Lanja House

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography

LANJA HOUSE

Articulated Design Initiative (ADI)

MANUFACTURERS
Mangalore, Mitsubishi, TATA

PRINCIPAL ARCHITECT
Aditya Basarkar

AREA
110 m²

YEAR
2021

LOCATION
Lanja, India

CATEGORY
Houses

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography
Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography

Text description provided by the architects.

Located in the rural farmlands on the outskirts of Ratnagiri, the brief for this project was to create an ancestral home that blends in with the tranquil surroundings of Lanja.

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography
Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography

The idea was to build a place that would revive childhood nostalgia. A crucial aspect of the project was that it had to be budget-friendly.

The house, with an overall built-up area of 1100 sq. ft, was constructed on a budget under INR 30 lakhs.

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography
Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography

Raised above the ground, the house provides a vantage point that frames the lush foliage outside.

Built with a composite load-bearing construction technique on a laterite stone foundation, it helped reduce damage to the red fertile soil.

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography
Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography

The house capitalizes on locally available indigenous materials and, more importantly, utilizes materials familiar to the area's inhabitants and best suited for the site’s extreme climate conditions.

Laterite stone, locally available within 10 km of the construction site, has been predominantly used for walls. RCC beam has been incorporated for the lintel, which supports the MS roof structure and the Mangalore tiles.

The house has an east-west orientation. The house's main entrance leads you to a spacious living area, with clearstory windows along the eastern side that provide abundant morning sunlight.

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography
Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography

Large window openings with high ceilings enable cross-ventilation and make the house appear spacious.

The contemporary implementation of traditional materials accentuates the simplicity of the house. The exposed laterite finish sets a very natural backdrop, and being sustainably conscious, not even a single tree on site was cut down or disturbed from its position.

This architectural expression is carried throughout the interior detailing as well. Combining locally sourced teak wood furniture, modern furnishing elements, and curated artwork brings this house together.

Lanja House
© Vaibhav Kapdi Photography


Lanja House
Plan - Site
Lanja House
Detail View


Lanja House
Section 01
Lanja House
Section 02
Lanja House
Elevation