Clara Solano

Clara Solano

Clara Solano is a Madrid-born, New York-based interior designer known for her considered layering of antique European pieces with raw, industrial American architecture. Her work appears in private residences across the Northeast and has been quietly influential in shaping a quieter, more material-focused conversation in interior design.

Preview - A Manhattan Loft Finds Its Quiet

Preview - A Manhattan Loft Finds Its Quiet

I first saw the apartment in February. The broker had left a window open and there was snow on the sill, which I took as a sign of something — honesty, maybe. The bones were extraordinary: original cast-iron columns, fourteen-foot ceilings, north light flooding through factory windows that hadn't been replaced since the 1920s. The clients, a couple in their late forties who collect contemporary ceramics, wanted something that would hold their objects without competing with them.

Preview - Light and Quiet in Manhattan

New York, USA

Preview - Light and Quiet in Manhattan

I first saw the apartment in February. The broker had left a window open and there was snow on the sill. The bones were extraordinary: original cast-iron columns, fourteen-foot ceilings, north light flooding through factory windows that hadn't been replaced since the 1920s. The clients — a couple who collect contemporary ceramics — wanted something that would hold their objects without competing with them.

Preview - The Madrid House That Learned to Wait

Madrid, Spain

Preview - The Madrid House That Learned to Wait

The brief arrived three years before I could take the project. The owner — a retired magistrate — had bought a nineteenth-century townhouse in Chamberí, gutted it to bare concrete and brick, and then stopped. He wanted to wait until he found someone who understood what he was doing.

Preview - For the Collector Who Lives Lightly

Paris, France

Preview - For the Collector Who Lives Lightly

The brief was a paradox: my client owns seven hundred objects — paintings, prints, ceramics, glass — and wanted a home that felt empty. He had been offered advice by every designer he had ever met, and had declined it all, choosing instead to live in a series of rented apartments where he could hang things freely without committing to walls.

Preview - A Small House in the Hills

Umbria, Italy

Preview - A Small House in the Hills

The client bought the house on the basis of a photograph. She had never been to Umbria. She arrived to find a structure that had not been inhabited since the 1970s, with no running water, no electricity, and a roof that was structurally adequate in summer only.