A Working Model

Undo Center brings together sustainable technologies, ecological practices, and human experience into one integrated environment.

Here, visitors don’t just learn about circular systems—they live within them.

Energy is generated and used on-site.
Water is conserved, treated, and reused.
Food is grown, prepared, and shared.
Waste is redirected as a resource.

Every system is designed to be observable, understandable, and replicable in real-world contexts.

Services

Farm Visit

From ₹1,200 per person
Weekend and weekday batches available in Kanchipuram.

Hands-on sessions on farming, value addition, and solid waste management that turn circular economy ideas into everyday household practices.

Agriculture

Undo Center aims to act as a bridge—encouraging more direct connections between those who grow food and those who consume it. By engaging with farmers, understanding seasonal realities, and supporting local produce, individuals can play a meaningful role in sustaining both agriculture and the communities behind it.

Products

Seasonal organic produce grown within the ecosystem

Select harvests are value-added—coconuts and sesame are cold-pressed into oils, and groundnuts into small-batch peanut butter—creating value while supporting sustainable farm livelihoods.

Reviews

A meticulously organized circular economy hub interior with modular birch-wood shelving filled with neatly labeled glass jars, metal bins, and woven baskets containing sorted materials like paper, textiles, and electronics. In the center, a large reclaimed-wood worktable showcases disassembled products laid out in precise rows. Floor-to-ceiling windows reveal a hint of urban greenery outside, allowing soft, diffused daylight to bathe the space in a calm, professional glow. Overhead, minimalist LED track lights add gentle highlights to polished concrete floors. Captured at eye level with a wide-angle lens, the composition emphasizes depth and clarity, with sharp focus throughout. The photographic realism and clean, modern aesthetic convey a sophisticated yet approachable environment where sustainable systems are actively practiced and visibly organized.

Aya Nakamura

“Undo Center made sustainability tangible; our students now run a zero-waste canteen inspired by their immersive workshop.”

A close-up, photographic image of a circular materials flow diagram physically built on a smooth, matte white tabletop using real objects: small wooden blocks, metal gears, glass pebbles, and color-coded arrows made from recycled paper. Each segment represents stages of reuse, repair, and recycling, arranged in a precise loop. Soft overhead studio lighting creates subtle shadows that add depth without harsh contrasts. In the blurred background, shelves with neatly stacked cardboard boxes and labeled containers suggest an operational sustainability center. Shot from a slightly elevated angle with shallow depth of field, the composition draws the eye to the tactile details and textures. The mood is analytical yet hopeful, with a clean, professional aesthetic that makes complex sustainable systems feel tangible and understandable.

Mateo García

“Working with Undo Center transformed our farm waste into compost and income, while training local youth in green skills.”