The yard is paved in varieties of flamed granite, tandur stone, and cobblestones from Kudky’s Stone Arch; Photography by Syam Sreesylam

A backwater reverie in Kerala

BCA Architecture crafts a home in Kerala’s Kadalundi, where legacy and design breathe together

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Zip codes, however precise, feel hollow in places like Kozhikode’s Kadalundi backwaters. Can a sequence of numbers, in all sincerity, delineate where the earth stitches into the river’s edges, where the coconut palms stand sentinel over a hamlet, or where the herons and sandpipers fly into the sunset’s molten hues? Embodying BCA Architecture’s deep reverence for Kerala’s architectural legacy is a 3,870 sq ft four-bedroom residence called Paradis that speaks of the inheritance of knowledge that the land once bestowed upon its people.

If retreat-like seclusion amidst an abundant landscape sewn with cultural memory were to take the form of a dwelling, it would come to rest within the walls of this home set along the still shores of the backwaters.

"The strategic location sets up the waters as an eternal, panoramic view. There is an unbroken dialogue between the built form and its peaceful setting"

A view of the alfresco dining area as seen from the sit-out with steel furniture from Crafters; Photography by Syam Sreesylam

A FAMILIAR ECHO

The principal architecture beyond mortar and blueprint is conceived not just as a shelter but as a vessel of memory. The home breathes through inward-looking courtyards where light is a sentient visitor, cool stone floors that hold the memory of every barefoot arrival, and wood crafted by hands that have passed on their dexterity through generations. The architect reflects, “The building is a deliberate nod to its surroundings, employing an artistic vocabulary of locally procured materials woven into the space’s very grain.” The Kadalundi Riverfront remains a constant muse, and every room seems to turn towards its majestic expanse, as if drawn by instinct, suggesting that the home’s heart rests outside its walls.  

The first acquaintance with the home reads like a cinematically authored sequence. A landscaped corridor ushers one through the sweep of green, bookmarked by intentional pauses in the form of perching spots, sprawling orchards and an amphitheatre, all seemingly emerging from the land. Where the path yields, yarns of greenery cradle the home that rises oasis-like, its walls framed by sepia wood columns and the deep overhangs of terracotta Mangalore roof tiles.

Crafted in teak, the dining area sits within the open blueprint as a beacon of warmth. The trio of pendants are from Aura Light; Photography by Syam Sreesylam
At Paradis, the thresholds between the bedrooms and the landscape feel porous; Photography by Syam Sreesylam

AN ARRIVAL LIKE THIS

Arrival within the foyer composes a view of the ebony koi pond, situating one within the fluid, interconnected whole. Open corridors stem from this centre, creating pathways to the living room, dining area, and kitchen that fringe the central courtyard. The two bedrooms on this floor extend outwards, blurring into verandahs that form a porous edge between the structure and the scenery. 

Upstairs, a corridor peers into the courtyard, the home’s emotional and spatial core. The passage’s skin feels permeable, with light and air flowing across its threshold, fusing vernacular and modern design sensibilities.

This perspective celebrates layered depths of the residence: the corridors in the foreground, the stairwell framed beyond; Photography by Syam Sreesylam
Bedrooms on the ground level spill into the peripheral verandahs, blurring the divide between the inside and outside; Photography by Syam Sreesylam

A LIVING INHERITANCE

Rigid boundaries give way as one moves through the house, especially in shared areas, where rooms melt into one another, allowing light, wood accents, textiles and objects to lend the home a lived-in appeal that isn’t mere showcase. The bedrooms employ colour with a deft hand, its presence marked by fabric, artwork and curios that feel chosen rather than placed. 

“There is a synergy between the architecture and its environment, heightening a living experience that balances luxury with ecological depth. The harmony between traditional tenets and contemporary realisation allows the home to attain a singular richness,” Babu concludes. To be at Paradis is to willingly attune to the subtleties of everyday life, and recognise them, at last, as luxury — the gentle lapping of water as music, and the sight of colourful boats bobbing along the riverfront as art itself. 

Read more: i2a Architects Studio shapes a home around its existing landscape, letting trees guide its form

The vignette frames the amphitheatre and the dwelling set against the verdant scenery; Photography by Syam Sreesylam
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