HARESH.
Building homes for builders.
I was born with a computer in my hands.
My dad showed me how code is made. Not to play games, but to understand how the digital world is built. The curiosity was lit.
Then the world paused. In the quiet of the lockdown, I discovered machines that could create art. I spent months building models, teaching them to see patterns before anyone was talking about it.
But as AI started speaking to the world, I realized something.
Most apps are shallow. They don't solve real problems. And in India, despite having so many brilliant people, we lacked the physical spaces to build deep things together.
Physical spaces are good, but a house is just the beginning. Now, my mission is to help others build, because people build beautiful things.
I realized the hardest part of building isn't the code. It's the people.
It's getting a room full of brilliant, stubborn minds to see the same vision. It's welcoming a new founder and instantly knowing exactly who they need to meet to finish their project.
It's creating perfect timing. I set the rhythm of the space—scheduling the late-night hack sessions, bringing in mentors, and making sure the fire never dies.
I became the bridge. When someone hits a wall, I find the person who can break it down. When a team needs a server, a sponsor, or just a quiet room with a whiteboard, I find it.
Because a great hacker house isn't just a physical building. It's a living home. And my job is to keep that home growing, thriving, and shipping.
I am a first-year student in Bangalore. Less coding, more coordinating. I help people collaborate, so together, we can build the future.