A guide to beat the heat: How smart design can make your home cooler

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A guide to beat the heat: How smart design can make your home cooler

When guests step into Gopala Krishnan and Sangeetha’s ‘Midori’ Green home in Madipakkam, Chennai, their attention is drawn not to the decor or layout but to the floor-to-ceiling windows. The top halves have high ventilators that remain open day and night—a feature once common in traditional architecture but rare in modern homes.

This simple design floods the space with natural light while continuously expelling hot air. “It’s the first thing everyone mentions,” Sangeetha shares. “The rooms feel brighter, airier, and somehow cooler.” Visitors are often surprised to learn that the couple uses air conditioning for only a few hours during peak Chennai summers, if at all.

Built by the sustainable design firm Green Evolution, this two-storey home received the 2024 Nippon Paint A.C.E.D Award for Sustainable Residential Project. In fact, the climate-conscious design was driven by the homeowners. “We wanted a cool, minimalistic home that can reduce the heat island effect in our city,” says Gopala. With clay-based Porotherm blocks, heat-reflective tiles, water recycling, and solar panels, their house is a live demonstration of how climate-conscious design can coexist with comfort.

tall windows with ventilatorstall windows with ventilators
These windows bring in the natural light, while ventilators remove hot air. Pic courtesy: Green Evolution.

Why our cities are heating up

Their home stands in stark contrast to the increasing urban heat island effect in cities like Chennai and Bengaluru.

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