In a city known for its fast-paced technical life and urban spread, a cool hash has shared-only to avoid a beauty but intentionally offered a lesson in life. designed by Studio Sharad, Ravine Bangalore, residence in India, is a 2100-class-foot apartment, which connects Japanese Wabi-Sabbi philosophy with modern minimalism in a individual and globally inspired house.
Prepared for a young couple in the technical industry, residence reflects their time and desire for thoughtful simplicity abroad. “A minimum location with worldly effects, infected with natural materials, is infected with the studio autumn’s chief designer Chinton Punjabi. The design started with interaction around the travel values and vision, resulting in a house that feels both root and search.
“Lagom” – a Swedish word that means “simply enough” – completely defines the feeling of residence. Each element is directed by this principle of balance, from spatial plan to the choice of materials. The result is a place that neither feels too rigorous nor highly ornate – is careful to provide peace in the middle of a stirring city.
When entering the house, guests are welcomed by an arched entryway, which has a systematically shaped mirror-which is a clue to come to the rest of the apartment. These soft curves are complete, softening the infection of the room and rejuvenating the sculpture beauty of the house.
A minimal wooden bar and marble-clad kitchen, as well as brass accents and local stones lend a grounded, regional identity for puja alkov that is defined by an archway.
The central to the house, and the “individual favorite place of the couple,” food space stands with its underlying concrete bench, details of the wooden wooden wisbon chairs, and a curet made by changing an old window. “An existing window was filled with lime plaster to create this composition,” says Punjabi. This clever intervention not only adds depth to space – it transforms a simple wall into a conversation piece.
The color is the primary palette soil and neutral, with hot oak wood floor as well as microscopic textures and lime washed walls. The furniture is perfectly bespoke with fluid forms and touch finish. A knitted jute rug from the carpet kingdom and the custom decoration from the minimum Indian anchor emphasizes natural materials and handicraft design details.
A bloated glass division leads to private regions, which maintains the visual flow, offering a subtle layer of isolation. A bedroom is renovated in a joint study and space of a cupboard, making the main sleep areas open and uncontrolled.
The primary bedroom, drenched in white tones, maximizes natural light for a peaceful retreat. In contrast, the guest bedroom offers oak wood tone and a flexible media unit that matches the needs of contemporary life – infection between work and relaxation.
“Each piece of decoration was cured with intentions,” is the conclusion of Punjabi. “We focused on gathering tangent sensations with a spontaneous difference of light and materials. The reflection of his personality has been deeply beneficial to come to life to see this house.”
For more information about Lagome Niwas and Studio Autumn, Try StudioAutumn.com,
photography by Nayan Soni,