panels. - A small communal terrace area. FACADE MATERIALS AND STYLE: - NOT a copy of the old tower. This is a clearly CONTEMPORARY building, but warm and contextual with Madrid. - Main material: light-toned brick cream/sand color — different from the tower's darker brick, creating a dialogue but not imitation. - Horizontal WOOD SLATS as sun protection on the south-facing windows this facade faces south, so solar protection is important. The slats are natural wood tone, horizontal, fixed. - Window frames: dark anthracite aluminum, large format. - Ground floor: natural stone base limestone or similar for the first 1.5 meters. - The overall feeling is: warm, modern, high-quality residential. Think contemporary Madrid architecture — firms like MVRDV, Burgos & Garrido, or Rafael de la Hoz. THE TOWER BEHIND: - The existing tower is visible rising above the new building. Show approximately 2-3 floors of the tower above the new building's roof line. - The tower's rear facade is simpler than its street facade: rendered/plastered in light color, with regular windows. Show it renovated and clean. - This height contrast tall tower + lower new building is architecturally intentional and must be clearly visible. NEIGHBORING BUILDINGS: - On both sides: typical Madrid residential buildings, 4-6 floors, rendered facades, some with small balconies. The new building fits in height and character with these neighbors. STREET — ABDÓN TERRADAS: - Narrow one-way street, typical Madrid secondary street. - Parked cars along one side. - Narrow sidewalks with stone curbs. - A couple of pedestrians. VIEWPOINT: - Standing on the opposite sidewalk, looking at the full facade. - Slight 3/4 angle from the RIGHT side, to show the depth of the setback on the top floor. - Eye height 1.6m. Distance approximately 10-12 meters from facade. LIGHTING: - Morning light this facade faces SOUTH, so it gets direct sun most of the day. - Bright, clear Madrid sky. Strong light with defined shadows that reveal the setback volume. - The wood slats cast interesting shadow patterns on the facade. IMAGE QUALITY: - Photorealistic architectural visualization. - Real material textures: brick joints, wood grain on slats, metal reflections, glass. - High-end real estate marketing quality. - Editorial architectural photography style. CRITICAL REMINDERS: - The new building is 13.5m 4 floors. The tower behind is 22.55m visible above. Show this height difference clearly. - The top floor setback of 3 meters is the KEY design feature of this facade. Make it prominent. - The semi-basement windows at ground level are small and horizontal — they hint at the studios with private gardens on the courtyard side. - This is NOT a glass tower or a generic modern building. It is warm brick + wood, Mediterranean-contemporary. , keep exact camera angle
PromptThe top floor MUST be visibly stepped back 3 meters from the main facade plane. This creates an exposed terrace/balcony running the full width of the building. The step-back should cast a clear shadow on the terrace floor. This is the most important architectural feature — make it obvious. Look carefully at the uploaded photo. This is the CURRENT back facade of a property at Fernández de los Ríos 59, Madrid, seen from Abdón Terradas street. The low building with graffiti is an old industrial warehouse (former cinema) that will be COMPLETELY DEMOLISHED and replaced with a new residential building. The tall building visible BEHIND the warehouse is the existing residential tower (22.55m, 5 floors + attic) — that tower STAYS and is being renovated. You can see it rising above the warehouse. It must remain visible in the render, behind and above the new building. I need a photorealistic render showing the NEW BUILDING that replaces the warehouse, as seen from Abdón Terradas street. THE NEW BUILDING (EDIFICIO 2) — WHAT TO SHOW: Height: 13.5 meters total, 4 floors above ground. Significantly LOWER than the tower behind it (the tower is 22.55m, almost twice as tall). The tower must be visible rising above. Width: 18 meters (same as the current warehouse, wall to wall between neighboring buildings). SEMI-BASEMENT LEVEL (partially below street level, about -0.50m): - Small windows at ankle height along the street facade — these are high windows for studio apartments below. - The windows are horizontal format, about 0.5m tall, with frosted or translucent glass for privacy. - There are 6 of these windows evenly spaced along the facade. GROUND FLOOR (street level): - A residential entrance door on the right side: glass + dark metal frame, minimal and elegant. - The rest of the ground floor facade has regular windows for apartments inside. - No commercial spaces — this is purely residential. FLOORS 1 AND 2: - Regular residential floors with generous windows. - Balconies with dark metal railings and some potted plants. - The facade rhythm is clean and modern but not cold. FLOOR 3 (TOP FLOOR) — KEY FEATURE: - This floor is SET BACK 3 METERS from the main facade line, creating a row of TERRACES in front of it. - The terraces have glass railings, outdoor furniture hints, and planting. - This setback is clearly visible as a step-back in the building volume — it is the most distinctive feature of this facade. - Behind the setback, the top floor has floor-to-ceiling windows. ROOF (visible above the setback): - Partially green roof (sedum/plants) and partially solar panels. - A small communal terrace area. FACADE MATERIALS AND STYLE: - NOT a copy of the old tower. This is a clearly CONTEMPORARY building, but warm and contextual with Madrid. - Main material: light-toned brick (cream/sand color) — different from the tower's darker brick, creating a dialogue but not imitation. - Horizontal WOOD SLATS as sun protection on the south-facing windows (this facade faces south, so solar protection is important). The slats are natural wood tone, horizontal, fixed. - Window frames: dark anthracite aluminum, large format. - Ground floor: natural stone base (limestone or similar) for the first 1.5 meters. - The overall feeling is: warm, modern, high-quality residential. Think contemporary Madrid architecture — firms like MVRDV, Burgos & Garrido, or Rafael de la Hoz. THE TOWER BEHIND: - The existing tower is visible rising above the new building. Show approximately 2-3 floors of the tower above the new building's roof line. - The tower's rear facade is simpler than its street facade: rendered/plastered in light color, with regular windows. Show it renovated and clean. - This height contrast (tall tower + lower new building) is architecturally intentional and must be clearly visible. NEIGHBORING BUILDINGS: - On both sides: typical Madrid residential buildings, 4-6 floors, rendered facades, some with small balconies. The new building fits in height and character with these neighbors. STREET — ABDÓN TERRADAS: - Narrow one-way street, typical Madrid secondary street. - Parked cars along one side. - Narrow sidewalks with stone curbs. - A couple of pedestrians. VIEWPOINT: - Standing on the opposite sidewalk, looking at the full facade. - Slight 3/4 angle from the RIGHT side, to show the depth of the setback on the top floor. - Eye height 1.6m. Distance approximately 10-12 meters from facade. LIGHTING: - Morning light (this facade faces SOUTH, so it gets direct sun most of the day). - Bright, clear Madrid sky. Strong light with defined shadows that reveal the setback volume. - The wood slats cast interesting shadow patterns on the facade. IMAGE QUALITY: - Photorealistic architectural visualization. - Real material textures: brick joints, wood grain on slats, metal reflections, glass. - High-end real estate marketing quality. - Editorial architectural photography style. CRITICAL REMINDERS: - The new building is 13.5m (4 floors). The tower behind is 22.55m (visible above). Show this height difference clearly. - The top floor setback of 3 meters is the KEY design feature of this facade. Make it prominent. - The semi-basement windows at ground level are small and horizontal — they hint at the studios with private gardens on the courtyard side. - This is NOT a glass tower or a generic modern building. It is warm brick + wood, Mediterranean-contemporary. , keep exact camera angle
Date04 March 2026
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