To enter this house is to step outside. The architecture reverses the usual order of domestic space: nature is not a view to be framed, but a presence to inhabit.
At the heart of the project lies an interior garden — not ornamental, but structural. It defines how air circulates, how light filters, and how privacy unfolds. This garden organizes the plan and gives rhythm to daily life; it is both threshold and destination.
The house reveals itself through a sequence of porous limits — from open to enclosed, shared to intimate. Concrete, teak, and modular brick create a language of measured exposure, where the landscape seeps in through every surface.
Here, to enter outside means to live between walls that breathe.
Nature becomes architecture: it organizes, breathes, protects, and softens.