Stone, timber, and soft evening light
The property keeps its materials honest: dark stone walls, warm wood ceilings, open terraces, and lantern-lit edges that feel calm after sunset.

Oak Rooted Nature Hosted
The Baan is a calm mountain stay with warm rooms, pine views, open terraces, and slow evenings above the valley.
Mood
Editorial calm with stone, timber, and mountain dusk as the visual backbone.
Stay Style
Attic lofts, terrace cabins, warm lighting, and open-air circulation along the slope.
Contact
9286423591
Open Lawn
Quiet corners for slow mornings, evening conversations, and valley air.

The Baan
A website direction that keeps the place grounded, clean, and modern without pretending it is something else.
A mountain stay with a clear point of view.
The property keeps its materials honest: dark stone walls, warm wood ceilings, open terraces, and lantern-lit edges that feel calm after sunset.
From attic-style loft rooms to terrace-facing cabins and lawn seating, the experience is less about spectacle and more about space to settle in.
The Baan feels rooted in its slope and skyline. The website leans into that character instead of masking it with generic hospitality styling.
The current property imagery already carries the right atmosphere, so the page architecture gives those spaces room to breathe instead of forcing them into a generic booking layout.

Front-facing rooms with direct access to the wider terrace and the architectural rhythm of the A-frame block.
Best for
Travelers who want easy access, outdoor spill-out space, and the most immediate feel of the hillside row.

Simple bedrooms with textured stone walls, timber ceilings, warm bedding, and a quieter visual tone.
Best for
Couples or short-stay guests looking for comfort, warmth, and a more grounded interior palette.

Lofted rooms with pitched ceilings and a more tucked-away feeling, while still opening to terrace light and valley air.
Best for
Guests drawn to the A-frame shape, warm attic mood, and a slightly more distinctive room character.

Architecture that belongs to the hillside.
White railings, dark stonework, broad terrace paths, angled roofs, and pine-facing openings give the property a recognizable graphic language. The site turns those cues into a quieter visual system.
You move through the stay via outdoor edges, stairways, and long railings instead of enclosed corridors.
The same spaces feel sharp and airy in daylight, then warmer and more intimate once the lights come on.
The seating lawn gives the property a softer break in the stone-and-terrace layout.
Rooms and dining spaces stay visually calmer when the material palette does most of the work.
Dining, common spaces, and long evenings.
The indoor dining hall, warm ceiling lights, and terrace-connected circulation make the shared spaces feel inviting without needing excess decoration.
Shared Dining
A calm interior with timber ceilings, patterned seating, and enough room for unhurried meals.
Terrace Flow
Walkways and balcony edges keep the property visually open to the valley and the evening sky.



The visual tone of the property changes naturally through the day, so the site uses that shift as an editorial rhythm instead of flattening everything into the same light.




The full gallery page also includes short property videos so the walkways, rooms, and lawn areas read as lived-in spaces rather than static brochure frames.
Browse GalleryReady to ask about your dates?
Reach out directly for current availability, room questions, and the stay setup that fits your trip best.
Best for
Weekend escapes, quiet couple stays, small group getaways, and travelers who want the hillside atmosphere to stay front and center.
Direct contact
Phone for quick booking conversations. Instagram for a visual look at the property and informal updates.