team
A home where nature keeps the build honest; and people have the freedom to play

Drift house, Little Much Farm

Little Much Farm

Pomgaon, Mulshi, Maharashtra

2018

Built Up : 8,000 Sq.Ft.

Drift house, Little Much Farm

AT A GLANCE

  • 3 single-slope mild steel diagrid roofs built in 3 weeks by a ship building team

PROJECT OVERVIEW

Conceptualized as a labyrinth the form has an underpinning geometry that emerges from the center. The brick skin swells to envelope this frame. 

Blocks turn into series of potential happenings; layered, connected and scalar. Through a composition of angles, the hosue draws inspiration from the wind-blown grass on site.

6 acres, 4 bedroom villa, 2 bedroom cottage with pool and a farm

 

The villa of ‘The Little Much Farm’ straddles a remote hill side location overlooking the Sahyadri hills of Mulshi and its lake. This is home for a family and their friends to re-engage in the environs of the hills that surround Bombay. The spaces are planned as a series of potential happenings; layered, connected, scalar, with an element of discovery.

 

This is a site with multiple view points and extreme weather conditions. The design strategy of the roof provides shelter from both monsoon rain and the harsh sun; liberating the forms of the enclosures. The enclosures of the house are a composition of angles informed by the various draws of the site and the eccentricities of its owners. Three single slope mild steel roofs slant in distinct directions creating specific conditions; a windy but dry corner, a crack of sky above the entry, a sheltered monsoon walkway.

 

The mild steel dia-grid roof structures float above the various interior and exterior spaces. A ship building fabrication team built the steel roof structure on site. Exposed concrete columns built with custom detail form work, hold up the drifting roof planes at strategic nodes of the dia-grid. The locations of the columns allow for large roof overhangs to shelter the deck and considered interior spaces. Oriented on specific axes, spaces are enclosed with large scale glazing and masonry walls.

FIG (O1)

Metal Diagrid

A metal diagrid becomes structure and canopy, supporting three hovering roofs angled precisely to respond to site conditions. The steel roof was fabricated on-site by a shipbuilding team, ensuring precise and durable construction.

FIG (O2)

Exposed Concrete

Exposed Concrete is used in strategically placed colums, anchors the building and enables generous roof overhangs.Curving into cylindrical spaces and through words cast into the underside of the slab, it introduces craftsmanship with moments of joy

FIG (O3)

Slate Stone

Slate stone cladding on the walls frames the entry and its layered textures grounds the architecture in geological context.

FIG (O4)

Cement tiles

Handmade cement tiles are cast in situ on the cement floor animating surfaces through pattern and pigment.

FIG (O5)

IPS

IPS flooring forms a continuous, utilitarian ground plane, privileging durability, economy, and seamless spatial flow.

FIG (O5)

Terrazo

Handmade bespoke sculptural wash basins are made on site using cast in situ Terrazzo finish, stitching fragments into a unified surface.

Looking to shape an experience, not just a space?