Curved Terrain
The design creates a house that blends in its natural environment, comprised of steep gravel slopes, dressed in scattered wild thorny bushes, and beautiful large rock formations.
Context Integration
The most prominent landscape features, however, were the short, dry-stone retaining walls, locally called ‘xerolithies’, created long time ago, for land cultivation purposes. These walls, usually no more than a meter high, formed flat stripes of land parallel to the slope and extended along the entire surface of the hillside. The site with its ‘xerolithies’ was the spark of inspiration.

Morphological Approach
When one thinks of the Greek Islands and their vernacular architecture, scattered and stacked white boxes come to mind. The first step was to challenge this morphological preconception by imagining the main facades (front and back) of the house being formed as ‘xerolithies’. They start low and gradually develop at a sufficient height for a house. They move gently closer and away of the slope, independently from one another, forming spaces in between them. To achieve this, all the functions of the house were placed sequentially, making it long and narrow.
The walls have a lightness seeming as if like they were affected by the strong Cycladic winds, like ribbons in the air. To complete the ‘xerolithia’ likeness, the roof of the house was covered with soil and vegetation, emulating the natural landscape. This made the house almost invisible, especially when seen from behind and afar. Another important feature of the Cycladic rural house is the wooden pergola consisting of thick, raw, smooth, wooden beams and columns with a bamboo cover, all in their natural color. This structure appears also in the interior of the house, on the ceiling, following the traditional way of constructing roofs.

Material Palette
This particular element was used along the entire length of the structure, inside and outside. The beams supporting this structure, naturally, could not be placed parallel to each other; instead, they follow the house’s curvy morphology, like vertebrae on a long spinal cord. As a result, the bamboo was knitted in a fish bone manner, creating a unique pattern with beautiful shade textures. The doors and windows are wooden and simple, with a light olive color, and the main exterior walls are made of stone with no joint mortar. Both these decisions follow the traditional style and technique.






