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Aura Architecture Studio | Sukoon

Sukoon emerges as a quiet pause within the dense, fast-moving fabric of Noida. On a site defined by its northeast orientation, mandatory front garden, and long-standing trees, the architecture chose restraint over imposition. Rather than reshaping the land, the design listened to it, allowing the house to be revealed by its context. True to its name, meaning peace, Sukoon is conceived as an atmosphere rather than a statement, where calm is embedded into everyday living.
3 January 2026 by
Aura Architecture Studio | Sukoon
Better Blueprints, Editor

• Project Name: Sukoon
• Project Location: Noida, India
• Project Type: Interior Design 
• Designed by: Aura Architecture Studio
• Principal Designer: Tawish Tayal
• Instagram: auraarchitecturestudio
• Website: www.auraarchitecturestudio.com
• Photographer: Purnesh Dev Nikhanj

Organized across three levels, the home follows a clear and intuitive spatial hierarchy. The ground floor opens with a double-height foyer that immediately introduces light and vertical openness. This space flows seamlessly into the living area, which extends toward the northeast garden, softening the line between inside and outside. The kitchen and dining area sit along a central spine, forming the core of daily activity while maintaining visual connections to the front lawn through carefully positioned openings.

Circulation within the house is effortless and visually engaging. A centrally placed staircase, paired with a natural light well, anchors movement across floors while maintaining continuity between levels. At the rear, the master bedroom remains secluded yet connected, framing green views toward the northwest without direct exposure. This balance of privacy and openness defines the spatial experience of the ground floor.

The first floor houses two bedrooms and a shared lounge, connected by a corridor that overlooks the spaces below, reinforcing vertical dialogue. A standout feature here is the open-to-sky bath court, offering a private, naturally lit retreat. The journey continues upward to the second floor, where a multipurpose hall opens onto a terrace shaded by a lightweight metal pergola, designed to host creeping greens and evolve into a breathable rooftop garden.

Light, ventilation, and materiality play a defining role throughout the home. Four open-to-sky voids placed at the foyer, dining area, staircase, and first-floor bathroom act as spatial lungs, bringing daylight, passive cooling, and visual continuity across floors. Locally sourced Aravalli stone grounds the exterior and dining spaces, while Kota stone flooring lends thermal comfort inside. Even construction waste finds new purpose, reused in flooring and water features. Together, these choices reinforce Sukoon as a home that absorbs its surroundings with quiet grace offering stillness in a city that rarely slows down

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Aura Architecture Studio | Sukoon
Better Blueprints, Editor 3 January 2026
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