
"Located on the outskirts of Mayiladuthurai in Tamil Nadu, , Paati Veedu by Koodu Architecture is a compact rural developed under financial constraint and material limitation. Built on a 1,200-sqft site within a neighborhood of small houses and agricultural fields, the project is defined by , adaptation, and resource-conscious construction. The house was constructed using 10,000 accumulated over time by the client, forming the primary material basis for the design."
"The existing foundation was reinforced with a plinth beam to support new load-bearing brick walls. The plan is organized as a single-story layout comprising a veranda, living room, kitchen, bedroom, and attached toilet. Circulation follows a simple sequence: the entrance foyer, which also functions as a pooja space, leads into the living area, from which the kitchen and bedroom are accessed. This compact configuration ensures clarity of movement and efficient spatial use."
"Material selection by Koodu Architecture Studio draws directly from the agrarian context of the site. Mud-plastered walls provide a textured surface that visually aligns with the surrounding soil. Green oxide flooring references the tonal qualities of nearby paddy fields, incorporating subtle variations in texture. The oxide skirting includes imprints of paddy grains, while fragments of discarded marble from a neighboring construction site were cut into geometric floral patterns and inlaid into the floor surface."
Paati Veedu occupies a 1,200-sqft site on Mayiladuthurai's outskirts amid small houses and agricultural fields. The house was developed under tight financial and material constraints, with 10,000 accumulated over time by the client forming the primary material basis. The existing foundation was reinforced with a plinth beam to support new load-bearing brick walls. A single-story plan organizes a veranda, living room, kitchen, bedroom, and attached toilet with clear circulation from an entrance foyer/pooja into the living area and then to the kitchen and bedroom. Materials respond to the agrarian context with mud-plastered walls, green oxide flooring featuring paddy-imprint skirting, and inlaid discarded marble fragments. When bricks became scarce, a large semicircular steel arched window using leftover reinforcement stirrups was introduced to increase daylight and cross-ventilation.
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
Unable to calculate read time
Collection
[
|
...
]