A contemporary home wrapped in classical architecture — where fluted-glass partitions, hand-painted murals and quietly luxurious materials compose rooms that feel collected, layered and calm.
House 595 pairs a neo-classical envelope — corniced ceilings, panelled walls and marble floors — with a contemporary, collected interior. Reeded-glass and slim steel partitions divide the living and dining spaces without closing them, letting light and sightlines travel the length of the home.
Indian art anchors every room. Chinoiserie landscape panels, pichwai paintings and miniature works are framed in black against soft, warm neutrals; against them sit sculptural modern pieces — rust bouclé tub chairs, agate and gemstone tables, cane-backed seats — holding a dialogue between heritage and the present.
The palette stays restrained — ivory, warm wood and brass, lifted by deep blue and terracotta accents — so the layered art, natural textures and considered lighting lead. The result is a residence that reads as gathered over time rather than decorated all at once.








