Project posted by Yatin Fulari

HOUSE IN SALVADOR DO MUNDO

Location
EXTERIOR VIEW
EXTERIOR VIEW
EXTERIOR VIEW
EXTERIOR VIEW
VIEW OF THE WALL ENCLOSING THE COURTYARD
VIEW OF THE WALL ENCLOSING THE COURTYARD
EXTERIOR VIEW
EXTERIOR VIEW
VIEW OF THE COURTYARD AS SEEN FROM LIVING AND DINING ROOM
VIEW OF THE COURTYARD AS SEEN FROM LIVING AND DINING ROOM
WOODEN STAIRCASE
WOODEN STAIRCASE
LIVING ROOM VIEW
LIVING ROOM VIEW
MARBLE WINDOW
MARBLE WINDOW

Credits

Posted by
Architect
FIELD ATELIER
Interior Design
FIELD ATELIER
Photographer
SHANTANU STARICK

From Yatin Fulari

“House in Salvador Do Mundo”

The site is located in a village named Salvador Do Mundo in North Goa, India.
Goa experiences tropical climate with monsoons for over six months and the form of architecture is a response towards this climatic aspect. The vicinity where the house is built has sporadically distributed houses and thus feels isolated. The rest of the surrounding area is covered in dense vegetation. Especially the front is densely covered with large trees.

The site has a steep slope of 1:3. The main house, pool and courtyard are all placed at the highest contour and a flight of stairs gives an access to the road below.
Our first atavistic feeling for the site was to design a house that was internal without being ‘closed’ in order to respond to the setting. For the house to be internal it needed a hortus conclusus of a domestic scale to which all spaces open. The light, ventilation & views are borrowed from this court. The wall enclosing this courtyard gives a sense of security & protection from an uncertain exterior landscape.

This court houses a delicate garden almost an antithesis to the outside landscape.

The spaces are planned in a linear way however marginal offsets in walls gives each space a unique light and provides distinct view of the landscape in the courtyard as seen from the living, dining or bedroom and is a matter of contemplative subject.

A small pool is located along the entry path to the house.
This pool is lined with black tiles that does not allow one to gauge the depth of the pool. As one descends in the pool the walls on two sides further enhances the subterranean feeling. Making one’s experience in the pool more reflective and meditative.

The framed views of the quiet nature outside and the simplicity of the finishes allows the mind and the eye to rest and dwell. The house has a certain amount of inherent darkness allowing the unseen spaces to dwell in the mind.
The design is an attempt towards creating a peaceful space that fulfills humble aspirations of its inhabitants.