Elements like a green lamp from Fig Living and artworks from Etsy India introduce calibrated moments of color in the otherwise muted envelope; Photography by Kuber Shah

It’s greenr in Breach Candy

This cafe leads you to a garden patio, living room-like corners and a health bar!

BY

Mumbai is a city that never picks sides — where old and new live shoulder to shoulder, never fully letting go of the past, never stopping to embrace the next. At Greenr Cafes new outpost in Breach Candy, this duality gets a clean edit. Think modern simplicity meeting the city’s Art Deco cues.

Conceptualised by Studio Hohma’s Devika Bhalla in collaboration with STaND architecture + design’s Nikita D’Silva and Siddhant Tikkoo, the 2,000 sq ft space draws from the past while staying rooted in the brand’s sustainable DNA. The trio worked in sync from day one, treating existing conditions as creative prompts.

“The goal was to make it feel like you’re walking through a home, not a cafe with zones" — Devika Bhalla 

The in-situ platform of the health bar is cast in concrete. Wooden vases from Hohmgrain (Studio Hohma’s in-house brand); Photography by Kuber Shah

Form, flow and familiarity

On their first visit to the site, they were met with a labyrinth of partition walls. “We decided to treat them as spatial dividers,” shares Devika. “The goal was to make it feel like you’re walking through a home, not a cafe with zones.” And it does. You start at a lush garden patio, breeze through a foyer-style retail nook, and land at a health bar, anchored by a community table as its dining room equivalent.

Then comes the main cafe space — set up like a living room — and finally, a cosy basement stacked with popular volumes for bibliophiles. Every turn reveals a new mood, but the thread remains: thoughtful, tactile, and just the right amount of laid-back.

This ethos is layered with subtle references to Art Deco, though not in its usual ornamental guise. Instead, it surfaces as a contemporary undercurrent, distilled into precise geometries and curved frames. The palette stays grounded: moody greys balanced with dusty greens that feel equal parts city-slick and nature-soaked. Shouldered archways nudge visitors from one space to another, no hard divisions needed. Familiar textures such as stucco walls, terrazzo flooring, and breathable fabrics are softened by ambient lighting. The result is a place where one ends up lingering, long after their plate is cleared.

Black rattan pendant lamps from Luuma speckle the primary seating zone. The repurposed brown glass bottles are sourced by Studio Hohma from a local scrap vendor; Photography by Kuber Shah
The stepped platform celebrates material contrast while embracing a grounded, communal vibe. The table lamp is from Fig Living, and the collage artwork is customised by Studio Hohma; Photography by Kuber Shah

Linger longer

Just as Greenr’s menu champions pure and unprocessed flavours, the design strips off the excess. It’s clear from the first step inside: a souk-inspired foyer showcases homegrown brands on sleek teak shelves with metal framing. Mosaic underfoot stitches this space to the health bar beyond. For the ones just passing through, a grab-and-go window makes room for the in-between moments.

Furniture was largely custom-crafted to fit the space: scalloped frame of concrete benches, Dholpur stone table tops, teakwood chairs, all of which nod to Japandi restraint. The wood, sourced from a Jabalpur sawmill, was treated with natural oils to highlight its natural grain without the interference of synthetic finishes. Deeper in, the mood mellows, like slipping into a family den. A stepped seating beckons casual interactions, doubling as an impromptu screening zone. Stucco panels conceal the electrical board, keeping the lines clean. Downstairs, a sculpted red seat with integrated drawers enlivens the basement’s modest scale.

In its interplay of urban sophistication and handcrafted details, the new Greenr cafe blurs the line between hospitality and home. More than a sum of design decisions, it’s a reflection of collaborative clarity — where Devika’s material fluency and STaND Design’s architectural precision align to craft a culinary escape that feels entirely cohesive.

Read More: Gurugram’s Sorbo by Studiio Dangg reveals an old-worldly Moroccan setting into its architectural interiors

Nostalgia leans back in teak and linen, as sunlight sketches shadows on the floor. Each piece of furniture is custom-crafted by Studio Hohma; Photography by Kuber Shah
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