Andheri
Mumbai, India
A Penthouse Drawn in Gold and Glass
Warm stone, city light, and the kind of quiet only the highest floors know.
Living at the Edge of the City
The living room frames Mumbai like a painting floor-to-ceiling glass holding the entire skyline within reach. Inside, the palette deliberately softens what the city cannot: cream upholstery, warm amber light, hand-laid stone cladding that rises from floor to ceiling like a slow exhale. The furniture sits low, keeping the view dominant, the horizon always present.
Where the Day Ends
The bedroom was designed as a room that receives you. Dark teak panels line the walls, absorbing light rather than reflecting it creating a depth that feels almost forest-like. Recessed lighting runs in clean horizontal bands, grazing the wood grain and pulling the eye toward rest. The sunken element at the foot of the bed blurs the line between bedroom and spa, between sleeping and floating.
The Sky as the Sixth Room
A private terrace where the city becomes scenery. A strip of green lawn softens the stone underfoot, while perimeter uplights hold the space in a warm amber glow as the sun drops behind the Mumbai skyline. This is not an outdoor extension of the home — it is a room without a ceiling, complete in itself, designed for the hour when the light turns gold and the city slows to a hum.
Location:
Mumbai, Maharashtra, India
Type:
Residential Property
Built Area:
2,200 sq. ft
Status:
Completed 2023
Client:
Private Wellness Collective
Design Intent:
Mindful Design, Nature Immersion, Earth-Centric Architecture
Architectural Studio: TARA Design Lab
- Principal Architect: Meera Jaisingh
- Interior Conceptualist: Ankit Nandan
- Ayurveda Consultant: Dr. Shikha Rao
- Acoustic Design: Quiet Earth Studio
- Craft Partners: Satoli Clay Artisans & Kumaon Weavers’ Guild
Global Design Excellence Award
– 2023
India Design Forum Honors
– 2024
The Art of the Threshold
Between rooms, a laser-cut brass screen unfolds an intricate lattice of organic forms, part architecture, part jewellery. It divides without closing, filters light without blocking it, and announces every transition through the home as a moment worth noticing. The pattern draws from botanical geometry, each cutout casting its own shadow as the light shifts through the day.
