DUBAI: Time magazine released its annual list of the “world’s greatest places” this week, with Saudi Arabia securing a spot due to its Dar Tantora The House Hotel in AlUla Old Town historical village.
Designed by Egyptian architect, Shahira Fahmy, the hotel is the “first and only lodging option built directly out of the over 800-year-old mudbrick houses that were once a pivotal stop along the incense trading route through the Arabian Peninsula,” Time reported.
Fahmy and her team restored 30 buildings in the area. The hotel is candlelit with minimal electricity.
“(The inhabitants) used to use cross-ventilation for optimal airflow, with one window higher than the other and one larger, so we have replicated that too,” she told Arab News in a previous interview. “They kept cool on terraces, so our rooms are terraced.”
People who lived in the city 800 years ago whitewashed the interior walls and adorned them with red and blue murals, Fahmy said.
“I was dealing with heritage. It’s an (ancient) Islamic city, so, it’s an archaeological ruin. You have context, where buildings are built between stones, mud bricks and farms. You are restoring something that already exists,” she said.