JD Design Awards 2025 scaled

The Farm to Future Hub by Veeresh T S

MSc in Interior Design

Veeresh T S has basically thrown together a love letter to India’s farming roots—wheat stalks, mud between your toes kinda nostalgia, but with a wild twist of philosophy. It’s not just old plows gathering dust. No, this place leans into the idea of chakras—the seven big ones from Indian tradition—sneakily tying spiritual vibes into the dirt-under-your-nails world of agriculture.

Each chunk of the museum syncs with a chakra. Root Chakra? It’s all “get your hands in the soil, connect to the earth” energy. Sacral Chakra? That’s all about water—paddies, canals, monsoons. By the time you hit Solar Plexus, you’re dealing with tractors and the big, powerful stuff. Heart Chakra? It’s the neighborly help-your-buddy-in-the-field kinda deal. Throat? Communication, trade, basically how farm gossip turns into business. Third Eye? And we’re in the brainiac zone—agricultural hacks, cool inventions. For the Crown Chakra—idealism, next-gen farming, all the sustainability buzzwords rolled into shiny honored promises for the future.

The Farm to Future Hub by Veeresh T S

It’s not just look-don’t-touch. You’ll find hands-on exhibits, random workshops where you might just end up planting seeds yourself, and displays that bounce between old-school and high-tech. It’s got that whole “stop, breathe, think about where your dinner comes from” vibe cozying up alongside legit research and fun for the future farm nerds.

It’s not a boring old museum. It oozes culture, but with a forward-looking energy. Whether you’re an over-caffeinated student, an Instagram-happy tourist, or someone who just wants to geek out over tractors, the place somehow bridges everything. Makes you wonder: why don’t all museums go this hard?

front view brazilian woman working as clothing designer

It’s not just look-don’t-touch. You’ll find hands-on exhibits, random workshops where you might just end up planting seeds yourself, and displays that bounce between old-school and high-tech. It’s got that whole “stop, breathe, think about where your dinner comes from” vibe cozying up alongside legit research and fun for the future farm nerds.

It’s not a boring old museum. It oozes culture, but with a forward-looking energy. Whether you’re an over-caffeinated student, an Instagram-happy tourist, or someone who just wants to geek out over tractors, the place somehow bridges everything. Makes you wonder: why don’t all museums go this hard?