Most people think of a courtyard as the heart of the home. But in this 3,700 sq ft Bangalore villa, the heart beats from the corner.
In the hands of Design Datum, the three-storey residence was conceived for a young couple, their daughter, and their parents, a multigenerational household anchored in routine, rhythm, and a quiet reverence for the everyday. The wife bakes, the mother performs daily pujas, and the family gathers often. They wanted openness without flash and softness without pastiche.
In this Bangalore Villa, Every Corner Narrates a Story | Design Datum
But their primary requisite? “A courtyard, but not at the cost of feeling cramped”, reveals principal architect Abhay Sreekant. Who radically pushed the courtyard to the edge, liberating the plan with generous setbacks and sculpting a home around how the family lives.
From the outset, the villa reads as calm and cohesive. A tactile play of exposed brick, solid grey fins for a monumental rhythm, and a towering terracotta jaali wall that lends verticality and softness in equal measure.
This double-height screen, made from modular terracotta blocks, anchors the façade and shields the courtyard with a porous veil, blurring the line between enclosure and openness. “It had to feel like the courtyard was part of the interiors, not something left outside,” says Abhay.
Thick elephant grass carpets the floor for barefoot comfort, and granite planters double as seating, creating a cosy pocket for reading, or just letting the day pass slowly. “His mother often retreats here with a book or her online classes,” shares Sreekant. “We carved out outdoor niches in the landscape to give the family quiet corners where they could just relax.”
Inside, the mood mirrors the exterior: elemental, unpretentious, and intuitively zoned. The entryway is deliberately compact. A spatial prelude that opens into a double-height living room doused in natural light.
A tall window to the east frames a stately honge mara (Indian birch), casting shifting shadows across the vitrified concrete-finish flooring and exposed brick walls. “They wanted the house to grow slowly on the visitor. The small foyer gives way to an unfolding sense of space, like in temple or palace architecture,” the architect adds.
In adherence to the family’s penchant for “an earthy yet contemporary aesthetic”, the material palette remains restrained and honest, without veering into vernacular tropes, leather-finish granite for the staircase, Kota stone in the outdoor areas, and aluminium-framed windows from Tostem, enlivened by refreshing highlights of sage green. The home’s accessories feel just as intentional: a handwoven carpet from Raw Pastel, planters from INDAM, and lighting that is minimal yet evocative.
The kitchen and dining are designed as one monolithic gesture, a black granite island that flows seamlessly into the dining surface, unified in form and material.
“We kept the design tight, almost invisible, so attention goes to the herbs in the courtyard,” says Abhay, pointing to the sniper window that precisely frames the foliage beyond.
Upstairs, the interplay of solid and void continues. The husband’s study is strategically overlooking the living room, acoustically separated yet visually connected.
Monochromes of ivory engulf the unadorned master suite, with sliding French doors that lead to a private balcony. A fluted wardrobe in sage, with notch detailing, adds subtle texture.
The daughter’s room brings in playful nuance, a bay window aligned to her scale gives her a personal connection to the courtyard below, often becoming her medium to communicate with family downstairs. Bathrooms echo the home’s muted elegance: the master bath in white subway tiles with an amorphous mirror, and the daughter’s bath finished in cheerful terrazzo and salmon pink fluting, softened further by clerestory light.
Throughout, the spatial choreography holds rituals, and gives space to the slow. “The clients knew what they didn’t want: no excessive decoration, no forced nostalgia,” Abhay reflects. “That clarity helped us design with empathy, rather than with embellishment.” Maximalist in sensitivity, minimalist in manner, and meditative in mood, this home doesn’t just frame a courtyard. It reimagines one, as a philosophy of living.
Fact File
Designed by: Design Datum
Project Type: Residential Architecture Design
Project Name: The Courtyard House
Location: Bangalore
Year Built: 2025
Duration of the project: 2 Years
Project Size: 3700 Sq.ft
Principal Architect: Abhay Sreekant
Photograph Courtesy: Vedant Sharma
Text Courtesy: Mehar Deep Kaur
Products / Materials / Vendors: Planters – INDAM / Rugs – Raw Pastel / Aluminium- framed windows -Tostem
Firm’s Instagram Link: Design Datum
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