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Join date: Feb 20, 2026

About

Kanika Aggrawal is a design, architecture, and culture writer at Modely, covering the creative ideas, spaces, and cultural influences shaping contemporary life. Her work explores how architecture, urban environments, interior design, and cultural movements reflect broader social, economic, and aesthetic shifts. From landmark buildings and innovative design concepts to cultural institutions and creative communities, Kanika examines the intersection of design, functionality, and human experience. Through thoughtful analysis and storytelling, she highlights the trends, creators, and ideas influencing the future of design and culture.

Posts (6)

Jun 2, 20264 min
Why the Best Clubhouse Can Sell an Entire Residential Project
There was a time when buyers judged a residential project by the apartment itself. The size of the living room, the number of bedrooms and the view from the balcony. Today, that equation is changing. Increasingly, some of the most important decisions happen before a buyer even sees the apartment. They happen in the clubhouse, the lobby, the co-working lounge, the wellness center, or the rooftop terrace. In many modern developments, these shared spaces have become the emotional heart of the...

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May 18, 20265 min
Designing Desire: How Developers Use Architecture to Sell Lifestyle
You’re not buying the apartment. You’re buying the morning light that enters through floor-to-ceiling glass. The quiet confidence of a marble lobby. The idea that your life, inside those walls, will feel more refined, more elevated, more complete. This is the real business of modern real estate. Not construction—but desire. Across global cities, developers are no longer just building structures. They are designing experiences, narratives, and emotional triggers that turn spaces into...

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Apr 6, 20265 min
The Future of Design: How Spaces Are Evolving Across Physical, Digital, and Cultural Worlds
Part of the Future of Design series — exploring how spaces are evolving across physical, digital, and cultural worlds. Image Courtesy: Standret (via Freepik) There was a time when design was about how something looked. Today, it’s about how something works, feels, and lives with you. The chair is no longer just a chair. The store is no longer just a place to buy. The hotel is no longer just a place to stay. Across industries, design is undergoing a quiet but powerful transformation—one that...

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Kanika Aggrawal

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