Indigenous Architects · Zajira · 2023–2025
AWT Padma
Resort Complex
The Padma, tail end of the mighty Ganges, is the river that defines the riverine country of Bangladesh: a gentle but unforgiving force that shapes the land and the imagination of those who live with it. The Padma Bridge is the epitome of the nation's relentless pursuit of progress, the engineering act that dares to traverse the humbling giant. The AWT Padma Resort sits on the southern bank at Zajira, with a courtside view of the bridge: a project conceived to receive the river and the bridge as a single landscape.
The brief is hospitality. The site is 13.5 bigha (176,000 sqft) of land at Zajira, Greater Faridpur, on the southern bank of the Padma. It sits 1.1 km of visual distance from the Padma Bridge and 2.75 km of vehicular distance from the bridge landing approach, running parallel to the bridge's span across the water. The development unfolds in three phases. Phase 1, completed December 2025, comprises two G+5 accommodation buildings totalling forty rooms, a riverside restaurant for 150 guests, a 120-foot swimming pool with amenities, an amphitheatre at plaza level, a sculpture garden, a 350-foot boating ghat tracing a meandering water body, a 300-by-125-foot multipurpose green field, peripheral walkways, and parking for fifty cars.
The project was led by Ar. Sayeed Ahmed, principal of Indigenous Architects in Dhaka, who developed a design that celebrates both the river and the bridge. My role was to aid the principal architect in developing the design and producing the full Revit BIM model for our client, the Army Welfare Trust of Bangladesh.
The Site and the Bridge
The site is encapsulated by horizontal, organic surroundings: traditional village landscapes of Bangladesh on three sides, the Padma on the fourth. The horizontality of the river is the dominant fact. Every move on this site begins from that line: the building masses are kept low and parallel to the water, the elevated terrace extends along the linear axis of the site, and the long view from the building fronts is framed and held open. Across the water, slightly offset, the Padma Bridge runs in counterpoint: an industrial line answering the natural one. The architecture sits between them.
Axonometric Overview · Water Body, Boating Ghat, Resort Blocks
The Riverside Restaurant
The riverside restaurant is the public face of the resort to the river. It reads as a standalone pavilion from the approach: a horizontal volume, low and long, its glazed perimeter catching the river light at the water's edge. The resort entrance sits directly beside it, so the first thing a guest sees upon arrival is the restaurant framing the threshold. Inside, 150 covers are arranged around the long river-facing wall. Timber ceiling slats, warm brass, and the panoramic view as the primary interior element: the Padma River and the horizon as the wall. From the table by the glass, the river view from the restaurant is exactly that of the bridge.
The Riverside Restaurant and Resort Entrance
Riverside Restaurant · Exterior
Riverside Restaurant Interior · River View Wall
The River View from the Riverside Restaurant · Padma Bridge on the Horizon
Arrival and Drop-Off
The arrival sequence is compressed and deliberate. The resort entrance gate marks the threshold: branded with the AWT Resort identity, a sculptural double-helix marker at the access control point. From there the guest moves through the approach to the resort buildings, past the water park amenity on one side, and arrives at the drop-off entrance beneath the elevated terrace. The geometry decompresses at each step: from the tight gate, to the open approach boulevard, to the covered drop-off porch and the plaza beyond.
The Resort Entrance · Access Control Gate
Approach to the Resort Buildings
Resort Building from the Water Park
Drop-Off Entrance · Porte-Cochere
Reception, Café and Dining
The ground floors of the two accommodation buildings hold the full service programme for arriving and resident guests. The reception desk anchors the lobby of Building 01: timber and brass, a warm double-height waiting area behind the concierge line. Beside it, the semi-outdoor café opens to the plaza edge through tall glazed panels, bringing daylight and plantation into the hospitality sequence. Building 02 holds the resort restaurant area: a full-service indoor dining room with bar seating and communal tables for 150, serving the resort's all-day food-and-beverage programme.
Reception and Waiting Area · Building 01 Ground Floor
Semi-Outdoor Café Area · Plaza Edge
Resort Restaurant Area · Building 02 Ground Floor
The Plaza
The elevated plaza is the social heart of the resort: a continuous outdoor platform that holds the building volumes, the amphitheatre, the sculpture garden, and the long river view. The approach from the drop-off ascends to the plaza level through a landscaped ramp sequence; from the plaza surface the bridge and river are composed in the eye. The elevated areas at the river edge are furnished with rattan pod loungers and mature integrated trees: a terrace above the landscape it stands on, addressing the Padma Bridge across the water.
Approach to the Plaza
View from the Plaza
Elevated Plaza · River-Facing Terrace
Elevated Plaza · Terrace Edge
Conference and Seminar
Below Building 01 sit the formal meeting facilities: a 150-person conference hall and a seminar room for smaller working groups. The conference hall is finished in timber panelling with full AV presentation capability; the seminar hall is configured for a more intimate setting, with a feature staircase element dividing the space. Both rooms open to the public ground-floor lobby programme, so conference and hospitality traffic share the same sequence without collision.
Seminar Hall · Feature Stair
Conference Hall · 150-Person Capacity
Guest Rooms
Levels 03 to 06 of the two G+5 buildings hold the forty guest rooms of Phase 1: Deluxe Rooms and Premium Deluxe Rooms, each oriented to the Padma River. The Deluxe Room interiors are composed around a circular wall sculpture at the headboard, twin pendant lights flanking the bed, and a full-height window opening to the river view. The Premium Deluxe Rooms step up in area and finish: a fully timber-slatted accent wall behind the bed, a circular mirror console, a wider panoramic glazing. In both room types, the river and the bridge are the principal furniture.
Deluxe Room Interior
Deluxe Room Interior · Evening
Premium Deluxe Room Interior · Timber-Slat Wall
Premium Deluxe Room Interior · River View
The Rooftop
The roof of Building 01 holds the juice bar: a compact interior counter opening to a terrace with lounge seating under the open sky. On the rooftop of Building 02, the viewing deck addresses the Padma Bridge directly. Pod-form rattan loungers on a tiled deck, the river at arm's length, the bridge spanning the full horizon. The programme is simple and correct: a place to sit above the resort, above the river, and look at the bridge.
Rooftop Juice Bar · Building 01 Roof
Rooftop Viewing Deck · River Horizon
Rooftop Viewing Deck · Padma Bridge in the Sights
Plans
The plan strategy is direct: parallel axes, water on the river side, ground-floor public programme aligned with the elevated terrace above, accommodation stacked on top.
The Walk-Through
The full client presentation walkthrough, prepared for the Honourable Chief of Army Staff of Bangladesh in advance of construction. The flythrough traces the sequence from arrival, through the elevated plaza and the public realm, into the riverside restaurant, the lobbies and dining halls, and up to the rooftop against the bridge.
Construction
Phase 1 of the AWT Padma Resort completed construction in December 2025. The footage below records the project on site: the two G+5 accommodation blocks, the elevated terrace, the riverside restaurant, and the surrounding landscape works in the final stage of completion before handover to the Army Welfare Trust.
Phase 1 Complete
The handover. Phase 1 was inaugurated by the Army Welfare Trust at the close of 2025. The photographs below are taken on site after completion, with the resort dressed for its grand opening: the elevated terrace lit at dusk, the swimming pools live and reflective, the lobby and dining rooms in operation, the guest suites finished and furnished. Five years of work, end to end, from concept design to BIM documentation to a building standing on the bank of the Padma.
Pool and Building at Sunset · Phase 1 Inauguration