Set along the Atlantic edge of A Coruña, the Domus stands as a singular piece of architecture — a curved volume clad in slate, shaped by the presence of the sea and the horizon beyond. Unlike traditional museum buildings, it does not impose itself through monumentality, but through continuity with the landscape, its form echoing both geology and motion.
From the street, the building reads almost as an object in transit. The sweeping façade absorbs the changing light of the day, while its scale shifts depending on the point of view. In this frame, everyday elements — buses, railings, the urban foreground — temporarily interrupt the clarity of the architecture, grounding it in the ordinary life of the city.
Photographed during a recent visit to A Coruña, this image captures a moment where infrastructure and architecture overlap, revealing a less idealised but more honest reading of the building. The Domus becomes not just a museum, but part of a continuous urban sequence, where movement, scale and context redefine its presence.








