Project Reference

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ALILA VILLAS ULUWATU

Location: Uluwatu, Bali, Indonesia

Architect, Interior Designer: WOHA Architects

  • Brand Highlights :

The remarkable open-plan design is filled with marriages between carefully curated materials

On a clifftop plateau along the southern coastline of Bali’s Bukit Peninsula, Singapore-based architectural firm WOHA re-imagined a wondrous cutting-edge hotel for nature lovers and paradise seekers. Alila Villas Uluwatu was born from a seamless orchestration between contemporary design, traces of nature, and traditional Balinese accents. Reflected in every part of the compound, touches of water, stone, wood, and rattan are integrated, not only to follow an environmentally sustainable framework, but to create flowing spaces from inside overlooking the breathtaking vistas of the Indian Ocean.

The remarkable open plan design is filled with a blend of carefully curated materials. Walls made from palimanan stones from Yogyakarta are enhanced with bamboo and rattan interiors, which are locally sourced and crafted in Bali. The harmonious contrast between the recycled wooden materials and the refined shower room with a GROHE Rainshower 310 system signify an unrivalled attention to detail. All of this is combined in a picture-perfect escape sitting just on the edge of limestone cliffs which cascade down to the ocean.

Designer Highlights

WOHA

The Singapore-based architectural practice founded by Wong Mun Summ and Richard Hassell in 1994 have gained global recognition for their integration of environmental and social principles at every stage of the design process.  WOHA has built projects range from residential towers, hotels and public housing to transportation hubs and institutional buildings, and they have proposed many schemes that integrate several, if not every, building type within one structure.

In a process they describe as ‘Macro- Architecture Micro-Urbanism’, WOHA have increasingly focused upon designing buildings as integrated mini-cities, which regenerate the greater urban context by providing environments that are both sustainable and sociable.

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