The Casa de Azulejo is built of
mixed masonry of stone and brick on a rectangular plan. Houses in the mid-19th century in Salvador transitioned from a traditional Portuguese colonial two-story urban
sobrado to a one-story house with a large garden. The house had a chapel that opened to the front and a large garden with fruit trees. The façade has four large
sash windows with a doorway at center, and is entirely covered in azulejos. They are primarily in blue and white, with polychromatic pieces around the doorway cornice. The basement of the house is high, and the house has
hipped roof and thick walls.
Interior The plan of the house, with its axis on a central distribution corridor to the bedrooms and
alcoves, follows the model most frequently adopted in urban houses throughout the colonial period and the 19th century. It has an
attic with lining that follows the two
eaves of the roof and opens to the side.
Staircase and grounds The Casa de Azulejo retains its patio and front staircase that connects the main floor directly to the garden. Residential gardens were common in Bahia in the 19th century, both for leisure and ventilation; few examples remain in Salvador. The garden of the
Solar Bandeira is in disuse and mostly lost; the
House at Rua Felipe Camarão, no. 34 retains its garden and fine
embrachado mosaic tiles. Staircases of appeared in Bahia in the late 18th century, notably at the
Solar do Conde dos Arcos in 1781. An outstanding example can also be found at
Casa Marback in the Bonfim neighborhood. The placement of a front staircase slowly spread across Bahia and was especially popular in the 19th century. The staircase and terrace have an elaborate iron railing fabricated in Scotland. ==Protected status==