The resort, with 15 eco-friendly chalets powered by solar panels will be built on 50 acres of privately owned land.
The organic farm is proposed to be sited on 225 acres of leased state land near the Southern border of Sri Lanka's Wilpattu national park in the north west of the island, which was closed to visitors until the end of a 30-year civil war two years ago.
"This will primarily be an organic farm cultivating fruits and vegetables according to the organic forest garden concept which does not destabilize the established forest," said Rohan Fernando, the chairman of the HVA Group.
"The resort will be built between a buffer zone of one mile from the park.
The farm and the resort will complement each other."
Sri Lanka has seen a surge in tourism with arrivals growing 40 percent in 2010 and 36 percent up to July 2011. The state has announced that it would develop guidelines to build resorts inside buffer zones bordering protected areas.
The project is slated to start in O