Nature-Integrated Residential Architectural Exteriors
I design facades that are not just skins, but living, breathing parts of the home. My approach blends raw concrete, warm wood, and lush greenery to create structures that feel rooted in the Bengaluru landscape.
From render to reality, this video shows the 'Echoes of Nirvana' project, where cascading green balconies become the primary feature of the facade.
The 'SWARA' home at dusk, where integrated lighting highlights the curved forms and textured materials of the facade.
The 'AIKYA House', nominated for Building of the Year, features a clean, modern facade with cantilevered balconies and a balanced composition of wood, glass, and white walls.
The 'Belaku House' facade, another Building of the Year nominee, uses layers of balconies, planters, and screens to create a dynamic and green urban home.
'The Far Site House', recognized for its use of earthy materials like brick and jaali screens, which merge the internal and external spaces.
A feature on the 'Belaku' home, highlighting its unique facade that incorporates greenery at every level.
The 'AIKYA' house, celebrated for its contemporary and minimalist design that creates a powerful statement.
About this collection
When designing a facade, I do not just look at the street view, I look at the tree line. Most people choose materials based on current trends, but I focus on how the structure ages under Bengaluru’s sun. We use clay bricks and Corten steel because they weather beautifully, allowing the home to settle into the neighborhood rather than stand out like an artificial block. My goal is to make sure your home breathes, with ventilation that naturally cools the space while keeping your privacy intact.
Architecture That Breathes
For me, a facade is a conversation between the home and the outdoors. In dense urban pockets like ours, it is easy to build a wall and shut the world out. I prefer the opposite. Through my 'Technoarchitecture' philosophy, I create depth in the elevation using layers—balconies, jaali screens, and double-height volumes. This prevents the building from becoming a heat trap.
The Role of Raw Materials
I am obsessed with materials that have a soul. Concrete, exposed brick, and teak wood are not just choices; they are a commitment to a specific texture. When you visit a site we have designed, you will notice the facade feels different at 8 AM versus 4 PM. That is the result of careful sun path analysis during the design phase. We calculate the shadow play so the building creates its own cooling effect.
My Design Process
Every project starts with the site, not a portfolio of past work. We look at the existing trees, the orientation of the plot, and the flow of the wind. Whether it is a luxury villa in a gated community or a compact home on a tight city plot, the strategy remains the same:
- Site-Specific Facades: We never duplicate a design. Each house responds to its unique orientation.
- Material Honesty: We let materials age naturally. The patina on the copper or the weathering of the concrete is part of the home's character.
- Greenery Integration: Every facade includes dedicated zones for plantation, effectively turning the building into a vertical garden.
If you are ready to move beyond the standard 'concrete box' architecture and want a home that feels like an extension of nature, let’s talk.
Techno Architecture
I’m Rajesh. At TechnoArchitecture, we don't just build houses; we create urban sanctuaries. My team and I focus on materials that age with grace, ensuring your home feels like it has always belonged to the land.
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