
Overwater Pod Villa within the Shebara Resort on the Red Sea
Shebara Resort
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Na chain of untouched islands in front of the Tabuk province of Saudi -Arabia, Shebara Resort Remove from the Red Sea like something from a science fiction film. The enclave of the 38 Overwater Villas and 35 retreats of 35 retreats is a remarkable experiment in radical architecture. From above, the spherical villas resemble a pearl necklace that’s casual above the lagoon, and its mirrored mussels reflect on the sky and sea until the border almost disappears between the constructing and the landscape.
Aerial view of the Schebara resort on the Red Sea
Shebara Resort
For the famous designer Paolo Ferrari, the founding father of Studio Paolo Ferrari von Toronto, the challenge was to be certain that the inside agreed to the skin of the resort. “We started the idea of natural futurism,” says Ferrari. “We wanted the rooms to look forward, but based on minerality, nature and craft.
This philosophy comes alive as soon as you step into it. Curved partitions include sculptural furniture akin to sofas that bend with the architecture, bed frames that grow seamlessly into bedside tables, and a monolithic bar cabinet that opens hydraulically to disclose an interior for red leather. “Every detail is a negotiation between engineer and art,” explains Ferrari. “Kreisspiegel floats like planets over vanities, glass pendants float like droplets over Onyx -stische, and baths ahms ahmen the flood flow outside. It is about creating an environment that feels both elementary and extraterrestrial.”
Air view of the principal resort and pool in Shebara
Shebara Resort
The material decisions were of central importance for Shebera’s visual aesthetics. “We made an early decision to use polished stainless steel inside as an important anchoring material,” recalls Ferrari. “This choice alone has pushed the resort in a new direction. It takes barefoot luxury and turns it on the head. They do not expect to see stainless steel in a villa, and suddenly she feels sophisticated, radical and fresh.”
The most unusual feature is the bar within the room. At first glance, it looks like a suspended steel ball, its purpose completely mysterious. “We wanted an object that was iconic, almost sculptural,” says Ferrari. “Only when you touch the hidden buttons opens it and reveals an interior wrapped in leather. It is a completely new way of thinking about the design of hospitality, which becomes the most surprising and unforgettable gesture in the room.”
Steel ball rod cabinet swims over the front room.
Shebara Resort
Bedroom within the Overwater Villa in Shebara Resort
EMA Peter Photography
Interior architecture with onyx bed frame.
Paolo Ferrari study
The beach villas have the identical futuristic design, but emphasize the broader space with expansive terraces, infinity pools and a seamless river between the sand and the ocean – probably the most exclusive residences, the crown and the royal villas that occupy your individual islands. “In the royal villa, the bed itself is carved out of a single onyx block,” notes Ferrari. “Here you really see the measure of handicrafts and ambition in this project. His architecture is made by furniture, furniture that is expressed by architecture.”
While Design Shebara’s show stopper, the guest experience is one other bonus. Visitors can choose from five characteristic restaurants from the Mediterranean Michelin Marco Garfagnini Ariamare To the Japanese Nikkei concept Iki.roeOr withdraw to the big spa that provides pearl and caviar treatments with a meteorite peeling. Other activities include yoga pavilions, underwater water adventures, a committed kid’s club, a big infinity pool and a state-of-the-art gym.
Lobby within the Shebara Resort
Shebara Resort
Main pool in Shebara Resort, which was designed by the Rockwell Group
Shebara Resort
But perhaps a very powerful thing is Shebara’s ecological focus. The entire resort drives outside the grid, driven by its own solar park, desalination plant and circular waste development system and received a Leed Platini certification. “We wanted to design something amazing, yes, but also something responsible,” says Ferrari. “The mirrored architecture does not prevent the coral reef, the mangroves, the desert. It disappears in the landscape that it celebrates.”
Shebara is accessible from its own international airport from its own international airport from its own international airport from the opposite international airport from Turtle Bay from Turtle Bay. For Ferrari it’s a brand new border within the hospitality industry. “It is omnipresent how luxury resorts often approach,” he says. “Here we wanted to undermine this in order to create somewhat iconic, futuristic, but still undeniably human. A place where architecture, nature and craft are in dialogue.”
Shebara is just not just one other island resort. It is an exciting experiment on the sting of the Red Sea, by which avant-garde design and ecological responsibility mix and by which Ferrari expresses it: “Luxury doesn’t only reflect the character.
Fitness studio within the Shebara Resort designed by the Rockwell Group
Shebara Resort
Four bedroom beach royal villa
Shebara Resort
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