The design of hotel Justa Nuo by Architecture Discipline represents a seamless urban connection, carrying the vibrance of city life into its interior spaces.

Nuo, a 27-key urban hospitality project located in Greater Kailash, New Delhi, is the first in a series of small urban hotels by jüSTa Hotels & Resorts that fulfil the specific needs of young, peripatetic professionals in the post-Covid world.

urban hospitality project located in Greater Kailash, New Delhi

Fact File
Location: Greater Kailash-1, New Delhi
Site Area: 4360 sq.ft
Built-Up Area: 10,000 sq.ft
Client: jüSTa Hotels & Resorts
Design Team: Akshat Bhatt, Chandni Saxena, Deeksha Gulati
Completion: January 2022
Photographer: Jeetin Sharma

The design treats the hotel not as an isolated building but as a comprehensive urban intervention. The boundary wall is eliminated, opening the building to the streetscape with a large open-to-sky entrance court. A glazed facade forms an unhindered transition between the outside and the inside, offering a view of a neon green spiral staircase that acts as a beacon, inviting visitors to take notice. These elements draw passers-by in letting them engage visually with the activities within.

urban hospitality project located in Greater Kailash, New Delhi

The entry court directs guests to an external staircase on the southern edge of the site that leads to the ground floor. Guests move through a reception lounge and a café from where they either enter a large atrium that forms the circulation core of the building or are taken down to the public sphere via the neon green spiral staircase. The large 15-metre-high, skylit atrium is punctuated by a sinuous black staircase in steel that takes guests to the first, second and third floors, which house individual rooms, and further to the terrace level that accommodates a gym and an open deck. The lower ground floor houses an art gallery, and the basement accommodates a co-working space equipped with amenities, including conference rooms and a pantry.

The interiors appeal with their neutral tones of black and grey. Floor finishes are in high-performance, locally sourced floor tech carpets with a black base and grey linear patterns. Distinctive, serpentine LED strips run along the ceilings of the corridors and down the stairwell.

urban hospitality project located in Greater Kailash, New Delhi
Unlike other urban hospitality projects that are most often housed in superficially adapted existing buildings in the city centre, Nuo is conceived, designed, and built from scratch, accommodating the specific requirements of an urban hotel in the most efficient way possible.

Principal Architect Akshat Bhatt

The monochromatic aesthetic is carried through to the individual rooms but is paired with warm tones of wood introduced in the floorboards and furniture. The rooms feature custom-designed furniture with integrated luggage storage and work desks. Locally sourced wood fibreboards, which can be recycled, are extensively used to attenuate excessive noise from the bustling city outside. A projecting bay window forms a distinctive feature in every room, bringing in daylight, and acting as a lively burst of space.

The private rooms open out onto the large, naturally-lit volume of the atrium creating a dramatic shift in scale. Air conditioning systems maintain air quality and temperature while an integrated heat retrieval unit minimises energy consumption (heat from air extracted is reused to treat conditioned air being supplied). Ample daylighting uplifts the interior spaces and also results in a reduced load on artificial lighting during the day.

urban hospitality project located in Greater Kailash, New Delhi

The facades of the building are developed in response to the sun path, minimising heat ingress from the south and the west and using glazed projecting bays to capitalise on the light from the northeast. The bays and balconies form striking, rhythmic elements that bring relief to the cuboidal mass of the building, showcasing a play of light, shadow and form and setting it apart from its context. The street-facing façade presents an interactive interface between the hotel and the city. The lines of the floor slabs are highlighted with strips of coloured LED lights that are coded and operated digitally to communicate indices such as occupancy to onlookers.