size
Units
SQ.M
Location:
Category:
year of completion
67505.86 sq ft / 6271.5
144
site area 242414 sq ft / 22521 se.m
coimbatore
High Rise Residential
March 2027
Renaatus
Varam is a contemporary apartment project conceived as a restrained response to its urban context. The facade is designed as a minimal yet expressive composition that balances privacy, proportion, and street presence.
A layered palette of stone, jaali elements, and wood accents defines the architectural language—where stone lends permanence, jaali elements modulate light and privacy, and wood introduces warmth at a human scale. Together, these elements form a calm, timeless façade rooted in material clarity and architectural restraint.
A layered palette of stone, jaali elements, and wood accents defines the architectural language—where stone lends permanence, jaali elements modulate light and privacy, and wood introduces warmth at a human scale. Together, these elements form a calm, timeless façade rooted in material clarity and architectural restraint.
SIZE:
67505.86 sq ft / 6271.5
Units
144
sq.m
Site area 242414 sq ft / 22521 se.m
Location:
Category:
High Rise Residential
DATE:
March 2027
Renaatus
The Brief of the Project
Varam is a contemporary apartment project conceived as a restrained response to its urban context. The facade is designed as a minimal yet expressive composition that balances privacy, proportion, and street presence.
A layered palette of stone, jaali elements, and wood accents defines the architectural language—where stone lends permanence, jaali elements modulate light and privacy, and wood introduces warmth at a human scale. Together, these elements form a calm, timeless façade rooted in material clarity and architectural restraint.
A layered palette of stone, jaali elements, and wood accents defines the architectural language—where stone lends permanence, jaali elements modulate light and privacy, and wood introduces warmth at a human scale. Together, these elements form a calm, timeless façade rooted in material clarity and architectural restraint.
