Studio Hinge, a young Mumbai-based architecture and interior design firm, makes a mark with newly refurbished rooms at the historic Cricket Club of India
There’s more to membership in a private club than just prestige and exclusivity. And architect Pravir Sethi describes it best as he walks us through the colonnade—with pristine white, art deco columns—that encircles the grounds of Mumbai’s Cricket Club of India (CCI), where he admittedly spends more time than at his own Marine Drive home: “Working with CCI feels like you’re doing it not just for yourself, but for your extended family too.”
Sethi, principal architect and founder of interiors and architecture firm Studio Hinge, and interior designer Chintan Zalavadiya give free rein to nostalgia, and let it flow into the studio’s newly commissioned designs for the CCI’s chambers wing. In those refurbished spaces—comprising seven suites, and one two-bedroom apartment—it is easy to see a narrative that is not only a nod to the past, but also a detail-oriented solution to contemporize and upgrade. “There’s a very strong sense of community among the people in the club, which has been one of the things that makes this a bit of a tightrope walk; it’s very hard to keep 7,000-odd members happy all the time. And when you’re living across the road, there’s no escaping if things go wrong!” says the architect.
This story is from the May - June 2018 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.
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This story is from the May - June 2018 edition of AD Architectural Digest India.
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