Earth-Formed Safari Lodges

The Kitirua Plains Lodge Introduces a Permanent Safari Retreat in Kenya

The Kitirua Plains Lodge was designed by Luxury Frontiers for A&K Sanctuary on a 128-acre private concession bordering Amboseli National Park in Kenya. Instead of conventional canvas tented accommodation, the project uses earth-based construction that responds directly to its landscape. Exterior plaster incorporates soil quarried from the site, while locally sourced Mazeras stone forms the floors and cladding. Curved walls, flowing rooflines, and integrated wetlands allow the architecture to follow the surrounding terrain rather than interrupt it, with each suite positioned to frame views toward Mount Kilimanjaro.

The lodge includes eleven one-bedroom suites spanning 1,250 square feet alongside two larger two-bedroom accommodations measuring 2,600 square feet. Interiors feature Kenyan mango wood furnishings, hand-woven sisal grass ceilings, clay bead lighting, sculpted metal details, and cypress decking sourced nearby. Passive ventilation reduces energy demand through carefully oriented openings, while blue-tinted mosquito netting enhances uninterrupted landscape views.

Image Credit: A&K Sanctuary

Earth-based Luxury Lodging
Site-quarried soils, regional stone, and sculptural forms are reshaping high-end hospitality through permanent structures that feel materially connected to their destinations.
Landscape-integrated Architecture
Curved walls, flowing rooflines, and view-framing layouts point to premium travel experiences where buildings are designed as extensions of terrain rather than visual interruptions.
Passive Comfort Design
Energy-light ventilation, shaded openings, and climate-responsive interiors create space for luxury properties to reduce operational demand without diminishing guest comfort.

Sectors Adopting This

Luxury Travel
Exclusive safari retreats with locally grounded design are expanding the definition of premium accommodation beyond canvas tents and standardized resort formats.
Sustainable Architecture
Natural materials, integrated wetlands, and climate-aware construction illustrate how destination buildings can combine ecological sensitivity with distinctive visual identity.
Experiential Hospitality
Immersive interiors using local craft, regional textures, and uninterrupted landscape views signal a shift toward stays defined by place-specific storytelling.
SCORE
4.4 out of 10
GENDER
50% Men50% Women
MARKETTop markets: North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa
GENERATION
  • Gen Alpha
  • Gen Z (primary audience)
  • Millennial (primary audience)
  • Gen X (primary audience)
POPULARITY
Popularity 16%
Activity 16%
Freshness 100%