
By R.
Wijewardene
If you imagine a
dream villa on a secluded beach, the chances are that
your mind will immediately leap south to the coves of
Tangalle, or the clear waters between Galle and Matara.
Its unlikely, at any rate, that images of Wadduwa would
spring immediately to mind. But for British couple
Brendan and Bernadette O Donnel it was Wadduwa with its
secluded lick of blonde sand, swaying palms and
proximity to Colombo, that presented itself as the
perfect location for the ultimate ‘barefoot beach
villa.’
The London based
architect and designer spent four years creating this
personal paradise and the thought and effort, lavished
on every detail of the property is apparent from the
moment you enter the villas, wonderfully secluded world.
As you drive
through the non descript gates, you enter something like
a tropical maze and a solid wall of drooping cannas,
ruby red ginger and hanging hibiscus guides you to a
central walauwa, that seems to have sprung
improbably out of the surrounding lotus ponds.
A striking
departure
Inside, bespoke
roofing tiles crafted in kerala, cool makrana marble
floors and hanging Moroccan chandeliers make it
abundantly clear that Reef represents a striking
departure from the uniform tropical chic of the expat
enclaves further south.
While much of the
furnishing and craftsmanship is Indian, the house — with
its high ceilings and intricate fretwork is absolutely
Sri Lankan, and the result is a seamless fusion — a
mughul-raj-walauwa that manages to take beach
architecture beyond the sometimes cloying influence of
Geoffrey Bawa.
Of course there is
more to a hotel than architecture and design. But at The
Reef the property’s design is so inextricably entwined
with the experience that more than the cake crumb soft
sand at the beach, or sparkling swimming pool — the
property’s principle attraction — is the chance to be
surrounded by such an aesthetically pleasing selection
of objects.
Luxuriously laid
back Reef experience
Lounging on antique
arm chairs and staring out onto a cerulean sea, or
sitting on the hand crafted cushions of the suite’s
bronze swings, waiting for another gently fizzing lime
soda, simple things are the essence of the luxuriously
laid back Reef.
What makes the
property really stand out however is that as a result of
this commitment to fabulous furniture, and distinctive
spaces, The Reef offers arguably the most spacious,
extravagant and fabulously furnished suites in the
vicinity of Colombo.
Each room is
enormous, encompassing vast living spaces, dressing
rooms and bath rooms that vie to be the best in the
island.
The rooms’ ancient
Calcutta beds are themselves minor sculptures, and each
is topped by perhaps the only working antique
pankawas in Sri Lanka — a gentle tug will send air
circulating through the room, but of course these
venerable contraptions are complemented by perfect
climate control.
Old world charm
Despite the
emphasis on period pieces The Reef, unlike some other
top end villas, does not eschew modern conveniences and
you’ll find state of the art sound systems, and flat
screen televisions, tucked discreetly into Dutch
almirahs and broad band sockets somehow sequestered in
custom made teak desks….
While the rooms
themselves offer quite exceptionally refined luxury, the
bathrooms are a special achievement featuring both
indoor and intensely tropical outdoor showers, venetian
glass mirrors and quite literally monolithic bath tubs.
Each tub was hewn from a single enormous lump of granite
and transported like the building blocks of the pyramids
on a series of rollers to its final resting place…
The mindboggling
labour involved in shipping each half tonne tub from the
quarries of South India to the beaches of Sri Lanka is
reflective of the painstaking effort that has clearly
gone into every aspect of the villa. And its only lying
in the cool granite egg of a tub at night, drowning in a
tsunami of foam, that you will understand that all this
effort was emphatically worth it.
It is the beauty of the villas’
various objects that allows it to stand at such close
proximity to Colombo and yet provide such a complete
escape. The swaying palm trees, and constant crash of
the ocean, drive thoughts of Colombo’s chaos from one’s
mind and the villa’s intensely aesthetic surroundings
will allow one to forget that the humdrum and
depressingly utilitarian world outside even exists, for
a while at least.