Riverstone A2
Morning. The river wakes you before the alarm does. Coffee on the open kitchen, light through the rice paddies, no traffic — just the chorus of the valley.
Afternoon. Work from the shaded loft above the living room, a meeting on the terrace, a swim before lunch. The villa has its own quiet rhythm; you stop scheduling against it after a week.
Evening. Friends from the village come up for dinner. Long table, candles, a slow conversation that runs past midnight. You realize you haven't checked your phone in three hours.
Riverstone is for people who are done performing, and want a place that lets them be quiet without being lonely. It sits inside an active community of owner-residents — not a resort, not a compound.
Twelve owner-families on the ridge. Weekly shared dinner. Daily kids-meet-the-rice-farmers walk. A regenerative kitchen garden tended by the Sayan cooperative.