It all began with a conversation. Not the hurried kind scribbled into calendars, but the slow, thoughtful kind, spanning afternoons and ideas between two friends, Gaurav Tinjni and Amit Madan. What emerged from these dialogues was not just a blueprint, it was a vision — for a farmstay built such that it belonged to the land, not simply built on it. And IDIEQ brought that to life.
Set against the hushed drama of 15,900 sq ft of Uttarakhand’s Bhabar region is this four-bedroom farmstay that unfolds across 5,600 sq ft of area, where the earth flattens before tumbling into the wilderness of Jim Corbett National Park. The vision was clear and quietly radical. Framed by forest vistas, the site offered a rare gift: an untouched canvas where modern design could breathe through the lungs of local materials, and sustainability would feel as instinctive as breathing.
"The dialogues were about integrating elements that echoed the local heritage, exposed brickwork reminiscent of age-old construction methods, graceful arches and materials like Corten steel that age gracefully" — Saubhagya, Principal Architect, IDIEQ