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Located in the heart of San Sebastián’s Romantic Area, San Martin Market forms part of the city’s everyday identity. More than a place of provision, it is a space of encounter—a setting where local identity is expressed not only through its products, but through the relationships built around them.

The recent renovation is grounded in a clear idea: to recover the essential character of the market as a vibrant urban space, deeply connected to its community.

For our studio, this project is particularly meaningful. Two of the three partners are from Donostia, and working on a place so embedded in the city’s collective memory has been a unique opportunity to engage with it through proximity, familiarity, and a deep understanding of its everyday use.

A Local Connection that Enhances the Product
The first objective is to highlight local product, the true protagonist of the market. The architecture is conceived as a quiet backdrop that supports without competing, using honest, locally sourced materials—wood, stone, and iron—that bring texture, warmth, and a timeless identity. A restrained and natural color palette enhances the presence of fresh products, creating a welcoming, approachable, and clearly recognizable environment.

Beyond its material expression, this strategy seeks to create an inviting, accessible, everyday space where users feel at ease to explore, pause, and engage.

Design
The market is organized across two levels, each offering a distinct program: the ground floor brings together produce from the land and butcher shops, while the basement level is dedicated to fishmongers.

One Market, Two Experiences
The design expresses this duality through different material and formal languages in showcases, counter fronts, and suspended ceiling elements, evoking the worlds of field and sea. This narrative not only explains the origin of the products but also creates an emotional connection between users and their provenance, reinforcing the overall market experience.

From Field to Market
On the ground floor, the design draws on agricultural tradition and the idea of bringing products from the land closer to the consumer.

The space is inspired by the rural landscape and incorporates references to woven baskets historically linked to harvesting. A woven wooden ceiling introduces warmth and a more domestic scale, while local stone in floors and countertops reinforces the connection to the territory.

Metal structures provide a contemporary counterpoint, while also recalling the structural memory of the original market. The result is a space where materiality goes beyond aesthetics to create a warm, familiar, and welcoming atmosphere, always placing the focus on the product.

From Port to Market
On the basement level, the project is linked to the sea and port activity, establishing a distinct yet coherent identity.

The ceiling design references the crates traditionally used for fish transport, while the finishes evoke the structure of wooden boats and fishing nets. A palette of turquoise and green tones recalls the Cantabrian Sea, creating a fresh, luminous, and evocative environment.

At the same time, the space responds to the hygiene and functional requirements specific to fishmongers, integrating these constraints within a coherent architectural language.

From Marketto Table
The design incorporates the possibility of tasting market products, either at the stalls or in a central ground-floor area. This strategy responds to the project’s second key objective: reinforcing the market as a social space within the neighbourhood, where value lies not only in buying, but in everything that happens around it.

A Versatile Space
The central ground floor plays a key role in this transformation. In the morning, it is occupied by the caseras—a traditional term referring to the people who bring fresh produce from local farmhouses (caseríos) into the city—keeping a deeply rooted tradition alive. In the afternoon, the same tables become shared seating where visitors can enjoy market products. This flexibility extends the space’s use, broadens its social hours, and attracts new audiences, integrating different ways of inhabiting the market in one place.

For many local residents the daily visit to the market is a ritual of encounter, conversation, and belonging—an aspect the project reinforces by encouraging people to stay, share, and build community.

Opening to the Street
Another key aspect of the project is its relationship with the exterior. The introduction of new openings in the façade allows natural light to enter and establishes a more direct visual connection between the interior and the surrounding urban environment, reinforcing the building’s sense of openness, accessibility, and transparency.

Relationship with the City
The project also strengthens the market’s urban presence through a new canopy and a more visible entrance, consolidating it as a reference point within the neighbourhood.

The addition of perimeter spaces with terraces allows the market’s activity to extend into the public realm, blurring the boundary between inside and outside and transforming it into an active place throughout the day.

Conclusion
The result is a market that recovers its essence while projecting it into the future: a warm, welcoming, and deeply urban space where local produce, architecture, and everyday life come together to create new forms of encounter.

Designed by EL EQUIPO CREATIVO
Partners: Oliver Franz Schmidt, Natali Canas del Pozo, Lucas Echeveste Lacy
Project lead: Lucas Echeveste Lacy
Client: San Martin Merkatua
Contractor: IncogaSmart building
Lighting: lichtplanners
Photography: Aitor Estévez

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