LATIBULE is a holiday home in AfraNcho, Ghana, designed for a family of four seeking a peaceful return—an interior world that settles the body after months away. The project was shaped by a brief with precise requirements and uncompromising specifications. Its complexity was not visual; it was methodological. It demanded discipline, fidelity, and care in translation—so that every decision remained accountable to intent.
In collaboration with the lead architect, my contribution focused on 3D modelling, architectural detailing, and visualization: clarifying geometry, resolving edges, and expressing the quiet intelligence of the design through images that communicate how the house lives—how it shades, how it opens, how it holds privacy without isolation.
What distinguishes LATIBULE is its confidence in restraint. The architecture is deliberately simple, not as a stylistic preference, but as an ethic: to let the landscape speak, and to allow climate to shape form. In Ghana, summer light is both gift and pressure. Here, it is treated as a building material—caught by controlled openings, stretched beneath overhangs, and made legible through crisp shadow lines. The surrounding greenery becomes a second envelope, softening heat and extending the sense of refuge beyond the walls.
LATIBULE is ultimately a home of measured calm—precise in construction logic, generous in atmosphere, and rooted in the belief that sustainability and health begin with comfort achieved without excess.

Role: 3D Modelling • Detailing • Visualization (collaboration with lead architect)

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