Built by the river. Built
with the river in mind.
A small eco-resort on the banks of the Sunkoshi, two hours from Kathmandu.
From stones, sand, and quiet.
We opened our doors in Baisakh 2082 on a stretch of riverbank in Sukute that, until recently, was just stones, sand, and quiet. Today it's six triangular villas, three bamboo cottages, four glamping tents, a pool, an open bar, and a bonfire that gets lit every night the weather allows.
Small enough to know your name by check-out.
Villa 03 · Thatched in 2082 BS by local craftsmen
Why "Triangles"?
The shape is a nod to the dui pakhe ghar — the two-sloped Nepali home you've seen tucked into hillsides your whole life. It's also a tribute to Namaste: two hands meeting at a point.
Stone walls. Wooden frames. Khar ko chano — thatched roofs done the way they've always been done here.
Almost half the team is from the surrounding villages.
Much of it from the Majhi and Kirat communities who've called this riverbank home for generations. The thatchers who roofed your villa? Local. The kitchen team? Mostly local. The people maintaining the trails and gardens? Local.
When you book a stay here, that money stays in Sukute. That feels worth saying.
We're not chasing eco-certifications for a wall plaque.
We're trying to do the obvious things well — source locally, hire locally, build with what's around us, and keep the place quiet.
It's not perfect. We're early. But the direction is set.
On the banks of the Bhotekoshi.
Triangles Resort, Sukute · Sindhupalchok · Barabise, Nepal. About 65 km northeast of Kathmandu, roughly 2 hours on the Araniko Highway.
View on Google Maps ?The river was here long before us. We're just lucky to be next to it.
— from the team at Triangles
Words only do so much.
The river's been there for centuries. The bonfire gets lit every night. Your weekend is the only variable left.
Sukute · Sindhupalchowk · Where nature meets luxury


