Godrej Woods Clubhouse by Rachna Agarwal
Godrej Woods Clubhouse is a 40,000-plus-square-foot clubhouse in New Delhi, India, designed by Rachna Agarwal in 2023. The project bridges indoor rooms and the outdoors, using biophilic ideas and a restrained palette to keep the atmosphere calm, welcoming, and rooted in daily use. Across its levels, the plan shifts from social spaces to wellness areas without losing a residential feel.








About Godrej Woods Clubhouse
Located in the heart of Noida’s bustle, Godrej Woods Clubhouse builds a clear link between interior rooms and the landscape outside. The design keeps that relationship visible from the first arrival, where the plan opens outward and light, texture, and artwork shape the experience.
The clubhouse in New Delhi, India, is designed by Rachna Agarwal in 2023. Its 40,000-plus-square-foot program balances the demands of a shared amenity building with the warmth of a residential setting, using biophilic ideas to guide the layout.
At the stilt level, the sequence begins with a grand reception, then moves through a reading lounge, multipurpose hall, squash court, crèche, mini plex, and meeting rooms. A minimal aesthetic and statement furniture keep the rooms calm, while curated art gives each zone a distinct identity.
The podium level turns toward social use. An all-day dining café, games lounge, and kids’ party area draw from Mykonos with white-and-blue tones that recall coastal architecture and bright water, while the outdoor café extends that palette into the open air.
On the first level, the focus shifts to wellness. A gym, yoga room, spa, salon, steam rooms, and sauna sit within a light-filled setting, where biophilic elements and muted colors support a quieter rhythm. The result is less about spectacle than about ease, with each room tuned to a different pace of use.
Artwork gives the clubhouse its sharper moments. Sand-blasted stone, fluid graphics, and custom card imagery introduce contrast without breaking the overall calm. Japanese serenity and Nordic warmth work through the interiors as a soft counterpoint to the social areas, keeping the material palette restrained and the atmosphere open to pause.
Photography courtesy of Rachna Agarwal
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