SDM Architects create Sea Yah - a high-end Floating Restaurant in Mumbai with interiors showcasing a carefully selected palette of materials drawn from India’s rich maritime history

SDM Architects create Sea Yah

The boat has four levels. The main level houses two 75-seat restaurant/banqueting spaces that are separated by a sliding wall. The upper deck has an open-air bar, a dance lounge, and a VIP room designed to feel like a living space in a luxury yacht. The topmost level has an open-to-sky deck with panoramic views all around. The lowest level houses engine rooms, the galley, toilets, and crew living spaces.

SDM Architects create Sea Yah

The rich palette of materials includes Indian teakwood and brass. On the main level, the design challenge was to make a low-height and very long space feel fresh and exciting. To blur the boundaries between walls and ceiling, a teak wood tree-like element was developed and placed with mathematical regularity. This forms the space and gives it presence and character. Overall, the design was kept low-key by intention so that the views of the Mumbai skyline over the water would take centre place in the experience. Special air-conditioning units were imported from Japan to ensure that the system remained invisible and did not impinge on the space.
Samir Dmonte
This is, in a sense, an adaptive re-use project; we took a no-frills river cruise boat in Istanbul, shipped it to India, and turned it into a high-end floating restaurant

Samir Dmonte

SDM Architects create Sea Yah

The design needed to cater to the business plan: the main level could either be used as one large restaurant, or divided into two banqueting halls, or used half as a restaurant and half as an event space. To this end, an acoustic sliding wall clad in teakwood with brass inlay was used, and two fully independent bars introduced. The sliding wall bisects the bars, allowing them to combine into one large bar when used as a single space.

SDM Architects create Sea Yah

An open-to-sky central bar anchors the upper deck. This is clad in hand-cut and individually attached half-inch thick Indian marble geometric “scales” in a chevron-like pattern, inspired by fish scales. The bar is topped by a brass sculpture based on a blue whale skeleton, which anchors the entire space. Custom designed and fabricated brass barstools augment the space. A series of formal and raised informal seats surrounds the bar. Open-air live cooking counters and buffets for banquets are integrated into the design. A new staircase inspired by a spine-and-rib structural skeleton was added to this level.

SDM Architects create Sea Yah