Room with open doors to the garden
Rooms

Strip away everything.

What remains is the farm — framed by teak, marble, and the light off the trees. No televisions. Obviously.

Get the highlights
Connected to nature

Open the curtains. Not a garden view — the actual farm. Trees and animals.

Minimalist design

Nothing decorative. Nothing extra. Just the room and the farm outside it.

Natural materials

One-hundred-year-old reclaimed teak. Rajasthan marble. Nothing synthetic, nothing competing with the view.

Craft

Craftsmen who have worked here for decades, still improving details most guests never notice.

The difference

Not ornate. Restrained. The opposite of everything in Rajasthan.

Nature

The farm is outside every window.

No window, no room.

Most rooms carry 150 to 200 square feet of glass. If a room didn't have a good window, it wasn't built. The rooms frame trees, gardens, the pool, and changing daylight. In the morning, light moves through the fruit trees and across the stone floor. The dogs are already in the garden. The birds are already in the branches. The room does not separate you from any of this — it opens toward it. We have carefully removed the usual hotel noise so you can finally hear yourself think.

Curtains parted — trees outside
Book, window, lamp — quiet light
Sitting chairs by the window
Desk and garden through the window
Work desk inside a garden-facing room
Restraint

Simple is the hard part.

Stripping away is harder than adding. It takes confidence and taste — neither of which can be bought.

Rajasthan's default luxury is ornate — carved arches, mirrored surfaces, gold accents. PushkarOrganic is a deliberate departure. Restraint is not a budget decision. The room's job is to disappear, so the farm can do the work. Less visual noise means more room for rest — and more room to notice what remains: the weight of the linen, the grain of the wood, morning light on stone.

Desk, wardrobe, balcony doors — clean and ordered
Bed — lamps and headboard
Clean wide room, honest view
Reading by the balcony
Bathroom: sink and mirror
Materials

Real wood. No ply.
Real marble. No tiles.

Nature made the teak and the marble. Man made the ply and the tiles. The difference shows.

The rooms are not separate from the farm. They are built from the same world. Reclaimed teak, rosewood, and babul — grain visible, weight real, a connection to nature that ply cannot give you. Rajasthan marble: cool underfoot, from this region, polishable again in fifty years. Pure cotton and linen — nothing synthetic, nothing that traps heat. They do not age badly. They age honestly. Most hotels today don't. The economics work against it.

Desk, wardrobe, crafted details
Desk close-up — wood surface
Book and lamp — material detail
Bedside table — lamp, bottle, surface
Bathroom: sink and mirror
Craft

Done properly.
Takes longer.

Craftsmen spending decades on the property, continually improving it — including details most guests will never notice.

The rooms were not delivered at once and finished. They have been built, lived in, noticed, and refined over years. Wood is finished by hand. Stone is polished carefully. The weight of a door, the height of a light, the angle of a mirror — noticed, adjusted, improved. It is how the place holds itself honest over years.

Symmetrical bed and materials — craftsmanship in the details
Desk close-up detail
Bedside table detail
Book and lamp by the window
Living space and balcony doors
The rates

Starting from ₹12000 per night.

Same farm, food, pool, and quiet. Choose by space, light, and privacy.

RoomRateSizeWhat's different
Standard₹12000 / night300 sq ftKing bed · Garden and pool views · Marble study table
Deluxe₹18000 / night450 sq ftPrivate balcony · Wall-to-ceiling windows · Marble tub
Suite₹30000 / night800 sq ftPrivate garden · Two-person granite tub · Sold out till March 2027
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