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February 2026 Edition February 18, 2026

Northwest Arkansas: America's #1 City — And We Called It First

The Milken Institute just crowned NWA the best-performing large metro in the entire country. Out of 411. We've been writing about this market for two years. Punto y aparte.

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#1
Best-Performing Large Metro
Milken Institute 2026
411
US Metro Areas
Evaluated
Top 13
In Every Single
Labor Market Metric
~10%
Construction Employment
Growth in 2024

We told you. Now Milken confirmed it.

February 18, 2026 Executive Broker & Editorial Director

Look, I'm not the type to say "I told you so." But I'm absolutely going to say it this time. Two years ago, when most people still thought of Northwest Arkansas as "that Walmart place," we were here writing about construction cranes, trail systems, and a demographic wave that the big data houses hadn't caught up to yet. On January 27, 2026, the Milken Institute made it official: Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers is the #1 Best-Performing Large Metro in America.

Number one. Out of four hundred and eleven metro areas. Not top ten. Not "promising." Not "one to watch." The top.

And here's what makes it truly remarkable — this wasn't a fluke spike. NWA has been in Milken's top 15 every single year since 2021. This region has been doing the work quietly, consistently, without the hype cycles that inflate and deflate places like Austin or Boise. No tech bro gold rush. No overnight collapse. Just a steady, almost stubborn ascent.

The Numbers Don't Lie — But They Do Surprise

The Milken methodology is rigorous. They look at job creation, wage growth, high-tech GDP concentration, housing affordability, and household broadband access, among other indicators. NWA ranked 13th or higher in every single labor market metric. Every. Single. One. That kind of consistency across categories is almost unheard of for a metro this size.

Housing affordability? 15th among large cities nationally. In an era where most "best cities" lists are essentially rankings of places nobody can actually afford to live, NWA is doing something radical: growing and staying accessible. Construction employment surged roughly 10% in 2024 alone, which tells you that builders see what the data confirms — demand here isn't theoretical. It's physical. It's lumber and concrete and cranes in the sky.

Mayor Molly Rawn of Fayetteville put it well: "In Fayetteville, we are intentional about investing in what makes our city thrive." Intentional. That word matters. This isn't an accident of geography or a lucky commodity cycle. This is a region that decided to build something, and then actually built it.

The Next Chapter: Hyperscale Is Coming

If you think the story peaks at a Milken ranking, you're not paying attention. Arkansas is about to become a hyperscale data center corridor, with facilities expected to be operational by 2027. The implications for NWA are enormous — not just in direct employment, but in the secondary and tertiary economic effects. Tech workers need housing. Their families need schools, restaurants, trails, culture. The infrastructure investments that made NWA livable are about to pay compound interest.

And that's the thing about NWA that most outsiders still don't get. It's not just Walmart, Tyson, and J.B. Hunt anymore. It's Crystal Bridges and the Momentary. It's 40+ miles of world-class mountain biking trails. It's a food scene that has quietly become one of the best in the mid-South. It's a university town energy blended with corporate resources and — crucially — an affordability floor that gives regular people a real shot at building wealth through real estate.

Así es la cosa. We spotted the signal. The institute confirmed the trend. And the next wave — hyperscale data, continued corporate relocation, quality-of-life migration — is only just beginning. If you're not looking at NWA right now, you're going to be late. Again.

"In Fayetteville, we are intentional about investing in what makes our city thrive."
— Mayor Molly Rawn, City of Fayetteville

Colombia's Property Reset: What the Numbers Actually Say

February 18, 2026 Creative Director & Brand Strategist

Let's kill the fantasy right away: Colombia's real estate market did not boom in 2025. Not in real terms. If you listened to the cheerleaders — the Instagram agents, the "passive income in paradise" crowd — you'd think Medellín was minting millionaires on every corner. The reality is more nuanced, more interesting, and ultimately more useful if you're trying to make actual money here.

Residential prices across Colombia grew 7-9% in nominal terms last year. Sounds great, right? Except inflation ate most of it. In real terms — the only terms that matter for wealth — growth was a modest 2-4%. That's not nothing. But it's not the gold rush that social media promised you either.

Bogotá: The Expensive Anchor

The capital remains Colombia's most expensive residential market, with prices averaging around COP $9.8 million per square meter — roughly $2,600 USD. That's double the national average. Let that sink in. The gap between Bogotá and the rest of the country isn't narrowing. If anything, it's calcifying into a structural feature of the market.

What's actually exciting in Bogotá isn't the price level — it's the infrastructure play. The Metro de Bogotá is at 70% completion, and it's already reshaping demand patterns. Neighborhoods along the planned route that were overlooked two years ago are now seeing buying pressure from investors who understand what transit does to property values. This is the single most important infrastructure story in Colombian real estate right now.

The Rate Environment: Painful but Easing

Colombia's policy rate sat at 9.25% in January 2026. That translates to mortgage rates of 12-14% for most borrowers. Ojo con esto — those aren't typos. Colombians are financing homes at rates that would make an American homebuyer faint. This compresses purchasing power dramatically and explains why new-build homes (which come with developer financing and subsidies) are appreciating faster at 8-9% versus 6-8% for resale properties.

The rate trajectory is downward, but slowly. Banco de la República is cutting, but they're not rushing. Expect mortgage rates to stay in double digits through most of 2026. That's the environment. Plan accordingly.

Medellín: Still the Magnet, But the Map Is Shifting

El Poblado and Laureles continue to post strong numbers — 9-12% annual growth in prime micro-zones. No surprises there. The foreign buyer demand floor, combined with genuine quality-of-life appeal, keeps these neighborhoods resilient.

But the real story? Sabaneta. This municipality in the southern Aburrá Valley is emerging as the affordable alternative to El Poblado. Younger Colombian families are choosing it for price, metro connectivity, and a neighborhood feel that El Poblado lost years ago. International buyers who can't stomach El Poblado prices are discovering it too. We're watching this closely.

On the infrastructure side, the Metro de la 80 expansion in western Medellín is creating a similar dynamic to Bogotá's metro effect — opening up neighborhoods that were previously disconnected from the city's economic pulse. Transit creates value. Every time. Everywhere.

The Five-Year View

Here's our forecast: 30-45% nominal growth over five years, with 5-15% real growth. That's a wide band, deliberately so. The variables — rate policy, remittance flows, political stability, infrastructure execution — create real uncertainty. But the structural thesis is sound: Colombia's middle class is growing, urbanization continues, and housing supply hasn't kept pace with demographic demand.

The most liquid asset class? Mid-market 2-3 bedroom apartments. They rent fast, they sell fast, and they sit in the sweet spot of Colombian demand. Luxury is illiquid. Studios are oversupplied in tourist zones. The middle is where the money is.

One more signal worth noting: rental demand is structurally rising. More Colombian households are choosing to rent — not because they can't afford to buy, but because high mortgage rates and lifestyle flexibility make renting the rational choice. This is a demand tailwind for rental investors that isn't going away anytime soon.

9.25%
Colombia Policy Rate
January 2026
$2,600
Bogotá Price/SqM
in USD
70%
Metro de Bogotá
Completion
9-12%
Medellín Prime Zone
Annual Growth

The Great Housing Reset: 3 Signals Reshaping 2026

February 18, 2026 Executive Broker & Editorial Director

Something is shifting in the American housing market. Not a crash — stop hoping for that. Not a boom either. Something more subtle and, honestly, more interesting. We're in the early innings of what I'm calling the Great Housing Reset: a period where the rules of the game are being quietly rewritten while most people are still arguing about whether rates will hit 5% again. (They won't. Not this year. Move on.)

Three signals tell the story.

Signal 1: Consumer Confidence — Fragile, But Stabilizing

2025 was a rollercoaster for consumer sentiment. Inflation anxieties, election uncertainty, and a general sense that everything costs too much kept confidence metrics volatile for most of the year. But as we've entered 2026, the readings are stabilizing. Not soaring — stabilizing. And in a market that's been driven by psychology as much as economics, stability is actually a big deal.

When people feel like the ground isn't shifting under their feet every month, they make big decisions. They sign leases. They put in offers. They stop refreshing Zillow at 2 AM and start calling their agent. That behavioral shift is the precursor to the spring buying season, and the early signals suggest it's coming.

Signal 2: Mortgage Rates — The "Not Great, Not Terrible" Zone

Rates are hovering in a band that's uncomfortable but not paralyzing. The 30-year fixed is bouncing between the high 5s and mid 6s. It's the Chernobyl of mortgage markets: not great, not terrible. And the market is adjusting. Slowly, painfully, but adjusting.

NAR is forecasting a 7-12% increase in existing-home sales for 2026. That's meaningful volume growth, even if it's coming off a deeply depressed base. The early data, though, has been softer than hoped — existing-home sales actually dropped 8.4% to start the year. A reality check? Maybe. A trend reversal? Unlikely. February and March will tell the real story.

Signal 3: Federal Policy — Chaos as Catalyst

Look, I'm not going to pretend that federal housing policy makes sense right now. It doesn't. There are competing proposals, contradictory signals, and a regulatory environment that seems to change direction every news cycle. But here's the thing about chaos: it creates asymmetric opportunities for people who are paying attention.

Immigration policy shifts are affecting labor supply in construction. Tariff proposals are hitting materials costs. There's talk of novel mortgage products. Each of these creates localized winners and losers. The question isn't whether policy matters — it's whether you're positioned to benefit from the specific ways it matters in your target market.

The Reset Opportunity

Here's the thesis in one sentence: income growth is finally outpacing home price appreciation in many markets. That's the reset. For years, prices ran ahead of wages, creating an ever-widening affordability gap. Now, in select metros, the gap is closing — not because prices are falling (mostly they're not), but because incomes are catching up.

Meanwhile, the office market restructuring continues to reshape where people live and work. The WFH shift isn't reversing — it's settling into a permanent new configuration that distributes economic activity differently across metros. Markets that understood this early (hello, NWA) are already winning.

Inventory is shifting. Buyers are active but disciplined. The spring advantage window is opening. If you've been sitting on the sidelines waiting for the "perfect" moment — ya basta. The reset is now. It's just quieter than you expected.

"Income growth is finally outpacing prices."

The Great Housing Reset — Q1 2026

Four Markets, Four Signals

Quick-hit dispatches from the metros we're tracking most closely this quarter. The signal map, distilled.

01

Northwest Arkansas

#1 Milken metro. Data centers. Still affordable.

#1 Milken Best-Performing
Large Metro 2026
02

Medellín

9-12% prime growth. Metro expansion. Sabaneta rising.

9-12% Annual Growth
Prime Zones
03

Madrid

International buyer pressure. Golden visa ripple effects.

+14% YoY International
Buyer Activity
04

New York City

Office-to-resi conversion wave. Brooklyn heating up.

12.6M Sq Ft Approved
for Conversion

NWA — The Confirmation

We covered the headline in /CORE, but the flow signals deserve their own mention. Beyond Milken, NWA is seeing a construction boom that's creating its own momentum. Data center investment is attracting ancillary tech services, which attract talent, which creates housing demand, which funds more construction. It's a virtuous cycle — and it's still early. The affordability story remains intact: NWA ranked 15th nationally for housing affordability among large metros. That's the kicker. Growth plus access. That combination is rare.

Medellín — The Shifting Map

El Poblado and Laureles get the magazine covers, but the signal this quarter is Sabaneta. Located in the southern Aburrá Valley, it offers metro connectivity, walkability, and a price point that's 30-40% below El Poblado for comparable quality. The Metro de la 80 expansion in western Medellín is a second major signal — opening up neighborhoods like Belén and Robledo to a new class of transit-oriented development. Medellín isn't a single market anymore. It's a constellation of micro-markets, and the smart money is looking at the edges, not the center.

Madrid — The Pressure Cooker

Spain's capital continues to attract international capital at a pace that's straining local affordability. The golden visa changes — restricting real estate investment as a pathway to residency — are sending ripple effects through the market. Some foreign buyers are accelerating purchases before new rules bite. Others are redirecting to secondary Spanish cities. The net effect: continued upward pressure on Madrid prices in the near term, with potential for correction as the policy dust settles. Watch Malasaña and Lavapiés for the sharpest micro-signals.

NYC — The Conversion Play

Manhattan's office vacancy problem is becoming Brooklyn's housing opportunity. The office-to-residential conversion wave is gaining real momentum, with millions of square feet approved or in pipeline. Lower Manhattan is leading, but the signal is spreading to Midtown and, increasingly, to downtown Brooklyn. The micro-markets heating fastest are the ones adjacent to conversion projects — new residents create demand for services, retail, and yes, more housing. It's urban regeneration in real time. Messy, expensive, and full of opportunity.

The Investor's Playbook: Where to Put Capital in Q1 2026

Four actionable theses from the markets we know best. No fluff. No "it depends." Real positions.

February 18, 2026
NWA Play

Buy Residential Near Data Center Corridors

The hyperscale data center buildout creates a clear geographic thesis: residential within a 15-minute drive of planned facilities. Entry prices remain affordable relative to national benchmarks, and the demand catalyst is real, funded, and on-schedule for 2027 operations. Think workforce housing, not luxury. These workers need 3-bed houses with yards, not downtown lofts.

→ Affordable entry. Massive structural upside. Buy before the cranes arrive.
Colombia Play

Mid-Market Apartments in Transit Corridors

The playbook in Colombia is transit-oriented: buy mid-market 2-3 bed apartments along planned or expanding metro lines in Bogotá, Medellín, and emerging Sabaneta. Avoid the luxury segment — it's illiquid and overpriced for the yields. Watch Cajicá (north of Bogotá) as an emerging satellite market with improving connectivity. Rental demand is structurally rising.

→ Follow the metro lines. Buy the middle. Avoid luxury vanity plays.
US Broad Play

Target Markets Where Income > Price Growth

The Great Housing Reset creates a specific opportunity: markets where income growth is outpacing home price appreciation. That's the affordability gap closing in your favor. NWA is the flagship example, but look also at Midwest metros, parts of the Southeast, and markets benefiting from remote work migration. The spring buying window is opening now.

→ The reset is your entry. Focus on the income-to-price convergence story.
Risk Management

Cash Flow Over Appreciation Bets

In a high-rate environment, the math changes. Appreciation-only strategies are fragile — they require everything to go right. Cash flow strategies survive bad quarters, policy shifts, and rate surprises. Prioritize properties with day-one positive cash flow or very clear near-term rental demand. If the only way your deal works is 8% annual appreciation, it doesn't work.

→ High rates mean cash flow is king. Be disciplined or be disappointed.

From the Field: Boots-on-Ground Notes

What spreadsheets can't tell you. Personal dispatches from the places where deals happen, lives unfold, and markets reveal their character.

February 18, 2026 Executive Broker & Editorial Director
📍 Bentonville, Arkansas — Construction Site Visit

The mud was February-thick and the air smelled like fresh-cut pine and diesel. I stood at the edge of a 240-unit residential development on the southeast side of Bentonville, watching a crew frame what would become somebody's first home by autumn. The foreman — a guy named Dale who's been building in NWA for nineteen years — told me something that stuck: "Used to be, we'd finish a project and have to sell it. Now we finish a project and it's already sold." He said it casually, like it was obvious. Like the whole country should know. The framing hammers kept their rhythm. The data centers aren't even built yet, and this town already can't build fast enough.

📍 El Poblado, Medellín — Coffee and Cranes

Sitting at Pergamino on a Tuesday morning, third tinto of the day, watching the skyline through the steam. Three cranes visible from my table. Three. In a neighborhood that people keep calling "saturated." The couple next to me — both maybe thirty, both on laptops — were speaking French. The barista switched between Spanish and English without pause. A guy in a Patagonia vest walked past with a golden retriever and a phone call about a closing in Sabaneta. This is the texture of Medellín's market right now: international, caffeinated, relentless. The cranes keep turning. The tinto keeps flowing. The numbers keep climbing, even when the macro says they shouldn't.

📍 Bogotá — A Conversation About Renting

Andrés and Valentina are both 28. He works in fintech; she's a graphic designer. Combined income puts them solidly in Colombia's upper-middle class. They could buy — they've been pre-approved, they've done the math. They're choosing not to. "At 13% interest? No, hermano. We'd rather rent a nice place in Chapinero, save the difference, and wait." Valentina showed me their spreadsheet. It was more sophisticated than half the pro formas I see from investors. They're not anti-homeownership. They're anti-stupid-math. And they're not alone. I talked to four couples under 35 in Bogotá that week. Three of them said some version of the same thing. This is the demand signal that landlords should be paying attention to: a generation of educated, earning renters who are choosing to be tenants. That's not a problem for the rental market. That's a structural tailwind.

Data Stopped Being Numbers — It Became Signal

Where pricing data becomes commercial intelligence. The CRUMBS Index translates digital shelf behavior into institutional-grade risk ratings.

Week 2026-W08 · February 17, 2026

CRUMBS — the Commercial Retail Unified Market Behavior System — is our data signals division. While the rest of this magazine deals in narratives, macro trends, and boots-on-ground dispatches, CRUMBS deals in the cold behavioral data of the digital shelf. Think of it as a credit rating, but for brand pricing discipline across retail channels. Five pillars. One composite truth.

This week's portfolio scan covers four brands across surface disinfection, dishwasher care, air care, and cold & flu categories — monitored across 8 retail channels, 45 SKUs, and thousands of daily price observations. The signals are mixed. One brand is holding discipline. Three are showing cracks. Let's get into it.

/CRUMBS · Portfolio Intelligence
Lysol
Surface Disinfection · 15 SKUs
68/100
CI-C
11
Price
10
Promo
19
Market
16
Compete
12
Assort.
Key Signal
Third consecutive rating decline. Drug channel pricing 33–44% below mass channel. 7 concurrent promotions eroding price architecture.
Finish
Dishwasher Care · 11 SKUs
72/100
CI-B
12
Price
20
Promo
18
Market
10
Compete
12
Assort.
Key Signal
Strongest performer in portfolio. Zero promotional activity detected. Disciplined pricing holds despite Cascade competition.
Air Wick
Air Care · 10 SKUs
65/100
CI-C
3
Price
20
Promo
18
Market
12
Compete
12
Assort.
Key Signal
Price architecture broken. Plugin 2ct ranges $5.98 (Walmart) to $21.98 (Amazon) — 3.7× dispersion. Channel pricing not harmonized.
Mucinex
Cold & Flu · 9 SKUs
57/100
CI-C
11
Price
16
Promo
16
Market
4
Compete
10
Assort.
Critical Signal
Amazon Basic Care undercuts by 56% ($0.45/ct vs $0.76/ct). Most severe private label threat in portfolio. Competitive Pressure at 4/20.
/CRUMBS · Portfolio Dashboard
Portfolio Score
65.5
Weighted average · CI-C
Active Alerts
7
3 critical · 4 elevated
Retailers Covered
8
Tier 1 daily · Tier 2 bi-weekly
Price Observations
45
This period · 4 brands
Active Risk Register
7 ACTIVE
Severity Brand Risk Signal Exposure Action Required
Critical MUCINEX Amazon private label undercut — 56% below branded $18M+ category Value pack defense, loyalty activation
Critical AIR WICK Price architecture collapse — 3.7× channel dispersion All channels MAP enforcement, channel harmonization
Critical LYSOL Third consecutive rating decline — CI-A to CI-C Portfolio-wide Promotional calendar review, drug channel audit
Elevated LYSOL Drug channel pricing 33–44% below mass CVS, Walgreens Cross-channel pricing review
Elevated MUCINEX Severe liquid 33% promotional discount captured Amazon Promo ROI analysis, S&S counter-strategy
Elevated AIR WICK Walmart pricing $5.98 — potential loss leader Walmart Verify Rollback status, assess margin impact
Moderate FINISH Limited data coverage — 6 observations only Trending blind Expand retailer scrape coverage
/CRUMBS · Live Signals
Undercut

Amazon Basic Care Mucus-DM Max — 56% Below Branded

$18.99 for 42ct ($0.45/ct) vs Mucinex DM Max 48ct at $36.53 ($0.76/ct). Subscribe & Save adds 25% additional discount. Existential private label pressure.

MUCINEX
Dispersion

Air Wick Plugin 2ct — $5.98 to $21.98 Range

3.7× price gap between Walmart ($5.98) and Amazon ($21.98). Same product, same pack size. Channel price architecture not functioning.

AIR WICK
Erosion

Lysol Drug Channel Promotional Saturation

7 concurrent promotions active. CVS and Walgreens pricing 33–44% below Amazon and Walmart. Third consecutive weekly decline.

LYSOL
Defense

Finish Holds Discipline — Zero Promos Detected

No promotional activity across any monitored channel. Cascade competition present but no race to bottom. Strongest CRUMBS rating at CI-B.

FINISH
Leakage

Cross-Channel Price Leakage — Lysol Disinfectant Spray

Clorox 4-in-1 at $4.19 (Amazon) vs Lysol Spray at $6.47 — 35% competitive gap. Potential for algorithmic price matching cascade.

LYSOL

Commercial Retail Unified Market Behavior System

An institutional-grade behavioral rating system that converts raw digital shelf data into standardized risk scores — comparable to credit ratings, but for retail channel discipline. Five pillars. One composite truth.

Price Stability
0 – 20
Cross-channel price variance and coefficient of variation. Lower dispersion = higher score.
Promo Integrity
0 – 20
Promotional frequency × depth. Healthy brands promote strategically, not constantly.
Marketplace
0 – 20
Buy Box control, 3P seller containment, marketplace undercut depth tracking.
Competitive
0 – 20
Private label undercut severity, competitive gap index, share capture risk assessment.
Assortment
0 – 20
SKU availability, hero product presence, assortment cohesion across channels.
CI-A
Highly Disciplined
80 – 100
CI-B
Controlled
65 – 79
CI-C
Moderate Risk
50 – 64
CI-D
Structural Stress
35 – 49
CI-E
Breakdown Risk
0 – 34

What We're Reading, Watching, Tracking

01
📊 Report

Milken Institute: Best-Performing Cities 2026

The definitive ranking that crowned NWA #1. Essential methodology, comprehensive metro-by-metro data. If you only read one report this quarter, make it this one.

02
🏠 Forecast

TheLatinvestor: Colombia Property Market Forecasts 2026-2030

The most sober, data-grounded analysis of Colombia's residential market we've found. No hype, real numbers, actionable segmentation. Pairs perfectly with our /THRUST analysis this month.

03
📈 Data

DANE Housing Price Indices — Colombia

The Colombian national statistics office. Raw data, no spin. Track the IPVN (new housing price index) and IPHVS (secondary housing) monthly. The primary source for anyone serious about Colombian real estate.

04
⚡ Watch

Hyperscale Data Centers in Arkansas: The Infrastructure Play

Multiple outlets tracking the buildout of hyperscale data center infrastructure across Arkansas, expected operational by 2027. This is the next economic catalyst for NWA and the broader region. Watch the permits, watch the power grid investments, watch the housing starts.

The Voices Behind This Edition

JCE
Executive Broker & Editorial Director

Juan Camilo Echeverri

📍 Rogers, Arkansas

Juan Camilo Echeverri is an Executive Broker at PAK Home Realty in Rogers, Arkansas, where he focuses on commercial real estate strategy, market positioning, and portfolio development across Northwest Arkansas. With a decade of experience in retail and emerging category development—working with major retailers including Walmart and Sam's Club—he learned that growth comes from seeing what's missing before it becomes obvious. That same pattern recognition has defined his real estate career, where he combines regional market fluency with disciplined capital strategy. Northwest Arkansas is his territory. As an executive broker, he understands the ecosystem at infrastructure depth: retail headquarters, supplier networks, family migration, entrepreneur spillover, and how these forces reshape property value and land use over time. His work centers on positioning clients ahead of market inflection points—timing entries, structuring leverage, and reading the signals that precede mainstream recognition. Alongside brokerage and market analysis, he builds. Xtatik represents his commitment to asset strategy, innovation discipline, and measured expansion across multiple domains. He believes markets reward those who see structural shifts early and have the patience to position for them. IN-KluSo exists in that space: where culture, capital, and clarity converge.

Investment Properties New Home Sales Relocation Market Strategy Emerging Markets
CO
Creative Director & Brand Strategist

Camilo Osorio

📍 Madrid, Spain

Camilo Osorio is a brand strategist and visual identity architect whose work sits at the intersection of communication theory and design practice. Trained in Colombia and Peru, with academic credentials in Dirección y Gestión de Comunicación, Marketing y Publicidad and a Master's in Branding & Visual Identity from Madrid, he brings academic rigor to the art of making brands feel alive. He is the creative force behind IN-KluSo's entire identity system — from the editorial typography and the cream-on-black palette to the signature orange diagonal stripe that cuts through every page. When he's not deconstructing brand narratives or building identity architecture, he's probably sketching one on the back of a napkin in some Madrid café.

Brand Systems Identity Architecture Visual Storytelling Communication Strategy Editorial Design