This concept from Amusement Logic’s Design Department establishes architecture as a mediator between human beings and the vastness of the territory. The circular cabins rise up among the vegetation, enclosed by stone walls. These walls delimit, without isolating, a calm environment in contrast to the untamed energy of the landscape. Each wall defines a threshold: more than a barrier, it is a transition between the open and the intimate, between adventure and rest.
Far from being an architecture of fear, it is an architecture of respect. The closed form protects from the sun, wind and wildlife, without losing visual contact or natural ventilation. The materials—stone, straw, earth—are the same as those that shape the environment, so that each refuge seems to have emerged from the ground. The result is a compromise between shelter and horizon, between the need for protection and the desire to contemplate.
This design reinterprets the ancestral relationship with nature: living alongside it, rather than against it. Isolation becomes a sensory experience in spaces that inspire serenity without domesticating the environment. Places to feel the immensity from a place of safety and rediscover the luxury of the essential.




