Mansion in Hyderabad: This 18,000-square-foot abode is a masterpiece of exquisite craftsmanship

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Mansion in Hyderabad: This 18,000-square-foot abode is a masterpiece of exquisite craftsmanship

Nothing about Bengaluru-based interior designer Vinita Chaitanya is ordinary. Every room she touches becomes a canvas, every design choice a statement. To meet her is to step into a world where maximalism reigns and beauty—whether beheld through her eye or yours—is always dialled up to the highest setting. Hyderabad-based real estate developer Rohit Reddy knew these things about Chaitanya when he called her one morning a few years ago. “He had definitely heard stories,” laughs the interior designer, who is famous for erring on the side of flamboyance—whether her clients like it or not. Reddy was as interested in Chaitanya’s sui generis style as she was in his 18,000-square-foot mansion in Hyderabad’s Jubilee Hills—newly built by architecture firm Morphogenesis. “The space and scale were massive, so I was immediately intrigued,” reflects Chaitanya. The only question was: for a structure already set in stone, what value could she really add?

Palazzo Palooza

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Morphogenesis enveloped the facade with beautifully embellished screens. A car from the owner’s prized collection flanks the gate.

Gokull Rao Kadam

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The foyer is reminiscent of an imperial palace, with its opulent marble inlay floors, gilded accents, and a door embellished with magnificent grillework.

Gokull Rao Kadam

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Sunlight and shadow choreograph a mesmerising dance in the foyer, anchored by a bespoke golden console, exuding both edginess and glamour.

Gokull Rao Kadam

A lot, it turned out. With an artist’s instinct and a storyteller’s flair, she saw beyond the glass and concrete, layering textures, patterns, and a riot of colours to transform the space into something unmistakably hers. “I realised very quickly that the architecture was just the backdrop—the soul of the space would come from the details,” says the designer, who wove the visual scheme from the ground up—literally. “I inherited a plain beige floor, but as I was putting together mood boards, playing with colours, and sourcing materials, I came across this stunning Italian marble with gold and pink streaks. It instantly gave me grand European palazzo vibes. So I thought, why not go all in and do an Art Deco interior?” It wasn’t a style familiar to Hyderabad or Chaitanya. “It took a bit of research, but my mood board turned out spectacular,” continues the design maven, who conjured magic with marble around doors, as architraves, and in beautiful floor inlays around the staircase.

Drama in the Details

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A dazzling brass console by Vikram Goyal, embedded with semiprecious stones, acts as the pièce de résistance of the landing, echoed in scale and signature by ornamental brass mirrors of his own design. Kaleidoscopic wallpaper serves as a resplendent backdrop to the staircase volume, enhancing its grandeur alongside gleaming brass balusters and marble treads.

Gokull Rao Kadam

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A majestic brass mirror by Vikram Goyal emblazons the grand wall by the staircase.

Gokull Rao Kadam

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The 20-foot Murano glass chandelier, which Chaitanya had custom-made, is as much sculpture as it is a luminous centerpiece, casting a radiant glow over the staircase volume.

Gokull Rao Kadam

Chaitanya likes to observe how her clients live and then amplify that experience manifold. She recalls visiting Reddy and his mother at their old apartment before taking on the design reins. “Everything was nice and contemporary, but it didn’t resonate with me and I wondered how [our partnership] would ever work out. Luckily, they gave me carte blanche and let me take the creative direction I wanted.” Giving the home a soul became her starting point for the Reddys’ new mansion in Hyderabad. Every piece she introduced had to feel as though it carried a sense of history, embodying the geometry, symmetry, and understated elegance of the 1920s. For every existing vintage-inspired element, she added one of her own: the internal courtyard was beautifully landscaped, sky-high walls were enlivened with classic wallpaper, and passageways were overarched with old-world pendants, weaving a seamless narrative of past and present.

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