Facilities at Sacha Rumi

Sacha Rumi offers simple and purposeful structures designed to support healing work, personal retreats, and group processes. Each space is built with respect for the surrounding forest and placed in a way that preserves the natural quiet of the land. The facilities are intentionally modest so that the atmosphere remains grounded and the presence of nature stays at the center of the experience. The aim is to offer comfort without distraction and to create environments where inner work can unfold with clarity.

Key Facilities

The Maloca

  • Spacious ceremonial and practice space
  • Suitable for meditation, yoga, ceremony, and integration circles
  • Natural materials with open-air design
  • Capacity for 15 to 20 people
  • Positioned for privacy and sound protection

Individual Tambos

  • Fifteen private huts for retreat or plant dieta
  • Simple structures placed at a respectful distance from one another
  • Designed for solitude, rest, and personal process
  • Surrounded by forest with year-round running water nearby

Shared Tambos

  • Four larger huts for paired or group accommodation
  • Suitable for assistants, facilitators, or shared retreat lodging
  • Quiet placement along forest paths

Kitchen and Communal Areas

  • Open-air kitchen powered by solar energy
  • Dining and resting spaces designed for low-impact living
  • Areas for conversation, preparation, and relaxed gathering

Sanitation and Water

  • Exterior compost or dry toilets
  • Natural water sources running through the land
  • Fresh stream water available year-round

Forest and Practice Spaces

  • Clearings for movement, stretching, and quiet sitting
  • Forest trails for walking meditation
  • Natural acoustic privacy created by the valley and vegetation

Infrastructure and Environment

  • Minimal lighting to preserve the atmosphere of the forest
  • Low-impact pathways and simple structural footprints
  • Designed to blend with the environment rather than dominate it

Every space at Sacha Rumi is designed to meet the land with respect and to support the inner journey of those who come here.