A group of young architects opened in Madrid’s Carrera de San Jerónimo St. a store that also provided advice about any matter relating to construction, from taps to furniture. This place, the future site of the Asociación de Amigos de las Artes Nuevas (ADLAN) in Madrid, was called Centro de Exposición e Información Permanente de la Construcción. Moreno Villa held his last solo show before the Civil War there (December 1934 - January 1935.) This exhibition, with 47 drawings and three oil paintings, was divided into several sections.
One of them included the pen portraits of the best-known architects of the moment: López Otero, Zuazo, Blanco Soler, Sánchez Arcas, Bergamín, García Morales, Moya, and Martín Domínguez.