Four hundred metres from the Seseh coastline, in the commercial-use purple zone, with rice fields and mango groves in every direction that isn’t ocean. The penthouse units here sit atop a development that draws on traditional Balinese architecture — steep-roofed pavilions, natural stone, handcrafted detailing — but rides on a modern structural frame of 512 piles and metal construction engineered for seismic resilience.
The top-floor apartments range from 39 to 96 square metres. At the larger end, you’re looking at a one-bedroom unit that feels closer to a villa in terms of usable space, with the added advantage of height. Seseh is flat — palm canopy and paddy fields — so even a third or fourth floor gives you views that a ground-level villa on the same street simply cannot offer.
You’d assume a penthouse in a Balinese-styled building might feel incongruous. It doesn’t. The elevation amplifies exactly what the design is trying to capture: the observation deck looks across unbroken green toward the water, the rooftop spa complex opens to sky on all sides, and the breeze at this height is consistent. The ground-floor units are sheltered. Up here, you’re in it.
Shared infrastructure includes a full spa complex, restaurant, cheesery, yoga shala, co-working zone, and event-capable pool deck. The developer projects 14–15% ROI at 75% occupancy — and a penthouse unit with these views will sit at the top end of that range.
IDR 2.83 billion. Q2 2027.