Villa Jayanagar, Bangalore June 2024

Architectural Villa at Rohan Jharoka, Jayanagar

Project Details

Project Type Independent Villa
Location Rohan Jharoka, Jayanagar
Size 3,150 sq ft
Duration 73 Days
Completed June 2024
Package Premium

The Transformation

Design Notes

The owner of this 3,150 sq ft Rohan Jharoka villa is a structural engineer, and the brief reflected that entirely: celebrate the building itself rather than conceal it. The most distinctive decision was to selectively expose the concrete ceiling beams — sandblasted, sealed against moisture, and fitted with recessed LED strips between each beam that wash light upward across the raw surface. The effect is dramatic without being industrial. In the kitchen, concrete finds a softer form in the quartz countertop with a concrete-effect finish, balanced by warm walnut acrylic shutters on both upper and lower cabinets and Hettich soft-close hardware throughout. The staircase carries the material language further with raw exposed concrete treads and a minimal steel tube railing — no wood, no cladding, nothing to soften what the structure already says clearly. A single cast-concrete shelf runs the full length of the living room wall as a continuous display ledge — no individual brackets, no breaks, just one long uninterrupted horizontal line. Wardrobes across all bedrooms on both floors are in graphite laminate to hold the grey palette. The terrace uses exposed-aggregate flooring with built-in concrete bench seating that continues the outdoor architectural language. Cove ceiling applied selectively in the bedrooms where warmth was needed. Delivered in 73 days.

Scope of Work

  • Modular kitchen — concrete-effect quartz countertop, warm walnut acrylic upper and lower shutters, Hettich soft-close hardware, recessed under-cabinet LED strip
  • Soft-close wardrobes — graphite laminate with slim bar handles across all bedrooms, both floors of the villa
  • TV unit — wall-mounted console in concrete-tone laminate with integrated media shelf, living room ground floor
  • Cast-concrete display ledge — single full-wall shelf running the entire living room length, no breaks or brackets
  • Exposed concrete beam ceiling treatment — sandblasted and sealed structural beams, recessed interstitial LED strips between beams, ground floor living and dining
  • Cove false ceiling with dimmable warm LED — applied selectively in all first-floor bedrooms for contrast warmth
  • Complete interior painting — warm grey-white throughout ground floor, warm ivory on first-floor bedroom walls
  • Flooring — large-format light cement-tone vitrified tile ground floor, graphite-tone laminate first-floor bedrooms
  • Staircase — raw exposed concrete treads, no cladding, minimal steel tube railing with flush-welded horizontals
  • Terrace — exposed-aggregate floor finish, built-in cast-concrete bench seating with weatherproof sealant
  • Branded Hettich hardware across all modular kitchen and wardrobe units on both villa floors
  • 3D visualisation and design approval — full two-floor architectural coordination including beam and staircase detailing

Structure Is the Design — When the Building Itself Speaks

Not every home needs to be dressed up. Some of the most compelling interiors begin by asking what the building already offers — its beams, its staircase, its raw material language — and then choosing finishes that let those elements lead rather than compete. If your home has bones worth celebrating, our team knows how to make them the story.

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