ALONAKIA
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Type
Summer Houses
Location
Antiparos, Cyclades
Type
2025
Architectural Design & Site Supervision
REACT ARCHITECTS – Natasha Deliyianni, Yiorgos Spiridonos
Architectural Design Team
Andreas Androulakakis, Tatiana Tzanavara
Construction Team
Paros Prime Construction – Angelos Kottikas, Erald Myftarago
Structural Engineering
Aggelos Kottikas
MEP Engineering
TEKEM Consulting Engineers
Photography
Panagiotis Voumvakis
Detailed Design (Construction Documentation)
REACT ARCHITECTS – Lena Dagkouli
Landscape Design
Eva Papadimitriou – OUTSIDE
Lighting Design: HALO Lighting
HALO Lighting
Perched on a rugged west-facing hillside in Antiparos, this residence is conceived to inhabit a dramatic coastal site while minimizing its visual presence. Rather than placing an object on the landscape, the project becomes part of it through a composition of excavation, terraces, and stone retaining walls that merge with the rocky terrain.
Arrival takes place from the upper level, where only fragments of the house are visible. From this elevated approach, the architecture appears as a series of stone enclosures and carved platforms embedded within the slope. The residence gradually unfolds through descending paths, stairways, courtyards, and terraces, recalling the spatial experience of a cliffside Cycladic settlement.
The composition is organized on two primary levels. At the highest point sits the main residence, a compact whitewashed volume containing two bedrooms and an open-plan living, dining, and kitchen area. Abstract and monolithic in form, it establishes a dialogue with Cycladic architecture while framing uninterrupted views of the Aegean Sea and the western sunset. Supporting functions, including a gym and service spaces, are discreetly integrated into the terraced landscape, reinforcing the project’s intention to subordinate architecture to the site.
Below, three independent guest houses are arranged within a network of stone-built volumes partially embedded into the hillside. Constructed from local stone and conceived as extensions of the retaining walls, they blur the distinction between architecture and geology. Seen from a distance, they read as natural formations rather than separate buildings.
A linear swimming pool forms the compositional center, establishing a horizontal datum between the upper and lower levels. Acting as both a visual threshold and a communal gathering space, it connects the different parts of the residence while reflecting the changing light of the Aegean sky.
The project is defined by a deliberate duality. The white upper house belongs to the horizon, expressing the identity of the principal dwelling through the language of Cycladic architecture. In contrast, the stone guest houses belong to the landscape, disappearing into the terrain. Together they create a constructed topography where architecture is experienced as a sequence of movement, discovery, and framed views rather than as a single object.
By transforming the steep site into its defining spatial quality, the residence achieves a careful balance between architecture and landscape, allowing the dramatic terrain and the vastness of the Aegean Sea to remain the true protagonists.