Uttar Pradesh is moving to strengthen its nature-based tourism economy with a new eco-tourism destination taking shape near Dudhwa National Park, signalling a shift towards environmentally sensitive development in forest-edge regions. The project, planned at Chandan Chowki in Lakhimpur Kheri district, brings together a private infrastructure and services operator and the state’s eco-tourism development agency under a public–private partnership framework.
Located in the Terai belt along the Indo-Nepal border, the site has long been viewed by planners as a strategic entry point for regulated tourism linked to Dudhwa’s protected landscapes. The new development is designed to balance visitor infrastructure with ecological safeguards, a challenge that has often constrained tourism-led growth around India’s wildlife reserves. At the core of the project is a five-acre eco-resort that will anchor the broader destination. The hospitality facility, expected to be operational by early 2026, is being developed as a low-density, low-impact property intended to blend into the surrounding forest environment rather than dominate it. According to officials familiar with the planning, the emphasis is on restraint in scale, controlled visitor flow and long-term operational sustainability.
The private partner is responsible for end-to-end execution, including design, construction, financing and ongoing operations, while the state retains oversight to ensure compliance with environmental and tourism guidelines. Urban development experts note that such models allow governments to expand tourism infrastructure without placing long-term fiscal pressure on public agencies, provided regulatory enforcement remains strong. Beyond accommodation, the project aims to position eco-tourism as a vehicle for local economic participation. Dedicated spaces for regional handicrafts have been planned within the destination, creating direct market access for tribal artisans from surrounding villages. Women-led self-help groups are expected to play a key role in supplying crafts, local produce and select services, embedding livelihood generation into the tourism ecosystem.
The project also incorporates organic horticulture zones and nature interpretation areas, intended to familiarise visitors with sustainable agricultural practices and forest conservation. This approach aligns with a growing trend in experiential tourism, where learning and engagement are valued alongside leisure. Dudhwa National Park holds high conservation significance, hosting species such as tigers, swamp deer and one-horned rhinoceroses. Urban planners and conservation specialists stress that tourism infrastructure around such landscapes must prioritise buffer-zone protection, waste management and water efficiency to prevent ecological stress. Officials associated with the project say environmental impact norms and carrying capacity limits are being factored into design and operations.
For Uttar Pradesh, the initiative reflects a broader recalibration of its tourism strategy. While the state remains known for pilgrimage and heritage destinations, eco-tourism is increasingly being positioned as a complementary pillar that supports regional development without heavy construction footprints. If implemented as planned, the Chandan Chowki project could offer a replicable model for forest-edge tourism across northern India—one that links conservation, community participation and carefully managed real estate development, while preserving the ecological value that draws visitors in the first place.
Uttar Pradesh Taps Private Partner for Eco Tourism Growth