TOB Villa

A plot of 224 square meters in Jeddah’s Al-Shati district does not invite sprawling domesticity. It demands absolute spatial discipline, where every architectural decision must negotiate between the desire for expansion and the reality of extreme physical constraint. True architectural value in residential design is often forged in this exact type of boundary restriction.

The site is positioned near the Red Sea coastline, a location that offers distinct atmospheric advantages but sits within a highly compressed urban grain. The primary challenge was not aesthetic; it was the orchestration of spatial privacy and climatic comfort within a tightly bound perimeter. The architecture had to resist the regional tendency toward spatial bloat, operating instead as a highly calibrated machine for living.

The governing idea treats the building’s envelope as a deep, active filter rather than a thin, passive boundary. Drawing structural and environmental logic from the traditional Hijazi Rawshan, the architecture abstracts this historical element into a comprehensive facade system. It is not an application of heritage decoration, but a direct translation of historical climatic performance into contemporary geometry.

The primary elevation is defined by a dynamic, curved screen system engineered to intercept half of the direct solar radiation hitting the volume. This calibration protects the interior from Jeddah’s aggressive climate while permitting controlled natural light to penetrate the domestic core. The deep shadows cast by the facade become a defining material of the interior experience. Because the spatial margins were so narrow, the project was executed under a turnkey contract, allowing the architectural team to dictate both the design and its exact physical implementation. This single-point responsibility ensured that the environmental and spatial strategies survived construction without dilution.

INJ Architects modern villa exterior with white vertical fins, large glass windows, and people in traditional attire walking on a stone path.
The vertical screen system provides climatic protection and privacy for the residence © INJ Architects
INJ Architects TOB Villa logo featuring a minimalist graphic of vertical architectural fins.
Official logo representing the architectural identity of the TOB Villa project © INJ Architects
Location          Al-Shati District, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Type              Private Residence
Plot Area         224 m²
Status            Completed
Year              2019
Principal         Ibrahim Nawaf Joharji
Scope             Turnkey (Design & Supervision)

TOB Villa functions as a critique of the assumption that architectural quality requires vast square footage. By heavily articulating the facade and treating environmental response as a geometric necessity rather than an applied technology, the structure achieves a sense of density and permanence uncommon in constrained residential plots. This rigorous translation of historical climatic devices into modern performance metrics aligns with the office’s core approach to sustainability. The process of maintaining design fidelity through complete execution supervision is detailed in how-we-work. For inquiries regarding highly calibrated residential projects within constrained urban fabrics, the initiation protocol is outlined in bespoke-architecture.

INJ Architects modern living room interior with a wooden TV panel, vertical slats, a large patterned area rug, and contemporary furniture.
Interior spaces focus on warmth and material contrast through wood and textile textures © INJ Architects
INJ Architects minimalist bedroom featuring a bed with neutral linens, spherical pendant lights, and a glass-enclosed walk-in closet.
The master bedroom features a transparent connection to the dressing area for spatial depth © INJ Architects
INJ Architects interior view of a dining area with a modern chandelier, green velvet chairs, and a sleek elevator entrance.
Luxurious materials like marble and crystal define the formal dining area © INJ Architects
INJ Architects close-up of a wooden media wall with vertical gray slats and minimalist cabinetry.
Custom-designed cabinetry integrates storage and technology within the living space © INJ Architects
INJ Architects minimalist entrance walkway with gray pavers, a concrete boundary wall, and a large pivot wooden door.
The entrance sequence uses raw materials like concrete and wood to establish privacy © INJ Architects
INJ Architects spacious living area with a black marble feature wall, a modern gold chandelier, and a potted indoor tree.
Black marble is used as a dramatic backdrop for the secondary seating area © INJ Architects