
Purnima Gupta’s Sukh Sambandh
MSc in Interior Design
This is not just any other wedding spot with fancy lights and a flashy hashtag wall. For her JDDA 2025 project, Purnima Gupta’s running with the theme “Pause – Prioritise a Unique Sense of Ease.” It sounds pretty airy at first, but then you step into her wedding space and realize that this is actually deeply thoughtful stuff.

Nobody gets sidelined here. Not your grandma with the walker, not your friend who’s rolling in on wheels, nobody. She’s ditched all that superficial glitz and focusing on what matters: people. Her space intends to hug you back, with its wide open paths, soft transitions, spacious seating that doesn’t feel cramped. Can you imagine how rare this is at weddings where you’re usually just crammed between someone’s cousin and a suspiciously wobbly flower vase?
She calls it a “Timeless Embrace.” The tone is exactly that—it’s like time chills out for a night so everyone can just exist together. She solved the problem most designers ignore: how do you keep a place elegant and genuinely accessible? There’s nothing clinical or cold about it—neutral colors, clever materials that aren’t “hospital-like”, tech that does its job quietly in the background, and lights that don’t blast into your retinas but transition smoothly with the mood.




She doesn’t just tick the “diversity and inclusion” box. Every single design choice is a bit of a love letter to empathy. Adaptive mandap, responsive dance floor—even the transitions between zones are about making everyone feel like they belong, not just invited. This isn’t overblown design talk either; it’s care, made visible.
Sukh Sambandh isn’t just some wedding venue. It’s what you wish every celebration could be: roomy, relaxed, open-armed, fun for *everyone*. Purnima makes you wonder why we ever settled for less. This is celebration done right.

She doesn’t just tick the “diversity and inclusion” box. Every single design choice is a bit of a love letter to empathy. Adaptive mandap, responsive dance floor—even the transitions between zones are about making everyone feel like they belong, not just invited. This isn’t overblown design talk either; it’s care, made visible.
Sukh Sambandh isn’t just some wedding venue. It’s what you wish every celebration could be: roomy, relaxed, open-armed, fun for *everyone*. Purnima makes you wonder why we ever settled for less. This is celebration done right.