Your Privacy is Important to us

We encourage you to review our Terms of Service, and Privacy Policy.

By continuing, you agree to the Terms listed here. In case you want to opt out, please click "Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information" link in the footer of this page.

Opt out of the sale or sharing of personal information

We won't sell or share your personal information to inform the ads you see. You may still see interest-based ads if your information is sold or shared by other companies or was sold or shared previously.

Continue on TOI App
Open App
Login for better experience!
Login Now
Welcome! to timesofindia.com
TOI INDTOI USTOI GCC
TOI+
  • Home
  • Live
  • TOI Games
  • Top Headlines
  • India
  • City News
  • Photos
  • Business
  • Real Estate
  • Entertainment
  • Movie Reviews
  • Lifestyle
  • Podcasts
  • Elections
  • Web Series
  • Sports
  • TV
  • Food
  • Travel
  • Events
  • World
  • Music
  • Astrology
  • Videos
  • Tech
  • Auto
  • Education
  • Log Out
Follow Us On
Open App
  • ETIMES
  • CINEMA
  • VIDEOS
  • TV
  • LIFESTYLE
  • VISUAL STORIES
  • MUSIC
  • TRAVEL
  • FOOD
  • TRENDING
  • EVENTS
  • THEATRE
  • PHOTOS
  • MOVIE REVIEWS
  • MOVIE LISTINGS
  • HEALTH
  • RELATIONSHIP
  • WEB SERIES
  • BOX OFFICE

Traditional Indian home features that deserve a comeback in modern living

TIMESOFINDIA.COM | Last updated on - May 12, 2026, 21:19 IST
Comments
Share
1/6

A lot of what we gave up in the name of progress was actually working quite well

There's a particular kind of comfort that comes from sitting inside an old Indian home in the middle of summer. Not air-conditioned cool. The other kind, the kind that comes from thick walls, shaded courtyards, and cross-ventilation that somebody figured out centuries ago without a degree in architecture. Modern homes are sleeker, no question. But they sweat more, they echo more, and they somehow feel less like places people actually live in.
Here are the old features worth bringing back.

2/6

The courtyard that made the house breathe

The aangan — the central open courtyard — was not decorative. It was functional in ways that would impress a climate engineer today. Hot air rose and escaped through the open centre while cooler air circulated through the surrounding rooms. In the evenings, families gathered there. In the mornings, it caught the early light. Children played in it, elders sat in it, and festivals happened in it. It was the lungs of the house.
Modern urban homes have traded the courtyard for an extra bedroom, which is understandable when land costs what it does. But architects working on independent houses and farmhouses are beginning to bring it back, and the results speak for themselves. A well-designed central courtyard can reduce indoor temperatures by several degrees without a single watt of electricity. Add a plant or a small water feature, and you've also got something that genuinely calms you down when you walk in from the street.

3/6

Jali screens and what they actually did

Intricate latticed screens — jalis — were everywhere in traditional Indian homes, especially in Rajasthan and across the Mughal-influenced north. They looked beautiful, yes. But they also filtered harsh sunlight into dappled patterns, allowed air to pass through freely, and gave the people inside a view out while limiting the view in. They were privacy screens, air filters, and light diffusers all at once, cut from stone or wood without any moving parts.
Today's equivalent is usually a solid wall or a glass window with a heavy curtain. Neither does what jali does. A few contemporary architects are reviving jali screens in concrete, metal, and even 3D-printed versions, which is encouraging. But they're still treated as an aesthetic choice rather than the practical climate solution they always were.

4/6

The verandah that nobody builds anymore

Sit on an old colonial home's verandah and you'll understand immediately what's been lost. It's a transitional space — not quite inside, not quite outside. It catches the breeze, it provides shade, it gives you somewhere to be without committing to either the social world of the street or the private world of the home. In traditional homes in South India, the thinnai served exactly this purpose — a raised platform at the entrance where guests could sit, conversations could happen, and the household could observe the neighbourhood without inviting it in.
Modern homes go straight from the front door to the living room. That buffer is gone, and the loss is real. The verandah wasn't just a porch. It was a social institution. And in a country where the weather allows for outdoor living for most of the year, it makes no sense that we stopped building them.

5/6

Lime plaster walls and the quiet they created

Old homes plastered with lime had a texture and a temperature that cement simply doesn't replicate. Lime plaster breathes. It absorbs moisture when humidity rises and releases it when the air dries. It keeps walls cooler. It's also naturally anti-microbial, which isn't a small thing. And the finish it gives — that slightly warm, slightly irregular surface — is something that people are now paying premium prices to fake with Venetian plaster and textured paint.
Lime plaster fell out of fashion because cement was faster and cheaper to apply at scale. But for anyone building or renovating a home now, it's worth the conversation with your contractor. What you get in return — cooler walls, better air quality, and a finish that actually looks like it belongs in India — is worth the extra effort.

6/6

What these spaces had in common

None of these features were accidents of taste. They were solutions to real problems — heat, humidity, privacy, community, water. They were developed over centuries of trial and error in a climate that punishes bad decisions quickly. Modern building materials and design approaches have solved some problems while creating others: homes that cost a fortune to cool, that feel sterile, that cut people off from each other and from the outside world.
Bringing these features back doesn't mean building museums to live in. It means paying attention to what actually worked, and being honest that not everything that replaced it was an improvement.

Start a Conversation

Post comment
Featured In lifestyle
  • Thought of the day inspired by the Bhagavad Gita: Silence often reveals what noise cannot
  • 10 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in India that deserve a spot on every history and nature lover’s bucket list
  • How parents can raise adaptive and resilient kids from an early age
  • What happens to your body when you eat mango every day
  • Quote of the day by Toni Morrison: "You can do some rather extraordinary things if that's..."
  • Top 10 most visited states of America and travellers should know
  • Quote of the day by Arthur Schopenhauer: “Marrying means to halve one's rights and double one's...”
  • Chinese proverb of the day: “If you give a man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if you give him a fishing rod…” — what it really says about help, independence, and long-term thinking
  • The body check: What your sweat smell may reveal about health
Photostories
  • Why does your big toe hurt at night? 7 common causes of throbbing pain
  • The King of fruits strikes again: 5 incredible health benefits of mango
  • 10 UNESCO World Heritage Sites in India that deserve a spot on every history and nature lover’s bucket list
  • The body check: What your sweat smell may reveal about health
  • What happens to your body when you eat mango every day
  • Cannes 2026: How Prajakta Mali brought pure Maharashtrian grace to the red carpet in a stunning blue Nauvari saree
  • ​Ebola in Europe? Italy reports 2 suspected cases in Milan — How travelers can protect themselves from infection​
  • Thought of the day inspired by the Bhagavad Gita: Silence often reveals what noise cannot
  • 10 Ramayana quotes for children that will transform their heart and mind
Explore more Stories
  • 8
    “Not sour, but sweet”: Amit Shah praises this summer fruit of Bastar, what happens when you eat it regularly
  • 6
    Sadhguru quotes that make people rethink stress and happiness
  • 8
    ​8 ways to engage children other than giving them a mobile phone
  • 9
    8 Offbeat Weekend Getaways Near Bengaluru to escape heat
  • 6
    ​From Gymkhana Club to Connaught Place:​How British architect Robert Tor Russell shaped the architectural soul of Delhi
Up Next
  • ETimes
  • /
  • Life & Style
  • /
  • Home & Garden
  • /
  • Traditional Indian home features that deserve a comeback in modern living
About UsTerms Of UsePrivacy PolicyCookie Policy

Copyright © May 26, 2026, 10.39AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service