The Grounds

Sixty percent, left to the land.

The brief to the landscape architects was one line: make it look like the villa arrived last. Two point four acres, one gate, and a garden that was mostly already here.

The 25-metre pool with the sculptor's curved steel arc at its head, pointed at the horizon

Twenty-five metres, pointed at the horizon.

The pool is heated for December and shaded for May. The water feature at its head — a single curved steel arc — was the sculptor's idea, and the architects had the sense not to argue. Loungers face west. Everything here faces west.

Film — coming soon
The same water, five hours later.

The planting

Nothing imported for effect.

  • FrangipaniPlumeria rubra

    drops its flowers on the drive, on purpose

  • Coconut palmCocos nucifera

    the estate's original residents

  • BougainvilleaBougainvillea glabra

    riots quietly along the south wall

  • PlumbagoPlumbago auriculata

    a blue you stop noticing, then miss

  • CasuarinaCasuarina equisetifolia

    the windbreak between you and the beach

  • ChampaMagnolia champaca

    you will smell it before you see it

The Shore

Eighty metres, mostly yours.

A stone path leaves the lawn, ducks through the casuarinas, and puts you on Kihim sand in ninety seconds. The beach is grey-gold, long, and lightly used. This stretch of it, entirely so. There is a gate. It has never once been locked from the inside.

The last ninety seconds of the commute.

The service court side of the villa in soft light, the staff garden beyond

A house this size runs on quiet hands.

Staff quarters stand apart, past the service court, with their own entrance and their own garden. A keeper, a gardener, and a cook came with the construction and know the house better than its drawings do. They stay, if you wish. Most wish.

  • Keeper — resident, twenty years in Kihim
  • Grounds — full-time, plus monsoon crew
  • Kitchen — on request, trained in Mumbai