Homes
The seafront apartment in Mumbai by Rooshad Shroff stands as its pièce de résistance
SEP 11, 2024 | By Vaishnavi Nayel Talawadekar
For architect Rooshad Shroff, there are few things greater than a blank canvas. So was the case a few years ago, when he took on the design reins for a new project in Mumbai’s Worli — a 3,500 sq ft seafront apartment, created by combining three neighbouring sea-facing flats. Except, unlike his other projects, this one posed a conundrum or three. “Originally built as a hotel, the building had a very strange layout, terribly low ceilings and ceiling beams that zigzagged across the interior,” shares Rooshad, the former EDIDA winner, and founder and principal of his namesake Mumbai-based multidisciplinary firm, whose team also included architect Shonit Kotian.
Downsizing from seven bedrooms to two, produced another predicament for the architect, who additionally conceived the blueprint to include formal and informal living rooms, a dining room, a study, a gym and a den. The incongruent ceiling beams weren’t just a cosmetic curiosity, they were also a tad too low for their rather tall owner, a gentleman for whom the home was emblematic of a new beginning.
Refinishing the unsightly ceiling beams in a mushroom hue was Rooshad’s first sleight of hand. “It was an architectural oddity that we really leaned into,” avers the architect, who casts attention upwards with lighting details and wave-like edges that hold a mirror to the ocean beyond. The bid not only helped camouflage the overarching ducts and wiring, but also flipped the script by turning the formerly awkward appendages into the home’s tour de force.
As someone considered an éminence grise in the Indian art firmament (he is closely associated with Maskara Gallery), the homeowner had a caveat — the interior should be designed around his art. For Rooshad, that meant muting the material palette and predesignating pieces.
And so he did. By mirroring the warm-hued wood of the ceiling beams on the walls and maintaining bluish-grey marble flooring in the living and dining areas, he created a counterpoint for the shell, cured in daisy, to echo the sun-blanched coastline.
“From the beginning, we had to be mindful of making space for large works,” Rooshad observes. His words ring true in the objects d’art on display, unsheathed from the prized vaults of Maskara Gallery. Chief among them is a 16-foot-long T. Venkanna work in the dining area, a realist opus by Parag Sonarghare in the primary bedroom and a pair of larger-than-life, gilded leaf sculptures by Prashant Pandey, resplendently displayed in the living room.
Just as important, if not more, was forging a connection with the outdoors. Given that the building was intended as a hotel, the interior was designed like a glass box devoid of balconies and terraces — hardly ideal for a home with a scintillating sea view on three sides. “Because we were lucky enough to have the luxury of space, the client was happy to give up some of the interior square footage in favour of a terrace,” notes Rooshad. So was born the idea of a balcony off the living room: an al fresco oasis that fulfils a happy bouquet of roles. Some evenings, it’s used for entertaining; on others, for quiet reflection. It has something for each moment, no matter the hour or occasion. For the homeowner, it is a home of new beginnings, indeed.
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