Connecting Nature, Ecology, and Community: Afforestt near Sukhna Wildlife Sanctuary

Nestled near the Sukhna Wildlife Sanctuary in Chandigarh, this project transformed the Forest Hill Resort landscape into a thriving native forest. By restoring local plant species and natural water flows, the space now invites birds, butterflies and biodiversity back into its fold.

Category

Hospitality & Retreats

Ecology and Flora

Mixed deciduous of the Shivaliks

Location

Chandigarh, India

Highlights

Location: Adjacent to Sukhna Wildlife Sanctuary, near Chandigarh, in the Shivalik foothills.

Guiding principle: A rare position of Maximum Ecological Advantage, in an important watershed of three seasonal streams.

Field research: Thorough study of the region’s Potential Native Vegetation (PNV), including rare species such as Jhingan (Lannea coromandelica), Dhavda (Anogeissus latifolia), Kaim (Mitragyna parvifolia), Kosam (Schleichera oleosa), and Bistendu (Diospyros cordifolia).

Pathbreaking interventions: Three Colours of Nature framework, the Native 15 avenue design, and 100% native landscaping for residences and open spaces.

Ecological action: Removal of non-native species, restoring native character, and designing for water to slow, gather, and sustain permanent hydration.

Impact

On the edge of the Sukhna Wildlife Sanctuary in Chandigarh, the Forest Hill Resort project represents a new way of seeing land — as natural heritage to be protected, as ecology to be restored, and as community to be nurtured. Since April 2024, Afforestt has worked here to create an integrated restoration model: a place where conservation principles, native vegetation, and innovative design come together. At the heart of this effort lies a simple but powerful vision — connecting nature, ecology, and community.
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The rewilding of the resort near Sukhna Sanctuary has had a transformative impact—reviving the local ecosystem, attracting native birds, butterflies, and pollinators, and creating a self-sustaining forest that blends seamlessly with the surrounding sanctuary. What was once a manicured space is now a thriving natural habitat, offering guests an immersive experience in biodiversity while demonstrating how hospitality and ecological restoration can coexist meaningfully.
To guide this restoration, Afforestt began with a deep dive into the Potential Native Vegetation (PNV) of the region. This research revealed a forest once rich with rare and resilient species — Kumkum (Mallotus philippensis), Phulai (Acacia modesta), Doodhi (Wrightia tinctoria), Surteli (Woodfordia fruticosa), Heens (Capparis sepiaria), and Pansra (Colebrookea oppositifolia) — plants that have evolved with this land over millennia. Designing with PNV means looking beyond ornamentals to re-create a natural harmony of canopy, understory, and ground cover.
From this research grew a set of unique interventions. The Three Colours of Nature frame restoration as both science and story: red for earth and memory, green for balance and continuity, yellow for renewal and bloom. The Native 15 avenue design became a landmark intervention — a blueprint where 15 carefully chosen indigenous species set a new standard for roadsides and open spaces. Across the property, native landscaping is being adopted — avenues, residences, and edges are being planted with species that belong to the Shivaliks.
Equally important is the act of clearing away the past. Non-native species, which suppress local flora, are carefully removed to allow indigenous life to return. Parallel to this, designs for slowing water — water nerve centres, lakes, and natural channels — are drawn. These interventions, over time, bring hydration back to the land and create the permanent foundation for life to flourish. Together, these steps make the project not just real estate development, but a living sanctuary. It is a place where ecological research meets practical design, where heritage species return, and where every intervention is made with humility towards the larger landscape. For Afforestt, the project stands as a model: when real estate chooses to restore its native vegetation, respect its water, and work with its landforms, it creates more than property — it creates ecological legacy.

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