Tapa Villa Studio Tanama Indonesia
Project: Tapa Villa
Architect: Studio Tanama
Location: Indonesia, Bali
Year: 2025
Area: 260 m2
Photography: Thomas Irsyad
Tropical house as slow sanctuaryTapa Villa is conceived as a retreat where time slows: a low, earthy, modern-tropical house resting in the middle of rice fields and river sounds, not a villa chasing Instagram drama. Studio Tanama takes three ideas and weaves them together:
Modern Tropical (for climate and openness)
Balinese groundedness (whitewashed, textural, courtyard-like edges)
Tulum / wabi-sabi softness (raw, weathered, lived-in).
The result is a home that feels both global and deeply local — Bali at heart, but ready for design travelers.
Site & orientationThe villa sits in Beraban, Tabanan — away from the touristy parts, where rice terraces, humidity and cross-breezes define how you build. So the house is porous on purpose: big openings toward the view, protected edges where sun and rain are harsher, and in-between terraces that let you live half inside, half outside. The elongated plan lets breezes run through, while deep overhangs and timber-slat shading stop glare and overheating.
Plan: indoor–outdoor stitched togetherAt 260 m², the villa isn’t oversized — it’s tuned. Public spaces (living, dining, kitchen) are on the front, fully opening to the pool and landscape. Bedrooms pull back slightly for privacy, often with their own garden slice. Circulation is not a corridor but a sequence of shaded walks, edges, and framed views — very resort-like, but scaled to a house.
Material languageStudio Tanama keeps the palette short and tactile: lime/plaster walls, timber, rattan, stone, microcement, handmade tiles. Surfaces are allowed to age — wabi-sabi — so the villa will look better in five years than on opening day. Furniture follows the same idea: chunky, low, textural, linen and wood instead of gloss and metal.
Climate-responsive, not gadget-drivenInstead of hiding behind AC, the villa uses:
cross-ventilation via aligned openings,
deep eaves for shade and rain,
light roofs and breathable façades,
landscape as a microclimate buffer (ponds, planting, perimeter green).
So comfort comes from architecture + landscape, not just machines.

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad

Photography © Thomas Irsyad



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