1. Exposing the “Infrastructure Uglies”
Nothing kills the premium look of a beautiful elevation faster than the visual noise of AC compressors, exposed plumbing pipes, and randomly placed water tanks. The Fix: Push utility placements to the rear of the property in Phase 1. If plot constraints don’t allow that, use a “second skin” approach. Hide them using aluminum louvers or CNC-cut ACP sheets. This gives you necessary ventilation while keeping the design clean.
2. The High-Gloss “Bathroom Trap”
The material you choose for your exterior skin defines the prestige of your home. Pasting high-gloss tiles on your front elevation is a catastrophic error. Mentally, we associate glossy tiles with wet areas like bathrooms. Applying them to a facade makes a multi-million rupee home look like an oversized utility space, and the gloss highlights every minor uneven patch on your wall. The Fix: Stick to matte, textured finishes, or natural stone to soften the building’s look and interact beautifully with natural light.
3. Violating the 60-30-10 Color Rule
A common mistake is using four or more colors on the elevation, which creates visual clutter and turns your house into a “rangoli.” The Fix: Follow the 60-30-10 Rule:
- 60% Neutral Base: Anchors the structure (e.g., White, Beige, Light Grey).
- 30% Complementary Tone: Adds depth (e.g., Wood tones, darker grey).
- 10% Accent Color: Strictly reserved for highlighting one specific architectural feature.
4. Building a “Solar Oven”
If you ignore the orientation of your South and West elevations, you are engineering a literal solar oven. These walls take the maximum punishment from UV rays and afternoon heat. The Fix: South and West windows must be covered with chajjas or sun shades. Otherwise, you will be forced to run a 2-ton AC just to survive the heat load. Also, stick to lighter paint pigments on these walls to prevent the paint from degrading and peeling within 2 to 3 years.
5. The 7:00 PM Disappearing Act
Many homeowners spend a fortune on their elevation, only to have the house completely vanish in the dark after 7:00 PM. Lighting is a functional requirement that dictates your home’s nighttime character. The Fix: Create a planned lighting layout using strategic “Up-Down” wall fixtures to define the home’s silhouette. Always insist on IP65-rated waterproof fixtures to prevent short circuits during monsoons.
6. The “Slope Secret” for Chajjas
Flat horizontal projections are a recipe for structural decay. Without an intentional outward slope, rainwater pools on the surface and migrates into the building’s core. The Fix: Always ensure a slight outward gradient on all sun shades and chajjas. This prevents water stagnation, internal wall seepage, and those ugly white chalky patches (efflorescence).
7. The Gate Fallacy
Your gate is the first thing a visitor touches. It is ironic to spend a massive budget on a custom elevation only to install a cheap, “off-the-shelf” standard gate. The Fix: Your main gate must be a bespoke extension of your home’s architectural language. Validate your investment from the very first glance.