“…Men and women perceive space and their environment differently and this impacts architectural production" (Muxí Martínez 2008). Therefore, we propose to study and analyze architecture made by women working independently to describe and understand its particular features and, hence, reveal and evaluate it, Previous research into 'gender perspectives in architecture' (Pérez-Moreno 2018 have mainly covered historical reviews, from the ones conducted initially by Hayden and Wright (1976), Wright (1976), Torre (1977), and the Heresies Collective (1981) in North America, to the more recent work of Espegel (2006), Hervás y Heras (2015), Pérez-Moreno (2016), and Arias Laurino (2018) in Spain, who has focused on the forgotten female architects of modernism. Other research is centered around feminist reviews of spatial analysis (Rendell et al 1999), largely related to the domestic realm, such as those also undertaken by Hayden (1981Hayden ( , 1984, Friedman (1998), Colomina (1992), Heynen and Baydar (2005), and Baydar (2012), to give some examples.…”