Ten, fifteen years down the line, nobody will want to live in a city,” says Veeram Shah of Design ni Dukaan. It’s difficult to offer a rebuttal under Navsari’s exceptionally blue skies, especially when the Dandi beach — a direct antithesis to Mumbai’s plastic-strewn seaside — is only a few kilometres from his childhood home in this quaint city in Gujarat. And as luck would have it, his residence is a stone’s throw away from the home I write about: a 12,000 sq ft family home crafted by him. “Would you rather cycle or walk?” he asks us. We promptly opt for the latter. Two quick turns later, we spot the home’s modernist facade from a distance. Our eyes first fixate upon a narrow grey structure looming over the home. “That’s the staircase that connects all floors,” explains Veeram.
The emanating effect is that of a spaceship parked in Navsari’s sleepy streets: the asymmetric edifice standing, sloping and slanting around this architectural statement. I share this observation with Veeram, and he smiles. “Corbusier would often separate services and make them a sculpture,” he explains. Unlike Corbusier’s penchant for unfinished concrete, the exterior here resembles a canvas painted over with thick terracotta brushstrokes. Meticulously overlaid by painters who “scaled the building like Spidermen with trowels in hand,” reminisces Senior Architect Dolly Thakkar, this rugged finish softens the edges of the home’s intimidating scale, making it appear more grounded and lived-in.
“The interiors are a prime example of how you can build a self-sustaining community of architects, designers, artists and craftsmen”
- Veeram Shah








