The Parfitt family spends half of their year in Bali, but the place they call home is not a Baligalow in Bali in Balie.
It is a short-term luxury rental that Justin and Annabelle Parfitt have designed themselves.
In 2017, after having rebounded the startup, the couple decided to slow down life and live part -time between Bali and the French campaign.
To make the lifestyle profitable, they built a complex in two villas named Kasianda in the Bali district of Cance, which they rent for vacation and holidays.
Now, the couple and their children, Rosie, 9, and Skye, 5, spend half of their year living in the luxury property.
A master bedroom in the largest of the two Kasianda villas. Kasianda
After having launched several startups, the perfits decided to live in their two favorite places
The couple’s career has taken twists and turns and the last two and a half decades.
Justin Parfitt graduated from the University of Bristol, England. After the first cycle, Parfitt produced homemade music and managed a video production company, among other projects. In the early 2000s, he moved to Australia for his MBA, where he met his wife, Annabelle Parfitt.
Perfitt launched a speed-dating company and his wife joined the team. The company was launched in the United States and Canada, and the couple traveled around the world between the two. In 2013, they sold their business and Parfitt launched a social network built around experiences.
Finally, in 2016, Parfitt said that he and his wife had decided to settle after years of life and travel between destinations.
“It came from time to try to reinvent our lives. I said to myself:” Well, where do we really like to go? “”, He recalls. “And the only places where we were regularly returned were Bali and the southwest of France.”
Thus, in 2017, they bought a small castle in Gascony, in France, and went to Bali to start their next project: to build a short -term luxury rental.
The plan was to divide the time between the two destinations and rent each property when they were not there.
One of the family’s girls on the spot while the villas were under construction. Kasianda
In Bali, they bought land and began to build a villa
With views of Bali, the pair found the land for rent.
Due to Indonesian law, foreigners cannot have land in Bali. Instead, they may have a lease or the right to use. Although they vary, the 40-year-old lease of the Parfitt family cost them $ 400,000.
The pair worked with a local architect and spent a year writing plans for a compound with two constructions: a villa with seven rooms and a second with five.
They played with different architectural styles, from Tropical to Modern, and landed on the colonial.
A room in the villa. Kasianda
“Our idea was to make something timeless,” said Parfitt.
Construction began in 2018 and almost a year later, the five -bedroom villa was completed. Christmas Eve in 2019, they welcomed their first guests.
Then, the pandemic blow, and the pair finished building the villa of seven rooms via WhatsApp from their home in France.
Peritt said that the compound had been completed by 2021 and that the project cost around $ 1.7 million, including land lease, construction, accessories, landscaping and furniture.
The two villas can be rented separately or together, and all the property can accommodate up to 30 people.
“The seven rooms is like your own 5 -star private complex,” said Parfitt.
From the start, the goal was to offer a luxury stay. Outside, the largest villa has a large salt water swimming pool, a swimming bar, a terrace and a barbecue pit. Inside, there is an open kitchen, a living room, eight bathrooms, a dining room and a media room.
The smallest villa also has a swimming pool, a living room and a shared dining room and a kitchen.
Today, the complex employs 17 workers, including four chefs, majordomas, security guards and cleaning women.
Depending on the season, one night in the largest villa costs between $ 1,500 and $ 2,100, while the smallest generally costs between $ 400 and $ 800.
Artists and a DJ in a birthday party on the theme of Alice in Wonderland held in villas. Kasianda
Beyond luxury, the villa focuses on extravagant events
While the couple finished the construction, they realized that they wanted to differentiate themselves from other villas and short -term rentals across the island.
The perfects approached him in two ways. The first was to add a commercial kitchen and a bar to the owners of the property. A Popular Bali leader has developed the menu, and the former chief mix of Ritz-Carlton has created cocktails. This means that customers can access gastronomy, small bites and tropical cocktails similar to what they expect from a hotel restaurant.
The second added event planning. As the family noticed that more guests arrived for celebrations such as birthdays and birthdays, they decided to capitalize on this by offering free party planning services.
The Perfitts work with the guests and villa staff to plan and execute extravagant holidays, especially for significant birthdays.
In March, 30 people arrived at the Villa de India for a 60th birthday festival inspired by Holi-, with colored water balls and foam cannons.
Last year, they organized a party on the theme of Alice in Wonderland with fire artists, dancers and cocktails on the theme.
Perfitt said he believed that they are hosting one or two birthdays monthly.
A photo of a striking birthday party in Kasianda. Kasianda
“It’s more creative than traditional short-term rental,” he said.
During the offseason, the family of four lives in the smallest villa while welcoming guests and improving the complex. In March, they developed new menu elements such as a duck salad and test new cocktails on site.
“We have very good food and excellent cocktails,” said Parfitt. “But at the end of the day, we try to make sure that there is also something extra special.”
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