Sustainable Small-Scale Hospitality Projects

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PAVA Designs the Nachan the Antique Courtyard Hotel

PAVA architects has completed Nachan The Antique Courtyard Hotel, a small-scale hospitality project in Chiang Khan, Loei, Thailand. The project has received the Architizer A+Awards 2026 Jury Winner in the Sustainable Hospitality Building Category and the ASA Excellent Architecture Awards 2026.

The Nachan The Antique Courtyard Hotel is distinguished by its harmonious integration with the serene Mekong River landscape. The project is designed as a tranquil village cluster that minimizes its footprint through the use of reclaimed timber sourced from old houses, abandoned warehouses, and local rice mills. PAVA architects respected existing trees by arranging guest rooms around triangular courtyards that provide privacy and a humble connection to the earth.

The material palette is drawn from locally available, naturally weathering resources, including handmade brick, on-site earth plaster mixed with native grass, and reused timber.

Trend Themes

  1. Reclaimed-timber Hospitality — Reused structural wood from homes, warehouses, and mills signals new value in circular material sourcing for boutique lodging and low-impact construction.
  2. Courtyard-based Eco Design — Triangular courtyards arranged around existing trees demonstrate how privacy, cooling, and landscape preservation can converge in compact hospitality formats.
  3. Locally Weathered Architecture — Handmade brick, earth plaster, native grass, and naturally aging materials create differentiation through place-based aesthetics and reduced dependence on industrial finishes.

Industry Implications

  1. Sustainable Hospitality — Small hotels rooted in environmental restraint and regional character reveal premium positioning opportunities for low-footprint travel experiences.
  2. Architecture and Design — Award-winning projects that blend vernacular materials with ecological site planning indicate growing demand for climate-sensitive, culturally embedded design services.
  3. Circular Construction — Recovered building materials and on-site natural finishes point to emerging supply chains that transform demolition waste into high-value architectural assets.

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