Kheri is a 25-acre family estate in Punjab, run like a modern company. The land stays whole, the wealth sits in a family trust, a company does the business, and seven family members across three countries put in the work. This page is the whole idea on one map, for anyone who visits.
Read it clockwise from the top: the family settles wealth into the trust, the trust holds the company, the company works the land, the land grows into the brand, the brand sells to the market, and the returns flow back to the family and the generations after it. The KHERI mark sits in the middle because every arrow passes through it.
Punjab families lose estates to partition, one generation at a time. Here the land stays whole; the trust deed says so, and changing that takes the whole family, not one argument.
Every member holds a seat with one number they own and a checklist on this site. Salary for work, profit share through the trust. School comes first for the young ones.
Every process gets written down and automated where it can be. The 2-acre hydroponic farm is the first engine; when it proves itself, the playbook builds the next one.
No titles outrank others here. Every seat weighs the same at the Sunday council.
Papers and ground truth: land records, the trust, the company, vendor quotes. The farm shop gets the KHERI name. The family works its checklists every week.
The founder lands on the estate. First full council on the land. The first KHERI ghee is tasted. The polyhouse vendor is chosen.
The 2-acre hydroponic farm is built and growing: tomatoes, capsicum, cucumber, greens for hotels and grocers from Chandigarh to Delhi. The orchard is planted. The dairy grows.
The engine proves itself, the playbook replicates it, KHERI products reach the diaspora abroad, and the next generation claims its seats. The estate stays whole through all of it.
The estate sits in Punjab; the shop is on the roadside and the family is usually around. If you want to see the work, the greenhouse plans, or just have chaa with Bapu Ji, ask any member of the family. The build log lives on this site.