
Villa Toba was named after Lake Toba in Indonesia’s North Sumatra Province; it is the largest lake in all of Southeast Asia, and Villa Toba boasts the largest swimming pool in the LGV enclave.
This single-storey 2-bedroom villa is comprised of two pavilions positioned on either side of a swimming pool within a sunny, walled, courtyard garden. One pavilion houses the two bedrooms, and the other pavilion houses the living and dining area and open-plan kitchen. A striking feature is the magnificent Palimanan stone frieze, hand-carved in Balinese Sanskrit, and located on the garden wall at one end of the pool. A timber sundeck at the other end of the pool is furnished with two sunlounges and an umbrella. The pretty garden is planted with flowering trees and shrubs, and stone-carved waterspouts provide the serene and constant sound of running water.
The open-sided living and dining pavilion features a soaring roof supported by richly grained coconut wood columns above a cool terrazzo floor. Ceiling fans and gentle breezes keep this area cool, and bamboo blinds can be dropped for privacy and shade. Looking out over the tropical garden and pool, this area is perfect for entertaining and enjoying the laid-back lifestyle for which Bali has become so famous. Rectangular in shape, the pavilion is tastefully furnished with a deeply cushioned rattan lounge suite, together with orange, green and brown scatter cushions, a coffee table, a dining table for four, an arching chrome standard lamp, and attractive artwork.
The best of Seminyak is within walking distance of Laksmana Villas; miles of wide sandy beach, tropical chic shopping for fashion and interior design, spas, pulsating nightlife and superb dining at relaxed elegant restaurants. Laksmana Bali Villas is located on the most in vogue stretch of Jalan Laksmana, situated in complete privacy down a shady lane that keeps the outside world at a discreet distance. All this only one hundred meters from the Indian ocean ! At night the only sounds heard are the tropical breeze in swaying coconut palms, and the distant crashing of the surf.