In the lap of Mukundara · twelve ancient tribal villages, one shared landscape
The Living Field — Barahwan
A low-impact habitat campus for staying, learning, growing, and coexisting.
Barahwan is conceived as a grounded model for ecological living and rural resilience, shaped by the interdependencies between land, water, village knowledge, and people who choose to participate with care.
1 · The idea
Not a resort. A living field model.
Barahwan is a hybrid of field station, low-impact stay campus, school learning space, volunteer residency, habitat trip base, and regenerative landscape lab. It is designed to reduce dependence on high-consumption systems while supporting real people with dignity.
2 · Why it is important
Because extraction-led systems are failing land and people.
High-consumption status quo
- Concrete-heavy expansion and heat stress
- Waste and wastewater pushed out of sight
- Rural landscapes treated as consumption backdrops
- Communities excluded from value and decisions
Barahwan direction
- Low-consumption living instead of luxury load
- Engineered ecological sanitation and water loops
- Village-linked stewardship and skill exchange
- Habitat value for birds, pollinators, and people
3 · How it works
Climate-wise construction + circular systems + shared operations.
Architecture logic
Water and waste flow
4 · Phase-wise development
Start small. Build credibility first. Expand as systems stabilize.
Phase 1 · Starter base
Dorm + tent campus, shared kitchen, low-water sanitation, and first water loops.
- Implementation priority: 40%
- Operational focus: hosting small groups safely
- Goal: proof of discipline, care, and reliability
Phase 2 · Learning and workshop layer
Workshop court, school modules, volunteer residency protocols, and habitat observation trails.
- Implementation priority: 35%
- Operational focus: education and field practice
- Goal: stronger contribution and collaboration network
Phase 3 · Housing and resilience deepening
Expanded earthen housing, mature orchard systems, and higher autonomy in maintenance cycles.
- Implementation priority: 25%
- Operational focus: long-term stability
- Goal: resilient campus with dignified local livelihoods
How the model sustains itself (percentage model)
People can pay to stay, join habitat/birdwatching/wildlife tours, or contribute skills. Contributors receive practical perks like reduced stay costs, workshop access, or extended residency windows based on the value of contribution.
5 · Volunteer and proposal call
Help shape the pilot.
We are inviting landowners, architects, mud builders, hydrologists, geologists, ecologists, naturalists, educators, researchers, and aligned supporters. People can also join through paid stays, habitat trips, birdwatching tours, and wildlife tours that keep the campus economically alive.
Share your proposal directly by email
We are currently routing proposals directly through email for reliability. Please write to [email protected] and include:
- Your name and contact number
- Your contribution type (land, workshop, volunteer, research, or support)
- A short note on how you want to collaborate
- Preferred timeline and location details (if relevant)
6 · Why this gives hope
In climate stress, conflict, and unstable economies, smaller resilient systems matter.
Barahwan is not utopia. It is a practical path: lower consumption, shared stewardship, safer sanitation, local dignity, and habitat care that can be built phase by phase.
Not a fantasy retreat. A serious model for how people and landscapes may survive together with less harm.