The Pool House is a useful project lens because it sits in that overlap between architecture, retreat, and family life. A farmhouse extension has to do more than add built area. It has to change how the site is used, how time is spent, and how indoor space participates in the wider landscape.

In Delhi NCR, where construction timelines and site conditions can quickly become heavy, prefabrication becomes attractive for practical reasons. But practical reasons alone do not produce architecture worth remembering. The design still has to create quiet confidence: the feeling that the building belongs exactly where it is.

That usually comes from three things. First, the massing has to be simple enough to read clearly in the landscape. Second, the envelope must balance openness with thermal comfort and privacy. Third, the interior palette has to slow the experience down, otherwise a lightweight build can feel visually thin even if it performs well.

What matters most in this kind of project is not whether the system is prefabricated. It is whether the building lets air, light, and daily movement feel natural. When that happens, speed of construction stops being the headline and starts becoming a quiet advantage.

For residential clients, this is often the deeper question worth asking early: do you want more built area, or do you want a more inhabitable relationship between the site and the rooms you already imagine? Good prefabricated architecture answers both at once.