By Savitha Hira
Photography: Courtesy Spaces Architects@ka
Communicating through a dynamic spatial
vocabulary, Ar. Kapil Aggarwal of Spaces Architects@ka, chisels a sprawling
farmhouse on a 2.5 acres site in South Delhi...
The expansive luxurious habitat is a
beatific exercise in opening the inside to surrounding nature and forging a
seamless connect.
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The two-storey structure with its
double-height lobby is, in the words of the architect, “an attempt to create
different architectural compositions from all sides”. So we have this modern
architectural residence stationed at the rear end of a rectangular plot, with
plenty of room for a large pool and a front garden. The building blocks are
oriented perpendicular to the plot, juxtaposing the spatial configuration in an
L-shape, flanking the pool and evolving a larger-than-life ambience.
The language is totally, completely
architectural with the material palette of a stand-out zinc frontage, rough
Indian stone cladding, back-lit glass, clear glass and wood, fashioned into
straight-lined forms, spacious right-angles, transparency and a very chic
understated aura.
Largely sectioned into two units, one
facing the front and side and the other, the pool area, the home is open on all
sides with large glass panels ushering in ample natural light and establishing
the interior-exterior equation.
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A minimalist clean approach to furniture
and furnishings prevails, quite naturally training the eye to commodious indulgence.
The private and semi-private spaces house the lobby, drawing, dinning, two
bedrooms and a bar area on the ground floor along with a home office; whilst
three bedrooms including the master bedroom, the home theatre and gym are
positioned on level one with breath-taking views of the pool. A glass lift
flanked by an indoor water body connects the two levels besides a dramatically
sparse staircase.
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Each frame, each composition of the
different areas is stitched together frame-by-frame, exuding a strong aura of
belonging. Endorsing the differential spatial experiences intended, the spaces
flow into each other – for example, one enters through tall entrance doors
under a cantilevered entrance block, into a double-height lobby; the family
lounge connects to kitchen, which has approach from the dinning, and to the bar
area at the end; steps lead to the terrace garden above the gym extending into
a party space… and the like. The spaces change with changing light of day, creating
experiential intrigue and pockets of surprise.
We are looking to buy a house in New Delhi. Can we have the approx price of this house?
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