Editor’s Note – There’s something deeply personal about spaces designed for oneself, and this studio captures that beautifully. Studio Dashline’s workspace feels like an honest extension of their practice—quiet, thoughtful, and layered in its simplicity. What stands out is how the space shifts effortlessly between collaboration and pause, without ever feeling divided. It’s less about defined zones and more about a continuous experience, where light, material, and movement come together to reflect both the process and the people within. – Yamini Patil
Nestled in a quiet lane of Frazer Town, Bangalore, Studio Dashline’s 800 sq. ft. headquarters stands as an introspective translation of the studio’s own design ideology: honest, contextual, and quietly expressive. Designed by and for the team itself, the space mirrors the duality that defines the practice: grounded yet experimental, minimal yet layered, pragmatic yet poetic. Every surface, volume, and texture of this workspace design becomes a medium of reflection of the people who inhabit it and the process that unfolds within.
A Minimal Workspace Design Reflects In This Architects Office | Studio Dashline
The office unfolds across three intuitive zones: the material library and discussion area, the workstation and founder zone, and a skylit lounge and reading corner. Together, they form a sequence of experiences that shift seamlessly between collaboration and solitude, light and shadow, rawness and refinement. Boundaries are defined not by walls but by planes, levels, and light cuts, ensuring that spatial flow remains visual, emotional, and continuous.
The material library lies at the heart of the workspace design, serving as a tactile archive of design decisions. Here, long floating shelves display a carefully curated assembly of stone, wood, and tile samples, turning the wall into a living, ever-changing exhibit of ongoing projects.
Below them, monolithic counters in flamed granite hold drawers for storage, design tools, and coffee paraphernalia, a deliberate gesture that merges function and ritual. The central table, crafted from a single slab of local granite, anchors the room, serving alternately as a workspace, dining surface, and ideation zone.
The architectural language of the studio celebrates structure rather than conceals it. Instead of false ceilings, existing beams are mirrored and hollowed to conceal lighting, creating a linear glow that defines volumes.
Light is treated as material, bouncing off lime-plastered walls and diffusing across terrazzo floors. Black tiles and textured surfaces invite touch, grounding design in physical experience.
A custom black metal pivot door with granite handles marks a restrained yet monumental entrance. Beyond it, the founders’ workspace sits under a skylight with filtered daylight and tree views indoors.
The space, originally a utility area, was reimagined as a sanctuary of calm and clarity. Sunlight and shadows choreograph the day around a sculptural table with metal legs.
Throughout the office, custom furniture reinforces the studio’s design DNA: sculptural yet functional, balanced between geometric precision and handcrafted detail. Terracotta wall sculptures by Rutva Jhoshi punctuate the corridors, echoing the studio’s love for material expression and Indian craft narratives. Designers seamlessly build bookshelves into the structure, curating design journals, objects, and keepsakes that reveal fragments of inspiration.
This headquarters is not a showcase; it is a living organism that adapts with each project, each conversation, and each drawing pinned to the wall. It is as much a workshop as it is a retreat, where design is both process and meditation.
In essence, the workspace design embodies what Studio Dashline stands for: a dialogue between restraint and warmth, structure and softness, permanence and evolution. It is a place that doesn’t just house design; it becomes design in its purest, most human form.
Fact File
Designed by: Studio Dashline
Project Type: Office Interior Design
Project Name: Studio Dashline HQ
Location: Bangalore, Karnataka, India
Year Built: March 2025
Built Up Area: 800 Sq.ft
Founder & Lead Architect: Dheeraj Bajaj
Co-Founder & Lead Designer: Pranav Dakoria & Shriya Sohi
Photograph Credits: Yash R Jain
Firm’s Website Link: Studio Dashline
Firm’s Instagram Link: Studio Dashline
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