Set on the outskirts of El Peral – a small agricultural town in Cuenca, Spain – the new Agrosemillas Offices introduce spaces for concentration, research, and collaboration in a landscape shaped by the seasonal rhythms of production.
WORDS Gina Dionisio PHOTOS Del Rio Bani
Designed by Impepinable Studio, Agrosemillas’ new offices reflect both the company’s industrial roots and its shift towards technological innovation and environmental responsibility.
Situated within an industrial complex defined by large vehicles, logistical infrastructure, and production processes – and bordered by vast agricultural fields – Agrosemillas required workspaces capable of supporting concentration, meetings, and technical development despite an environment dominated by noise, dust, and logistical intensity.
Here, work rhythms follow the cycles of the harvest, alternating quieter periods with phases of continuous activity. As such, the building’s design had to accommodate a wide range of users – from warehouse workers to engineers involved in research and innovation – whose tasks and schedules shift throughout the year. At the same time, the architects were required to maintain a direct relationship with the surrounding warehouses, establishing formal continuity with the industrial complex.

Constructed from four reused shipping containers and simple systems crafted locally, the building draws on industrial pragmatism. The architecture responds to the company’s transformation by balancing continuity with its legacy while introducing a more open, youthful, and informal identity. This shift is expressed through the unapologetic use of the company’s corporate colours – green and yellow – applied directly across the building.
Arranged beneath a saw-tooth roof, the containers channel soft, even daylight deep into the interior, producing a surprisingly rich spatial atmosphere. The north-facing orientation of the open planes ensures a constant and controlled entry of natural light.
Workspaces, service areas, and laboratories follow a clear grid to accommodate the shifting patterns of activity throughout the year. Entrances are separated according to logistical flows and workflows, while the intermediate roof surfaces incorporate strips for experimental crops, physically linking research, production, and architecture within a single framework. | impepinable.studio
Don’t forget to sign up to our weekly newsletter for the latest architecture and design news.



















