Habitus

A Touch of the Past

- WORDS PAUL MCGILLICK | PHOTOGRAPH­Y PRITHVI M. SAMY

Chettinad in Tamil Nadu was once home to wealthy merchants who built homes to reflect that wealth. But the Great Depression devastated the merchant class and those homes fell into disrepair and, in the words of the architects, “the city today resembles a discoloure­d painting ”.

This villa, standing in a kind of raffish no-man’s land, has inherited that history. The clients wanted to modernise the house without sacrificin­g its links to the past. This involved rethinking the massing of the house, creating an open plan and a hierarchy of spaces linked by corridors and voids, the creation of indoor– outdoor spaces and a strategy to cope with a hot climate.

This starts with the skin of the house. The upper façade is wrapped in a terracotta jaali – an Urdu/hindi word literally meaning ‘net’, but used to denote a perforated screen and related to the Islamic mashrabiya with its decorative patterning. This screen, along with generous eaves, provides protection from direct sunlight but lets in the breeze and beautiful dappled light to the private spaces on the upper level.

Inside there are skylights and two light wells which draw in further natural light and help generate a satisfying play of light and shadow. This light filters down into the ground floor living spaces generating a reassuring sense of changing light during the course of the day.

Entry to the house is through a sliding metal-grilled gate and stone-walled garden which, with its cultivated flowers and water feature, provides a transition from the unpreposse­ssing semi-urban context. The small square pavers set into the grassy ground quietly reference the orthogonal patterning of the jaali above and signal the way the constituen­t elements of the house will work in unison to create its character. Inside the entry vestibule, stairs lead up to the private spaces while a handsome timber door leads into the living spaces. Here, there is a bold mix of elegant timber finishes and a more rusticated feel as with the exposed concrete ceiling. Marble plaster is used on the walls, while the floors are a mix of Jaisalmer and Kota marble with Athangudi tiles. The latter are traditiona­l handmade cement tiles, part of the Chettinad legacy dating back to the British era.

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