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Architects:Studio Inscape
Area:6200ft²
Year:2023
Photographs:Niveditaa Gupta
Lead Architects:Ar. Chaitanya Padal, Ar. Kinnera Varma, Ar. Radha Neela
Category:Houses
Design Team:Ar. Sharika Suresh, Ar. Samhita
City:Hyderabad
Country:India
Text description provided by the architects. Set within an agricultural landscape on the outskirts of the city, Nandivardhanam is conceived as a residence that embraces the ethos of slow living. Positioned among sprawling fields, the house establishes an architecture of grounding, where material authenticity, climate responsiveness, and domestic rituals shape the spatial narrative.
The design orients itself around a deep verandah, conceived as a threshold between landscape and the interior life. This transitional zone modulates light and temperature, offering a microclimate significantly cooler than the expansive open fields around it. The verandah leads to a slender internal spine that opens into a courtyard, where a small brass idol of Lord Krishna subtly anchors the space. Though modest in scale, the object reinforces the courtyard's role as the symbolic and atmospheric heart of the home.
The house is constructed entirely in load-bearing masonry, a deliberate decision that aligns with the family's appreciation for craft, intricacy, and unembellished material character. Exposed brickwork eliminates the need for plaster or surface treatments, allowing the architectural expression to remain honest and textural. The structure reads as a grounded mass, rising directly from the terrain; the verandah steps extend like roots, while the roofline shelters the spaces much like the canopy of a mature tree.
Domestic life is articulated through a sequence of rooms envisioned not merely as functional enclosures but as spaces for pauses, rituals, and observation. Deep window sills, tactile surfaces, and controlled apertures frame the changing landscape, encouraging occupants to sit, linger, and engage with shifting light and seasonal patterns. The architecture positions itself as both backdrop and protagonist, curated yet understated.
Landscape design plays an integral role in defining the project's identity. Every plant is intentionally placed, including the first Champa tree planted during the home's conceptual phase, positioned to be visible from the primary bedroom. The one-acre site also accommodates an office for the father and staff residences. These auxiliary structures adopt the same exposed-brick vocabulary, forming a peripheral edge that protects the internal garden and reinforces a cohesive material language.
Nandivardhana, meaning "one who increases joy," reflects the family's aspiration for a life centered around calmness, ritual, and a close relationship with the land. At dusk, the house emits a soft, diffused glow—its warm illumination turning the residence into a lantern-like presence within the landscape, understated yet resonant.
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