The Forgotten Sense in Spatial Design
We design for what we see and are able to then converse with.
We refine what we will guide the way of the place.
We measure what we hear and control it to our needs.
But smell has always remained muted in its intentionality, present surely by the simple nature of materials and abundant context that surrounds us. However not as consciously curated as the rest of them.
As architect Juhani Pallasmaa writes, “The door handle is the handshake of the building.”
If touch is a handshake, its scent remains as the afterimage: the trace that lingers long after departure.
Ritual and Fragrance in Indian Homes
In many Indian households, scent structures the flow of the day.
The smoke of incense in the morning.
Camphor during prayer.
Jasmine near a window.
Dried Spices blooming.
A decorated kitchen full of mixed goods and flavours
Closets surrounded by sharp and distinct essence.

Architecture could support such moments even at smaller scales: through recessed niches, transitional spaces, or breathable partitions that allow and encourage inhabitants to participate in such activities of diffusion without any confinement.
The Psychology of Scent
Because these plug-ins are not decorative gestures, even the most subtle and non-powering Smell can bypass logic.
It moves directly to memory and emotion. Familiar fragrances signal safety, continuity, belonging.
Ventilation is something designers strive to work with and this can be another passive layer that influences this dimension.
Designing the Invisible
To design with smell is not to artificially scent a space. Material memory, surface ageing and care of your space extends far beyond visual repairs. Oftentimes, a sudden difference in smell appears as the primary hint of an environmental shift.

We ask designers to move beyond surfaces and instead engage with the atmosphere they create for this.
Overview
Olfactory design in architecture challenges us to expand spatial awareness beyond what is visible. If scent shapes memory and emotion so powerfully, should it remain incidental?
The question is not whether architecture can influence smell, but how intentionally we are willing to design for it.