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Diplomatic Residence — Cantonments

Client
Embassies & Diplomatic Residences
Lieu
Accra, Ghana
Achevé
2023
Durée
Eighteen-week execution
Services
heritage-tile-restoration, natural-stone-installation

Diplomatic residence renovation requiring heritage encaustic floor restoration alongside specification-grade marble installation. Tilers Ghana coordinated period-matched replacement piece commissioning, conservation-grade lifting and re-laying, and book-matched marble layout in formal reception spaces.

Project Profile

This Cantonments residence serves as both a private principal dwelling and a formal protocol venue — a combination that imposes simultaneous demands on ceremonial presentation and residential durability. The commission was brought to Tilers Ghana directly by the project architect, referencing our institutional track record across high-protocol interiors.


Specification Challenge

Diplomatic residences carry an unusual dual burden: they must read as architecturally distinguished in formal settings while performing without failure under decades of continuous residential and event use.

The specification presented three compounding challenges. First, the principal reception hall required a large-format natural stone tile laid in a herringbone field pattern across an 180 m² unbroken floor plane — a format where any variance in substrate flatness becomes immediately visible under raking diplomatic lighting. Second, the external terraces required a tile selection capable of withstanding Accra’s thermal cycling and seasonal rainfall without grout-joint degradation or surface spalling. Third, the phased delivery schedule required Tilers Ghana to operate within an occupied compound, coordinating sequence and dust management around the occupants’ schedule without delaying the critical-path programme.


Approach

Tilers Ghana opened with a full substrate assessment across all zones, identifying three sections of the reception hall slab requiring self-levelling compound correction before any tile bed was laid. Tolerance was set at no more than 2 mm deviation per 3 m — a standard consistent with premium hospitality and embassy interiors.

For the reception hall, we specified a 900 × 600 mm Crema Marfil-grade limestone in a book-matched herringbone layout, installed with rectified joints at 1.5 mm to maintain the geometric precision the pattern demands. Adhesive selection was a high-performance, non-staining white-body mortar to prevent telegraphing through the light stone face.

External terrace zones received a 600 × 600 mm through-body porcelain in a slip-rated finish, set on a mortar bed with movement joints placed at every 4 m² — preventing thermal expansion failure over Accra’s temperature range. Grout was a UV-stable, anti-efflorescence compound selected for long-term colour retention in open-sky conditions.

Dust-sealed working zones and a night-shift programme across the reception hall ensured the adjacent wing remained fully operational throughout installation.


Outcome


What This Project Demonstrates

High-protocol residential commissions — diplomatic residences, ambassador’s quarters, premier private estates — share a specification logic closer to five-star hospitality than conventional residential work. The standard is unforgiving: tile planes are read at standing height under directional lighting, grout lines are photographed for record, and any irregularity carries institutional visibility.

Tilers Ghana’s 50 years of practice across Ghana’s most demanding institutional interiors means this level of specification rigour is our baseline, not our ceiling. Where the brief demands ceremonial precision alongside residential endurance, our methodology delivers both.

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