
- Project: Villa Sipat & Sauh
- Architect: Arkana Architects
- Location: Indonesia, Bali
- Year: 2025
- Area: 250 m2
- Photography: Thomas Irsyad
Crafting a Villa that Feels Like Home — Even in Hospitality
In the vibrant heart of Bali, Arkana Architects presents a project that challenges the conventional rental-villa paradigm. With Villa Sipat & Sauh, the brief was clear yet demanding: create a pool-villa designed for rent that nonetheless feels like a private home.
From this seed grew a two-level residence of around 250 m², rooted in compact urban conditions yet resonant with expansive domesticity. What emerges is not a flashy showpiece but a quietly refined retreat: textured, intimate, thoughtful.
Spatial Narrative & Material Intimacy
Arkana’s design pivots around key spatial ideas: light, texture, and interstitial space. The sequence begins at a modest foyer—an open-to-sky glass-block threshold where sunlight and occasional rain-fall engage directly with the visitor. This unconventional welcome immediately signals a departure from the typical rental-villa formality.
The living and dining spaces flow from the kitchen rather than the other way around, another subtle subversion of expectation. A translucent partition of timber and fluted glass softly delineates zones, allowing visual continuity and enabling light and air to pass through. The heart of the home is an interior courtyard housing the pool—serving simultaneously as mediator between public front zones and private upper-level sleeping areas.
Materially, the villa leans into texture and nuance rather than spectacle. Glass-block façades offer opacity with an inner glow, creating a façade that feels protective yet alive. The juxtaposition of solid and translucent, inside and outside, day and night, lends the design a subtle but persistent richness.
Designing for a Rental but Built for Living
Often, rental villas in Bali emphasise spectacle and scale; Villa Sipat & Sauh does something different. This is architecture conceived for everyday — albeit elevated — living. Arkana Architects injects domestic rhythms and tactility: the kitchen island where guests gather, the stair by the pool where movement becomes part of the experience, the filtered daylight that sketches patterns across wood and stone.
Moreover, within its modest site footprint, the design maximises spatial generosity through vertical layering and visual transparency. What might read as compact becomes expansive precisely because the architecture prioritises connection — to air, sky, water — over volume alone.
Significance & Architectural Impact
Villa Sipat & Sauh stands out for several reasons:
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Re-imagined hospitality architecture: By prioritising “home” over “villa”, the project elevates guest experience into domestic belonging.
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Refined use of modest scale: At approximately 250 m², the design shows how spatial richness need not derive from massive footprints.
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Material and sensory sophistication: From glass-block façades to timber partitions, the detailing conveys a commitment to tactility and archetype, not just aesthetics.
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Contextual resonance: Though contemporary, the villa is firmly grounded in Bali’s architectural culture of indoor-outdoor living, natural light, and comfort in climate.
Summary
Villa Sipat & Sauh by Arkana Architects is a masterclass in how architecture for rent can feel deeply personal. It sees the challenge of limited area not as constraint but as opportunity: to craft spatial nuance, reinforce material integrity, and allow living-architecture to emerge in subtler gestures. In a world of tourism-driven volume, this project reminds us of the enduring power of calm, considered design.