A large family villa on a 2,186 m² plot. We kept redrawing the plan until every room lived well — then delivered the full set of drawings a builder can price and build.
The brief asked for space for everything: five bedrooms, a men's majlis and a women's majlis, family dining, staff rooms, a pool, a garden, and parking for six cars. Before drawing anything, we pulled the official city rules for the real plot — how big, how tall, how close to the street — so the design would never hit a wall at the permit office.
Then came the honest part. The first plans looked beautiful on paper — clean lines, neat drawings. But when we tested how the family would actually move through the house, rooms felt like corridors and doors fought each other. So we redrew it. Eight times. The final plan is L-shaped: the house wraps around its own garden, every bedroom has a fair shape, and you can walk from the kitchen to the dining room without crossing anyone's privacy.
That patience became a rule at 10: a plan must be proven to live well before we make it beautiful. Every project since gets the same test.
Tell us where it is and what you dream of. We'll check the rules and the numbers before you spend anything on drawings.



