Simple monolithic design of Kochi house mutes visual noise, accentuates convenience

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A young couple with a small kid and a busy lifestyle needed a home to be built on a 5-cent corner plot, within a housing colony of similar small plots. in Kochi. Anticipating a crowded neighbourhood as other plots filled up, ensuring optimum privacy without compromising on daylight and ventilation was important for them. Budget constraints made them ponder that an ornate home would become a maintenance hassle.

So, the design had to be simple to negate the visual noise of the modern world. Almost monolithic in form, with a few openings for windows, the expression of this house to the neighbourhood reveals very little. The frugal approach caters to middle-class families who yearn to build an affordable home in the city. Moving away from the tendency to provide large windows, the design explores a more controlled interaction between indoors and outdoors. Contrary to the expectation set by the monolithic form, the rooms within are brightly lit and well-ventilated.

Upon entering the compound, a brief walk along a shaded veranda takes one to the entrance foyer. The living room is set at the rear end of the house to encourage this transitional journey from the street to the interior - an experiential luxury within the small plot. A skylit stairwell-only partly visible upon entering the foyer - reveals daylight spilling down into the living, while consciously hiding its source.
Quoting Louis Kahn, ‘Each space must be defined by its structure and the character of its natural light.’

The plain white walls present a sculptural canvas for the play of shadows, rendering the space meditative. As evening falls, the atmosphere in the stairwell turns dramatic, with the shadows and colours shifting along with the changing sky. The family lounge is designed as a conversation pit with in-built sofas, while the dining features a ledge seat extending the room's length.

The built-in seaters in the compact home allow a bigger crowd to be accommodated, should the need arise. In response to the tropical climate, larger windows are deep-set to channel in breezes while shielding the harsh sun. Strategically positioned ribbon windows maintain privacy without sacrificing visibility from the indoors.

Grounded in a strong sense of geometry, architecture strives to manifest as functional art responding to its context. The solid-void massing discreetly blocks views into the private spaces from outside, striking a balance between enclosure and exposure. Nestled within in-set volumes, the family can enjoy their privacy without losing connection to the outdoors.

The controlled departure from strict purity in form allows the building to accommodate its anomalies – the occasional shade slab, or the rainwater gutter that juts out from an otherwise subtractive mass. A reduced material palette and the elimination of colour in the interiors allow better expression of daylight.
The house stands as a modest sanctuary for a small family - imposing in its monolithic presence, yet serene in its essence.

Project Facts
Owner: Prasanth Kumar
Architect: Divya Rajesh
Studio: The Design Pursuit
Team: Architects Chitra V, and Antony Joseph
Interior design: Divya Rajesh
Structural engineer: TUBA Consultancy
General contractor: Paven Raj, STRIDE
Site Engineer: Ajith Babu