Camporrosso has been working as a property development company since 1985. They execute complete spaces where they can creatively shape the project, whenever possible. Currently, they are focused on residential projects, offering first homes and coastal residences to buyers from across Europe, primarily in the Community of Madrid and the province of Alicante. They strive to build special spaces designed to be lived in, always seeking a magical touch, understanding that space, the home, shapes life.
It seems like yesterday when they started their Camporrosso Village in Finestrat, an exercise in space and the adventure of living in the Mediterranean. These were unique homes connected by gardens and pathways, with paths leading everywhere and from everywhere, featuring large stone walls and landscaping that was just beginning to take shape. One has to experience it to understand and appreciate it fully.
Now they are embarking on Camporrosso Stone Valley, another experience, another different exercise, where the land rises on both sides of a ravine, with platforms cut by stone walls. These platforms will overflow with plants and flowers cascading down the slope, reminiscent of the ancient Hanging Gardens. At the top, forming a large L shape, are the houses with large terraces stepping towards the light, the South, and the sea, with their facade adorned with travertine marble, the same noble stone used in ancient Rome by emperors and artists to engrave their history and wisdom.
In Arganda del Rey, they are constructing the Prisma building, a display of minimalism and dignity, expressing everything necessary for living with sobriety and elegance.
In Calpe, Camporrosso Saeta is a slender and distinctive tower reaching towards the sky like an arrow, seeking light, always upwards. It's a simple yet ambitious building, akin to an obelisk, reminiscent of humanity's earliest efforts to reach greater heights, to communicate with the heavens through a towering vertical stone.
And in Somosaguas, they are creating two grand villas, two mansions. Shaping large homes is no easy task. They can be a sanctuary and a foundation for thinking big, for living large. But remember, the first great palace in history was called the Labyrinth... Not getting lost in large spaces is a privilege reserved for a few.
And there are a few more projects, ventures that drive them forward, knowing that they shape their spaces, and then those spaces shape them.