
Set within a quiet residential neighbourhood, Terrace Theatre emerges as a gentle architectural intervention that transforms the rooftop of an existing home into a dedicated space for Atman Theatre School, a practice led by theatre practitioner Sritej Bhatt. The project grows directly from the rhythms of domestic life, extending the house upward to accommodate a parallel world of rehearsal, movement, and performance.



For years, classes and workshops unfolded in the open areas around the residence, shaped by shifting weather and improvised arrangements. The terrace, already part of everyday life, held the potential to become something more. Rather than expanding outward, the design claims the vertical dimension of the house, introducing a lightweight steel structure that inhabits the roof while allowing the domestic environment below to remain undisturbed. The resulting intervention reads as an inhabited roofline; a quiet pavilion suspended within foliage and sky.



At its core, the architecture is organised around a single adaptable volume. Theatre requires both expansiveness and intimacy, space for bodies to move freely, voices to resonate, and collective energy to gather. The interior, therefore, remains intentionally unobstructed, capable of accommodating acting sessions, movement workshops, yoga practices, rehearsals, and small performances without prescribing fixed arrangements. This openness allows the space to evolve continuously with its users, reinforcing the idea of architecture as a framework that supports practice rather than defining it.
Sectionally, the volume is shaped by a pitched roof that introduces height, direction, and lightness. A continuous clerestory along the eastern edge admits soft morning illumination that washes the interior surfaces and visually lifts the roof plane, creating a calm, diffused atmosphere suited to contemplative practices. The south-facing roof responds to climatic exposure while limiting openings toward neighbouring homes, helping contain sound within the space and acknowledging the sensitivities of its residential context.



Movement through the building reflects the layered relationship between home and studio. Access is provided through an external staircase, allowing the theatre to function independently while preserving the privacy of the residence below. The landing at the top becomes more than a point of arrival. It acts as a threshold space that can extend activity outward, occasionally functioning as an informal stage and blurring boundaries between circulation and performance. A secondary internal connection from Sritej’s personal room reinforces the seamless overlap between everyday life and creative practice, allowing the studio to operate as both workspace and retreat.
Material restraint and structural lightness define the project’s expression. The steel frame enables large spans with minimal depth, allowing the interior to remain open while the addition sits delicately above the existing house. Rather than asserting itself as a dominant object, the architecture relies on proportion, light, and occupation to establish its presence. Over time, the space gathers meaning through use, through rehearsals, shared learning, moments of pause, and collective expression. The building becomes less an object and more an enabler, quietly supporting the evolving language of theatre within the intimacy of a domestic setting.
Terrace Theatre ultimately inhabits a threshold between worlds. It is neither fully domestic nor institutional, neither stage nor home, but an extension that allows practice to exist just above the everyday, close enough to remain grounded, yet distinct enough to nurture imagination.
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Project Details
Name: Terrace Theatre
Location: Ahmedabad, Gujarat
Status: Completed 2026
Area: 800 sq.ft
Typology: Recreational, Cultural Architecture
Designed by: Doro
Designers: Lamya Rangwala, Nirjar Patel, Naomy Parikh
Structural Engineering: Ami Engineers
Fabrication: Prakash Bhai
Contractor: Pintoo Bhai
Carpentry: Mahendra Bhai
Client: Sritej Bhatt, Atman Theatre School
Photographs: Stavan Bhagora





