
Nowhere else builds like this — five-story bamboo houses over river gorges, for the price of a city hotel room.
Bali's jungle interior is where the world's most photographed Airbnbs actually live. The bamboo houses around Ubud — many built by craftsmen trained on the Ibuku projects — are genuine architecture: spiraling staircases, woven roofs, whole walls that open onto river gorges. Nothing else in this directory looks like them.
Ubud is the hub, but the better stays sit twenty to forty minutes out — Tegallalang past the rice terraces, Sidemen under Mount Agung, Munduk up in the cooler hills. You'll share the garden with geckos, the occasional monkey, and a soundtrack of running water. Open-air living is the default: expect outdoor bathrooms, mosquito nets that get used, and a scooter or driver for everything.
Prices are the quiet shock. Houses that would cost four figures a night in Costa Rica run $80–250 here, breakfast often included, staff often included. Dry season is April through October. The rainy months still give you clear mornings — and the gorges at full volume.
Bamboo architecture capital