This Luxury Mountain Resort Looks Like It Belongs In 'Dune'

The hospitality project is an immense initiative by Saudi Arabia to redefine green tourism.

The future of hospitality. Credit: Oppenheim Architecture
The future of hospitality. Credit: Oppenheim Architecture

As luxury travel evolves into the 21st century, the glamour of ostentatious art deco-inspired monoliths or massive resort complexes wanes in the face of a more thoughtful look at luxury living.

READ MORE: Feeling Wanderlust? This 150-Year-Old French Hotel Will Spark Wonders During These Times

This applies even to the somewhat-maximalist sensibilities apparent in Middle Eastern tourism, which is now, more than ever, taking a nature-focused look at extravagance.

Desert Rock is a futuristic luxury resort set under the Arabian skies.

Oppenheim Architecture

The simply-named Desert Rock, in all its 48-villa and 12-suite glory, will be nestled within the crook of a mountain in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The project – already underway since July – is fronted by The Red Sea Development Company, a company funded by Saudi Arabia in the hopes of developing the western coast of the country into a tourist destination at once sustainable and worth visiting.

Ahead, a lowdown on this architecture icon in-the-making.


THE RESORT IS CARVED OUT OF THE GRANITE MOUNTAIN

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It’s an ambitious project. Turning some 28,000 sq km of desert, mountains and ninety islands into a paradise is no mean feat. Miami-based Oppenheim Architecture throws in with the likes of Kengo Kuma and Foster + Partners with their mountainous eco-resort.



For one, Desert Rock is integrated directly into the craggy granite massif it’s perched upon. A number of living accommodations are available, from ground-level rooms to suites integrated into the mountain face itself, halfway up the peak. Excavated stone and sand will be converted into the resort’s predominantly-concrete architecture; stone panels will also be used on exterior and interior walls and flooring.

IT'S ECO-FRIENDLY

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Said founder of Oppenheim Architecture, Chad Oppenheim, in a press release: “Desert Rock offers a ‘never before seen’ opportunity for guests to connect physically and metaphysically with one of the most dramatic desert landscapes in the world. Our key intention when designing the resort was to build with the land, not on it.”



Just as it’s harmoniously, well, intertwined with a mountain, the resort was designed to be extraordinarily eco-friendly. It’s fashioned to net the highest in LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification with energy- and water-conserving systems. Light and sound pollution, another bugbear for the eco-friendly resort of tomorrow, will also be minimised by way of redirecting roads away from the desert landscape guests are meant to enjoy.

EXPECT FULL TRAPPINGS OF LUXURY

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Despite being in a mountain, the resort will still come with a full suite of amenities including a spa, fitness centre and dining rooms. The lattermost, of course, stand to benefit from the magnificent, unfettered views of the desert landscape.



Planned outdoor activities for the guests include dune buggies for exhilarating dune bashing, guided hikes and star gazing. In line with Desert Rock’s mission to maintain harmony with the land, members of the local community will be hired as both tour guide and steward for the resort.



Desert Rock is set to house its first guests late 2022. The entire project, which will comprise some 50 resorts, golf courses, marinas and a slew of entertainment and leisure facilities – and an international airport to boot – is expected to complete in 2030.

A version of this article first appeared in The Peak

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