Ar Raghu Sharma's Mind Blowing 4th Dimension Architecture Secrets

It was a fine evening when Team Building Material Reporter met Architect Raghu Sharma of FD Design at his New Delhi office. What began as an informal conversation soon evolved into a deep, engaging interview. Over the course of three insightful hours, one thing became clear: for Raghu, architecture began with pure curiosity. As a student expected to choose a narrow technical field like engineering, he found those options constricting. Architecture, in contrast, offered him a vast, interconnected canvas—one where multiple disciplines meet and creativity finds true purpose.

Raghu’s practice is anchored in a defining idea: the Fourth Dimension of design—Time and Space. Beyond the familiar coordinates of X, Y, and Z, he sees time as the transformative force that turns a structure into what he calls “living architecture”. He believes buildings should respond to their surroundings, adapt to changing seasons, and remain sensitive to their occupants. This idea is so integral to his philosophy that he named his organisation Fourth Dimension.

Guided by the KISS principle—Keep It Simple, Stupid—he champions clarity over clutter. For Raghu, simplicity is not compromise; it is sophistication distilled. Every project begins with function, allowing form to emerge naturally from purpose. He firmly believes that buildings must evolve with time. Dynamic architecture—flexible, upgradable, and future-ready—is essential in a world where change is constant.

His design thinking draws heavily from two influences: Mother Nature and the Automobile Industry. Nature teaches that beauty is rooted in function, whether in shifting daylight or the structure of a leaf. The automotive world inspires his pursuit of precision: seamless services, efficient systems, and a future where construction mirrors the accuracy of a manufacturing line.

Even as technology and AI reshape the industry, Raghu insists the architect remains indispensable. AI may be the “horse”, but the architect is the “jockey”—bringing empathy, intuition, and vision to the craft.

Passionate about uplifting industry standards, he actively invests in training skilled labour through collaborations with manufacturers.

To young architects, his message is simple yet profound: stay curious, innovate fearlessly, and design with responsibility. Every project, he reminds them, becomes part of the planet’s memory.
 

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