
A hospitality-led clubhouse for a skyline community — choreographed around lifestyle, light, and the warmth of arrival.
Selected professional work showcased for portfolio presentation purposes only.
The brief was simple, the ambition was not: design a clubhouse that would feel less like an amenity, more like a private resort residents return home to. Every adjacency, sightline and material was tuned to a single question — what does an unhurried day in this building feel like?
A morning swim under a starlit ceiling. Yoga in a stone-clad studio before a glazed cardio floor. A long lunch in the double-height living lounge, light pouring through floor-to-ceiling glass. A game of billiards as evening softens into bronze.
Read the building as a single editorial spread — living, stair, wellness, pool, lounge and gym, composed in a quiet, cinematic grid.






Programme stacked vertically to keep social, wellness and quiet zones acoustically and visually separate — yet seamlessly connected by a central vertical core.
Glass-walled lounge with park-side views and book-matched marble
Tiled lap pool under a fibre-optic starlit ceiling
Glass-clad cardio and strength floor with city panoramas
Stone-clad meditation studio with sunset mural
Billiards, card tables and curated art salon
Quiet seating clusters in walnut, bronze and warm grey
A processional gallery linking each amenity floor
Bronze inlays, fluted stone and layered 2700K lighting
Interiors borrow their grammar from boutique hospitality — layered lighting, textured stone, ribboned timber and curated pauses between spaces.
A double-height lounge wrapped in floor-to-ceiling glass — book-matched marble, brushed bronze trims and a quiet view onto water and lawn frame the threshold between city and sanctuary.
A sculpted marble stair rises against a wall of black stone, its bronze handrail catching warm cove light. The vertical core becomes a piece of architecture, not a route.
Yoga studio, meditation room and a glazed gym corridor share a single floor — stone, timber slats and a soft sunset mural slow the pace before movement begins.
Mosaic tile and a fibre-optic starlit ceiling turn the lap pool into a quiet, cinematic room — engineered for early-morning swims and late-evening calm.
A long lounge of billiards, card seating and curated canvases — designed for unhurried evenings, lit in pools of warm 2700K light.
Glass on three sides, an orange accent wall and a clean ceiling rhythm of linear LEDs — the fitness floor borrows energy from the skyline beyond.
"The best clubhouses don't ask to be noticed — they ask to be stayed in."