Brass wayfinding system for one of corporate India's most storied addresses. Production and installation matched to a heritage-grade interior.
Bombay House is the headquarters of the Tata Group — a heritage building in Fort Mumbai with a history measured in decades, not quarters. The wayfinding system needed to honor that gravity. Nothing plastic, nothing temporary, nothing that would look dated in five years.
Brass. Specified by the appointing design firm, Kaishar Interiors. Brass ages with the building rather than against it — the finish develops a patina that reads as part of the architecture, not an applied layer on top of it.
Production and installation. We worked from Kaishar's drawing set across floor and directional signage. Each piece fabricated to specification, finished, and installed with the building still operational — every visit timed around tenant schedules and security clearances.
Tight tolerances on brass thickness, controlled lighting checks for finish consistency, and an install crew briefed on heritage-site protocols. The kind of project where the work is invisible if it's right — and very visible if it's wrong.
Mumbai-based. Pan-India. Since 2014. Brief us with a designer — or brief us alone.