Persone e Luoghi
Artists & TeachersEvent OrganizersVenues & StudiosKnowledge BaseGlossaryInspirationFunzionalità della piattaforma
Prezzi dinamici intelligentiCategorie di bigliettiPosti assegnatiRecupero carrelli abbandonatiRecupero visitatoriDonazioni e prezzi variabiliSistema affiliatiScanner bigliettiCodici scontoDomande personalizzateCondivisione bigliettiUpsell e componenti aggiuntiviAnalisi e reportSequenze emailLista d'attesa / Notifica / PromemoriaVedi tutte le funzionalitàChi siamo
Programs at
Retreat Center · Buckingham, VA
Home of Integral Yoga and the LOTUS shrine.
Satchidananda Ashram–Yogaville sits on nearly 1,000 acres of rolling Virginia piedmont along the banks of the James River, where the Blue Ridge Mountains form a distant horizon. Founded in 1980 by Sri Swami Satchidananda, the charismatic yoga master who opened the Woodstock festival with a message about the unifying power of music, this intentional spiritual community serves as both a living ashram and the international headquarters for Integral Yoga International. The ashram took shape after Swami Satchidananda spotted the property from the air during a flight south from his Connecticut ashram, identifying it as the ideal location for his vision of a 'heaven on earth' where people of all faiths could come together. He financed the initial 600-acre purchase in 1979 by selling property in Falls Village, Connecticut that had been gifted to him by singer-songwriter Carole King.
At the heart of Yogaville stands the Light Of Truth Universal Shrine (LOTUS), dedicated in 1986 after a $2 million fundraising effort. Shaped like a hundred-foot lotus flower rising from a reflecting pool, the gold-leafed dome houses twelve altars representing the world's major faiths plus altars for 'Other Known' and 'Still Unknown' traditions. The entire structure embodies sacred geometry built around the mystical number 108, from measurements to design elements, and functions as both architectural yantra and living embodiment of Swami Satchidananda's core teaching: 'Truth is One, Paths are Many.' Visitors drive on the left side of the road approaching the shrine, a deliberate disruption meant to signal leaving habitual patterns behind.
The ashram is home to approximately 200 permanent residents, including ordained swamis (monks) who wear orange robes, ministers, and 'Living Yoga' practitioners who have committed to residential spiritual life. The community operates on principles of karma yoga, selfless service, with much of the work performed by residents and volunteers who staff the dining hall, maintain the organic farm, teach classes, and care for the extensive grounds. Daily life follows a structured schedule beginning before dawn: morning meditation at LOTUS, hatha yoga classes in Sivananda Hall, vegetarian meals in the dining hall where readings from Swami Satchidananda's talks accompany lunch, afternoon programs, and Saturday evening satsang featuring kirtan (devotional chanting), talks, and videos of the founder sharing his wisdom.
Integral Yoga, the system Swami Satchidananda brought to America in 1966 after being invited by pop artist Peter Max, synthesizes six classical branches: Hatha, Raja, Bhakti, Karma, Jnana, and Japa yoga. The practice is notably gentle compared to modern postural yoga styles, emphasizing meditation, breath work, and an inward, spiritually-focused approach that aims to integrate body, mind, and spirit toward the experience of inner peace. Swami Satchidananda trained under Swami Sivananda Saraswati in Rishikesh from 1949 to 1966, studying for seventeen years in the Divine Life Society lineage before being sent to the West. He opened the first Integral Yoga Institute in Manhattan in October 1966, and by August 1969, had become famous enough to arrive by helicopter to open Woodstock, greeting the crowd with 'Brothers and Sisters of America' in an echo of Vivekananda's historic 1893 Chicago address.
Yogaville offers an extensive calendar of programs: the month-long 200-hour Integral Yoga Teacher Training that has been running since 1981, weekend Welcome Retreats for first-timers, silent meditation retreats lasting up to ten days, specialized trainings in restorative yoga and yoga therapy, and visiting teacher workshops. Recent guests have included Grammy-nominated kirtan artist Krishna Das, who returns annually for Memorial Day weekend intensives. The ashram's Integral Yoga Academy serves as the educational arm, and facilities include multiple dormitories, three Lotus Guest House buildings with private rooms, camping platforms, an organic farm supplying the kitchen, hiking trails ranging from flat riverside paths to the steep climb up Mt. Kailash for sunset views, and Swami Satchidananda's former residence overlooking the river, now used for meditation. The property spans enough territory that some visitors bring bicycles to navigate between program locations.
Guests describe a palpable spiritual atmosphere, what one reviewer called a 'holy feeling', combined with the modest simplicity of ashram life. Accommodations range from dormitory bunks to private rooms with full baths, all decorated simply with pictures of Swami Satchidananda present throughout the buildings. The dining hall serves three buffet vegetarian meals daily using produce from the on-site Satchidananda Farm, though reviews note the food is more nutritious than gourmet. Coffee is not served at meals (the ashram follows yogic dietary principles that exclude caffeine, alcohol, eggs, and meat), though a small café sells weak coffee at limited hours, a quirk that caffeine-dependent visitors learn to navigate by bringing instant coffee for their in-room electric kettles. Cell phone service is spotty, reinforcing the ashram's invitation to unplug from ordinary life and enter a different rhythm.
What's Happening
38 programs · 41 total sessions scheduled at Satchidananda Ashram – Yogaville
Showing 38 of 38 programs