Sleeping under the stars : Chiang Mai's glass cabin escapes

- A Monitor Special Date: 16 September, 2025
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Norden Glamping

Dhaka : The road into Chiang Mai's northern hills winds past quiet villages and stretches of deep green forest. Somewhere beyond the last curve, the trees open up to reveal something unexpected: cabins made almost entirely of glass, shimmering in the filtered light.

These are not just rooms to spend the night. They are an invitation to live inside the landscape. Resorts like Morning Star Glamping and Norden Glamping have become the talk of Thailand's travel scene, offering visitors the rare chance to wake up inside a forest without leaving behind the comforts of modern life.

At Morning Star, the cabins rise like crystalline triangles among the trees. By day, the glass walls frame soft shafts of sunlight and rustling leaves. By night, they become windows to the cosmos, where guests can lie in bed and watch constellations crawl across the sky. Some cabins come with outdoor jacuzzies bubbling under the stars, others with loft beds that turn the forest into a private observatory.


Morning Star Glamping

A short drive away, Norden Glamping offers a quieter, more secluded take on the concept. Here, only four cabins sit tucked between streams and thick greenery. Each comes with its own bathtub - some outdoors, some indoors - and details like Marshall speakers and Wi-Fi that make the isolation feel indulgent rather than bare. When dusk settles in, the glow from the cabins softens into the trees, as if the forest itself is lit from within.

For many travelers, the allure is the blend of opposites: wild nature and polished design, solitude and comfort, silence, and luxury. It is glamping at its most photogenic and, for some, its most restorative.

"We wanted to create a place where people could truly slow down," one manager explained. "The forest does the work - we just built the walls of glass so people can see it."

In a city already rich with temples, markets, and mountain trails, Chiang Mai's glass cabins have carved out their own kind of pilgrimage. They are less about sightseeing than about stillness - a chance to step away, to listen to the forest breathe, and to fall asleep beneath a canopy of stars.

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