
Triton Villa, Turks and Caicos
Togu: Interior design
relooking architectural design
facades and outdoor
On the protected side of Long Bay Beach, where the sand is wide and the water is still, Triton Villa occupies one of the Caribbean's quieter pieces of coastline. The light here is different from Miami. Brighter, more even, harder to control. The facades had to work for it.
TOGU Design's intervention was a major extension of the main residence: new bedroom suites, a generous office, a private gym, and a complete rethinking of the exterior envelope. The key move was the addition of vertical louvers across all facades, which unify the various volumes of the estate and give depth to its white surfaces. In the Caribbean sun, these louvers produce a constantly shifting pattern of shadow and relief. The house changes expression throughout the day.
The beachfront cabanas were designed as part of the same vocabulary: white, shaded, open to the breeze, placed directly at the edge of the sand. They are not decorations. They are rooms without walls.
Inside, select areas were refined to align with the new exterior language. The result, across the property, is a place that feels at once precise and loose, luminous and sheltered. The kind of house where you lose track of whether you are inside or out, and it does not matter.











