Founded by Lakshya Mittal, Sakshya Homes came into being from a belief that living, especially for a woman away from home, deserves intention, thoughtfulness, and moral clarity. I often tell people that Sakshya was not created to solve a housing problem—it was created to restore balance to a phase of life that is both formative and fragile.
If you are reading this, I imagine you standing at a threshold—between familiarity and independence, between what you have known and what you are about to become. I want you to know that Sakshya Homes was designed with someone exactly like you in mind. Not as a tenant, not as a number, but as a person who deserves a space that neither constrains nor neglects her.
When we began shaping Sakshya Homes, we asked ourselves uncomfortable questions. Why must women choose between freedom and security? Why does independence so often arrive burdened with disorder? Why is dignity treated as an upgrade rather than a given? The answers led us to create homes governed not by convenience, but by coherence—spaces where structure exists quietly in the background, allowing life to unfold without friction in the foreground.
And if you are a parent—perhaps reading this late at night, weighing options, and searching for a space where your daughter or kin will be both safe and at ease—this is the assurance we wish to offer you. Sakshya Homes is shaped by the same questions you ask yourself: Will she be secure? Will she be respected? Will the space support her growth rather than test her resilience? Every system we put in place, every rule we refine, and every standard we uphold is guided by the simple, unwavering test of parental conscience: would this be acceptable if it were our own child? Trust, for us, is not requested; it is earned quietly through consistency, discipline, and care that does not announce itself.
Every Sakshya residence is built on restraint rather than excess. Rooms are planned to breathe, not to impress. Cleanliness is habitual, not performative. Security is present without being intrusive. Privacy is respected instinctively, not enforced anxiously. What you will notice, over time, is not what is loudly offered, but what is gently absent—chaos, unpredictability, and the constant need to constantly negotiate one’s environment.
I do not believe luxury is a matter of embellishment. To me, luxury is composure. It is waking up in a space that feels ordered, knowing that systems will function without intervention and boundaries will be honoured without explanation. Sakshya Homes is designed to offer precisely this form of quiet privilege—one that preserves energy for living rather than expending it on managing life.
Sakshya Homes is not intended to dazzle on the first day. It is intended to support on the hundredth. It is a place that grows steadier with time, where living feels less like adjustment and more like continuity. If you choose to stay with us, my hope is simple—that this space allows you to become more yourself, not less.