An inhabited wall is built around the village, defining a new boundary that treats the existing village as a redoubt of the rural environment to be preserved. While the wall houses the residences and the resort facilities, in its interstice with the village buildings, the pastureland springs up again. The strategy is to frame the pre-existing site through a perimeter and thus enhance its fertility. This idea is based on DOGMA's A Simple Heart project and its predecessor, Cedric Price's Potteries Think belt. In a similar way, a new social condenser is proposed, but replacing the educational with the recreational.
The poché approach in the layout of the floor plan results in a defined but varied and suggestive geometric figure, offering a contemporary reinterpretation of the cave as a holiday experience, where time is suspended. In response to the diversification of users, which to a large extent led to the disappearance of behaviourist tourism from traditional resorts, the rooms are proposed under the same structural system but from the diversity and uniqueness of the guest. The construction of this wall involves the confrontation of two architectures. The stereotomic, the wall, adopts the role of the central body which, perforated, houses the bedrooms and wet rooms. Upon the wall, a new tectonic architecture appears to shelter the communal spaces. The project thus arises from the opposition between intimate space and shared space, between the heavy and the light, between contemporary architecture and stony vernacular architecture.