On a small yet busy lane in central Bangalore is a three-storey white house with a bright orange gate.
You might not notice the property when you walk past, but some of India's best companies of the future may be being dreamed up inside.
The southern Indian city of Bangalore is India's start-up capital.
Entrepreneurs from across the country, and indeed some from around the world, flock to the city - which is also the centre of India's computer industry - looking for ideas, investors and office space.
They also need a place to stay, but when you live and breathe entrepreneurship 24 hours a day, having to traipse back to your boring hotel room or dormitory at the end of the day isn't much fun.
This is where the white house with its orange gate has come to the rescue. Opening its doors in May of this year, it claims to be India's first start-up hostel.
Offering a home-from-home for budding entrepreneurs, the 20-bed property - the Construkt Start-up Hostel - enables them to live with like-minded people, and bounce their business ideas off each other day and night.
She's unsure yet of what she wants to do when she finishes her degree, but says that her time in Bangalore is attracting her to a start-up life.
With Construkt hoping to open a second start-up hostel in Bangalore, analyst Sudhir Singh of consultancy group PricewaterhouseCoopers says that while it is meeting a market need, he doesn't think it will become a widespread phenomenon.
"There is definitely a space for something like this, but I don't know if it'll catch on like wildfire," he says.
"It's where I'm sure a lot of aspiring entrepreneurs would choose to stay to network, but I'm not sure a well established entrepreneur would live there unless there are some innovative programmes they're creating to attract such people to the place."
But back at Construkt everyone seems very happy. There are strains of music, and people have brought out food and drinks to share.
Some are clicking away at their laptops, while others are talking about business, technology and politics.
Not very long ago, these men and women would have been called foolish. Setting up your own company was seen as risky and impractical in India. Today, I'm told, if you don't have a start-up idea as you graduate, you'd almost be looked down upon.
It's a life that comes with its own struggles - getting funding, hiring the right people and paying salaries, to name just a few. But right now, none of that's scaring off India's youngsters.