
Rare Regality: Inside Saudi Arabia's Desert Rock Resort
I never imagined that I would one day find myself waking up inside a mountain, surrounded by the stillness of the Saudi desert, in a villa sculpted directly from the rock itself. Desert Rock Resort, part of Saudi Arabia's Red Sea Global project, is not just another high-end destination – it's a paradox. Here, amid the raw, untamed landscape, opulence is not imposed but embedded, seamlessly woven into the earth.
Driving towards Desert Rock and venturing into the rocky terrain, I questioned whether I was really approaching a five-star resort. The usual grandeur of sweeping driveways and gilded lobbies was absent. Instead, I was greeted by towering rock formations and an entrance so discreet it nearly vanished into the terrain. It was a revelation – luxury here does not announce itself; it whispers.
Designed by Oppenheim Architecture, the resort is a masterclass in minimalism. Its very essence respects the land it inhabits, and painstakingly blends into the surroundings that I barely noticed the structures at first. 'Rather than imposing architecture onto the terrain, we allowed the land to guide the design,' says Chad Oppenheim, founding principal of Oppenheim Architecture, who is the visionary behind other notable projects such as Ayla Golf Club in Aqaba, Jordan, and Besa Museum in Tirana, Albania. The resort does not seek to dominate its surroundings; instead, it invites you to dissolve into them. 'The idea was never to build 'on' the land, but rather 'with' it – sculpting spaces into the rock, allowing the natural topography to dictate forms,' Oppenheim notes.
Photo: Desert Rock Resort
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I never imagined that I would one day find myself waking up inside a mountain, surrounded by the stillness of the Saudi desert, in a villa sculpted directly from the rock itself. Desert Rock Resort, part of Saudi Arabia's Red Sea Global project, is not just another high-end destination – it's a paradox. Here, amid the raw, untamed landscape, opulence is not imposed but embedded, seamlessly woven into the earth. Driving towards Desert Rock and venturing into the rocky terrain, I questioned whether I was really approaching a five-star resort. The usual grandeur of sweeping driveways and gilded lobbies was absent. Instead, I was greeted by towering rock formations and an entrance so discreet it nearly vanished into the terrain. It was a revelation – luxury here does not announce itself; it whispers. Designed by Oppenheim Architecture, the resort is a masterclass in minimalism. Its very essence respects the land it inhabits, and painstakingly blends into the surroundings that I barely noticed the structures at first. 'Rather than imposing architecture onto the terrain, we allowed the land to guide the design,' says Chad Oppenheim, founding principal of Oppenheim Architecture, who is the visionary behind other notable projects such as Ayla Golf Club in Aqaba, Jordan, and Besa Museum in Tirana, Albania. The resort does not seek to dominate its surroundings; instead, it invites you to dissolve into them. 'The idea was never to build 'on' the land, but rather 'with' it – sculpting spaces into the rock, allowing the natural topography to dictate forms,' Oppenheim notes. Photo: Desert Rock Resort