दीपक। चूने की दीवारें। कमरों में रामायण।
A spiritual retreat in Ayodhya. Twelve rooms. Twelve chapters of the Ramayana. A home that takes guests.
Not a hotel. Not an ashram. A house where every room carries a name from the epic. Where mornings begin with kirtan and evenings end with aarti at the Tulsi. Where the courtyard is the heart and the kitchen feeds everyone the same thali.
A 4,500 sq ft house on a 45×100 plot, east-facing. Ground plus two floors. Twelve studio rooms arranged around a central courtyard with Tulsi ji at the Brahmasthan.
Kerala-Karnataka country aesthetic meets Ayodhya temple architecture. Athangudi tiles. Mangalore clay roof. Teak columns. Lime plaster walls that breathe.
See the vision
The Tulsi Vrindavan stands at the centre. The Brahmasthan. Every room opens onto this courtyard. Rain falls in. Light falls in. The evening aarti happens here, every day, without exception.
Explore the spacesThis is not a place you pass through. Rooms have a kitchenette, a writing desk, a lock on the door. There is a co-working space on the terrace. A library. A community that forms over weeks, not hours.
Long-stay rooms begin at ₹35,000 per month.
Stay for a month