Layers don’t just sit here; they breathe, shift, and whisper through light. The Screen, set in the sun-drenched fabric of Solapur, Maharashtra, isn’t trying to scream luxury. It doesn’t need to. It moves quieter than that, more composed, more intentional, like a pause button carved into the chaos of the city. Spread across 4,125 sq. ft. of land and rising into a 7,500 sq. ft. built form, this bungalow, full of natural ventilation, is less about size and more about sequencing. It doesn’t reveal itself all at once. It unfolds. Slowly. Deliberately. Like a story that respects your patience.
Natural Ventilation And Light Fill Up This Solapur Home | The Architects Group
At first glance, the façade holds your gaze the defining wooden screen. Not just an aesthetic flex, but a functional veil. It filters the sharp Solapur sun, diffusing it into softer gradients that spill into the interiors. It controls privacy without shutting the world out completely. It’s that perfect middle ground where you’re hidden, but never disconnected.
This screen becomes the identity. A second skin. A breathing layer for natural ventilation that shifts throughout the day. Morning light slips through gently, creating thin, poetic shadows. By noon, it stands stronger, shielding interiors from heat. By evening, it dissolves into silhouettes, turning the home into a glowing lantern from within. And then comes the contrast.
Behind this porous wooden layer, the solidity of stone anchors the structure. Textured, grounded, almost timeless—the stone surfaces hold weight against the lightness of the screen. This interplay between heavy and light, opaque and transparent, becomes the core language of the bungalow. It’s not just materials, it’s mood.
The architecture doesn’t chase trends. It leans into restraint. Clean lines, balanced proportions, and a geometry that feels calm rather than complicated. There’s a quiet confidence in how the spaces are composed with natural ventilation, nothing excessive, nothing screaming for attention.
Step closer, and the transitions begin to reveal themselves. The entrance doesn’t throw everything at you. It invites. There’s a sense of layering not just on the façade, but in the planning itself. Spaces are designed to flow into each other, yet maintain their own identity. Public and private zones are carefully separated, but never disconnected.
The living areas breathe openness and lead to natural ventilation. Large glass panels frame the outside, letting in greens, sky, and shifting daylight. But thanks to the screen, this openness never compromises comfort. It’s filtered. Controlled.
The interiors echo the same philosophy as the exterior—muted tones, tactile materials, and a balance of warmth and minimalism. Nothing feels loud, yet everything feels rich. Wood adds warmth, stone adds depth, and glass dissolves boundaries. And then there’s the vertical play.
Double-height volumes amplify the sense of space, allowing light to travel deeper into the home. Voids and cutouts create visual connections between levels—so even when you’re alone in a corner, you’re still part of the whole. This is not a house of rooms. It’s a house of relationships. Between light and shadow suggests ambiguity, not clarity or darkness but a mix—uncertainty, nuance, or transition.
Every window is placed with intention. Not just for views, but for ventilation, for daylight, for rhythm. The design responds to climate without making a spectacle of sustainability. It just works quietly, efficiently. And that’s the thing about The Screen, it doesn’t try too hard. It understands that true luxury isn’t about excess. It’s about control. About knowing when to reveal and when to hold back.
Even the outdoor spaces follow this narrative. Terraces, balconies, and semi-open zones act as buffers—transitional pockets where you can sit between interior comfort and exterior freedom. Spaces where time slows down a little. In a city like Solapur, where the sun is intense and the pace is constant, this bungalow offers something rare—a sense of stillness. But don’t mistake stillness for simplicity.
There’s a strong architectural discipline at play here. Every joint, every alignment, every proportion feels resolved. The detailing is precise but never overdone. It’s the kind of design that doesn’t age fast, because it’s rooted in fundamentals rather than fads. It’s a space where mornings feel softer, afternoons feel calmer, and evenings stretch longer. Where shadows become part of the design language. Where light is not just illumination—but an experience.
And then there’s the emotional layer. Because beyond all the materials and planning, what this home really builds is a feeling. A feeling of retreat. Of stepping away without actually leaving. Of being in the city, but not consumed by it.
The Screen doesn’t just stand as a bungalow.It performs. Then it filters—quietly, constantly. Until it decides what life looks like.
From the outside, it appears composed—almost introverted. But inside, it opens up—layer by layer—into a world that feels expansive, warm, and deeply personal.
That duality is its strength. A home that protects, yet connects. A structure that stands bold, yet feels soft. An architecture that doesn’t demand attention, but earns it—quietly, over time. Because the real flex here isn’t what you see at first glance, it’s what you keep discovering, even after you’ve lived in it.
Fact File
Designed by: The Architects Group
Project Type: Residential Architecture & Interior -Bungalow Design
Project Name: The Screen
Location: MaharashtraYear Built: 2025
Duration of the project: 1 Year
Project Size: 7500 Sq.ft
Principal Architects: Ar. Mauliv Patel & Ar. Snehali Sanghvi
Team Design Credits: Prinal Shah, Anupama Panchal & Chandani Patel
Photograph Courtesy: studio_16m
Structure Engineers: Avenue Enterprise
Acoustics Consultants: Autocan Solutions
Products / Materials / Vendors: Wallcovering / Cladding – Concreexpo / Lighting – White teak / Doors and Partitions – Customized Wooden / Sanitaryware – Hansgrohe / Windows – luxurito living / Furniture – Wardrobe by The Closet Company, Loose Furniture by Wobb.india / Flooring – Italian Marble and Nexion Tiles / Kitchen – kuche 7 / Paint – Asian Paint and ICA PU / Hardware – Hettich
Firm’s Instagram Link: The Architects Group
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