↗ Hyderabad, India — Planning to Build
Named it Garbage. Because every other builder in Hyderabad calls themselves Mega. I did the opposite. Then I made sure the homes prove why.
The Name
Every builder in Hyderabad gives themselves a grand name. Mega Homes. Royal Estates. Supreme Constructions. Big name, bigger claims, almost zero follow-through.
I went the other direction. Called it Garbage. Now everyone's eyebrows go up when they hear it. Good. That's the gap I'm going to fill every single day.
The name is a mirror I hold up to myself. I can't hide behind a brand that promises the sky. I'm called Garbage — so I have to outperform the name constantly. There's no marketing to fall back on. Only the work.
It's the same logic I used at age 6 when I was opening up computers at the cybercafe. You can't dress up a broken PC. It either works or it doesn't. Homes should be exactly the same.
"Premium luxury residences crafted with world-class excellence." — Year 2: seepage in the walls. Year 3: contractor unreachable. Year 5: you're paying to fix what was never right.
I make mistakes. I document them. I fix them. I back them when issues arise — because they will arise. That honesty is built into the name before a single brick is laid.
Name yourself the worst. Build the best. That gap between expectation and delivery is the brand. No one else in Hyderabad real estate is playing this game. That's exactly why I am.
The Builder
"I looked everywhere for a home I'd actually want to live in. Didn't find one. So instead of settling — I decided to build it."
Two decades of building systems that cannot fail. Thousands of hotel nights across the world's most considered properties. An obsessive understanding of what separates something that merely works from something that feels exactly right. That difference is what I'm bringing to construction.
Companies supported through tech ventures
Why I Understand Luxury
I've stayed at almost every Aman property in the world. Two Cheval Blancs. 40 consecutive days in the Maldives across 9 different resorts — in a single trip. I understand luxury at the detail level: the exact weight of a pillow, the right temperature a room arrives at before you enter, the distance a bedside table should sit from the bed.
I'm not bringing this into the homes to replicate hotels. The opposite — to distill what actually matters from years of obsessive observation and carry only that into a permanent residence. The Aman quietness. The Cheval Blanc warmth. The one detail in a boutique room that makes you feel completely held.
How I Think
I've been deliberately breaking things since I was 6 to understand them. Every decision in a Garbage home gets stress-tested. When an issue surfaces after handover — and some will — it's documented, backed, and fixed. No debate. That's the deal.
A great Aman room has less in it than you expect. That's not minimalism for aesthetics — it's precision. Everything present was a deliberate choice to include. Everything absent was a deliberate choice to remove. I'm applying that editorial process to a home.
Day one, you'll notice what's missing. Month six, you'll understand why it's not there. The decisions aren't for the first impression — they're for the life you'll actually live. I'm okay if you don't get it immediately. I'll wait.
The Product
You arrive with one bag. You need nothing else. Every object in the home was chosen with the same obsession I gave to finding the right components at a cybercafe bench — except now the stakes are your entire daily life.
Move in with one bag. The home has everything — sourced, placed, already right. Not a show apartment with props. An actual operating life. You are purchasing a way of living, not a shell.
The past stays outside. This home only holds what belongs to the life you're living now. If you haven't worn it in 90 days, the home was never designed to store it. Edit before you enter.
I've slept in enough Aman beds to know what thread count matters, what pillow loft works, what a mattress should do at 3am. The sleep setup in a Garbage home is possibly the most considered thing in the room.
No chandelier for the listing photo. No marble for the impression. No decorative objects that collect dust. Every surface, fixture, object earns its place by improving how you live daily. Nothing else makes it in.
I'm building a master list of every item that will and won't be in the home — and the reason for each decision. At handover, it ships with you. No surprises. No undocumented choices. Full transparency.
Issues will arise — I'll tell you that upfront. When they do, they get documented and fixed. Not a call center. Not a third-party. Me. Personal accountability is the only kind that actually means anything.
Every single object in a Garbage home is being catalogued, questioned, and either kept or cut. When the home is ready, the full inventory ships with it — every item, every decision, every reason.
* Inventory is live and being refined. Every item is a decision, not a default.
The Point
I spent years building infrastructure that runs the world's most demanding companies. Then I tried to buy a home in my own city. Couldn't find one worth living in.
So I'm building it. The way I've always built things — by breaking them first, learning exactly what breaks, and making something that doesn't. Starting now. In Hyderabad.
The Weekly Discipline
The fridge is cleared every Thursday. Old clothes have no home here. I'm not selling storage space — I'm selling a discipline. The home is designed around the life you want to live, not the one you've been too busy to leave behind.
How This Home Actually Works
If you need more than 3 knives, you're cooking the wrong things. The home ships with the right 3. Everything else is a collection pretending to be a kitchen.
Every home has one drawer where logic goes to die. Not here. If something doesn't have a designated home, it doesn't belong in the home. There is no miscellaneous.
Every decision gets asked: how does this feel at 3am? That's when a home reveals itself — wrong light, wrong mattress, wrong tap. I've tested all of it across enough hotel rooms to know exactly what fails.
Every charging point, every screen, every device — planned in the design phase. No cable management needed because there's nothing left to manage. The problem was solved before you arrived.
Walking in after a long day should feel like checking into a well-run room — everything in place, nothing to deal with. If arriving home creates friction, something in the design is wrong. I'll find it and fix it.
I know because I was one of them. Money creates accumulation. Accumulation creates noise. This home is for people who've figured out — or are ready to figure out — that less, when it's exactly right, is everything.
Every issue found after handover gets documented publicly. Not to prove I'm perfect — I'm not. To prove I stand behind the work. The log is part of the product. Transparency is the only real warranty.
The room count doesn't matter. The square footage doesn't matter. What matters is the life that happens inside — whether the home makes it easier, quieter, and more considered. That's what I'm selling.
From the Build Log
Every home has one. The drawer where dead batteries live forever next to a mystery key. That drawer is not a storage problem. It's a design failure — and a philosophy failure.
Read → 4 min
There is a specific distance a bedside table should sit from the bed. If you have to lean to reach your glass of water, the table is in the wrong place. This sounds small. It is not small.
Read → 5 minWhere I Build
Born here. Building here. Hyderabad has the right density of people who've built something from nothing and understand the difference between real and performed. That's the right audience for this.
I'm not looking for volume. I'm looking for the people who understand what's being built here — or who are willing to trust that they will eventually.
→ garbageconstructions.com → Hyderabad, Telangana