SABHĀ Specialty Coffee
ARCHITECTS
Naav Studio
LEAD ARCHITECTS
Niharika Didige, Varsha Reddy
DESIGN TEAM
Revathi Pottimuthyala, Sri Vaishnavi
LEAD TEAM
Niharika Didige, Varsha Reddy
LOCATION
Hyderabad, India
CATEGORY
Coffee Shop Interiors
CONTROLLED CONTRASTS: A CAFÉ IN FILM NAGAR BALANCES RAW GEOMETRY WITH CHROMATIC PRECISION
In a city saturated with overworked design and thematic pastiche, this 3,500-square-foot café in Film Nagar, Hyderabad, asserts itself through a quieter, more cerebral language—one built around the idea of controlled contrasts.
Every move in the space plays on the tension between raw and refined, muted and saturated, heavy and light, resulting in an architecture that feels both deliberate and spontaneous.
The palette begins in restraint: concrete flooring anchors the interior in a raw material honesty, broken only by a stainless steel inlay that quietly guides the eye along the open plan.
This thin, reflective line becomes a tool of subtle orientation, cutting through the otherwise matte surface like a trace of movement.
Overhead, a coffered ceiling—formed by a rhythmic grid of recesses—introduces a tectonic order that tempers the informality of the space below.
Its geometries frame light rather than emitting it, casting a soft, even glow that lends the space a hushed spatial discipline.
Upon entry, a striking blue counter emerges as the central mass—its sculptural volume arresting, almost monolithic.
It is here that the design's colour language first comes into focus: a vivid red menu board sits directly behind the counter, not as an afterthought but as a deliberate counterpoint.
Together, the blue and red form a kind of spatial diptych—bold yet balanced, primary yet far from simplistic.
This pairing sets the tone for the café's chromatic logic: colour is not decoration, but structure.
Opposite the counter, a raised platform composed of glass bricks offers a contrasting gesture—light, translucent, and pixelated.
The grid of the bricks echoes the ceiling above, forming a subtle dialogue between horizontal and vertical, mass and lightness.
Behind it, a shaded wall texture moves gradually from dark to light, as though washed by time or weather—an atmospheric gesture that softens the geometry without undermining it.
The rest of the café unfolds as a measured field of colour interventions.
Seating elements appear in distinct, highly saturated tones—deep blue, crimson, citron—each isolated within the open space, like characters in a restrained mise-en-scène.
These aren't attempts at cohesion, but rather precise insertions into a neutral field, where colour is used to frame encounters and modulate mood.