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Culture04:00 · 5h ago

New Eréma Hotel in Milos Embraces Volcanic Landscape Over Classic Greek Aesthetics

MakoCenter
Translated & summarized from Mako by baba
The story · English

The newly opened Eréma boutique hotel in southeastern Milos offers a fresh architectural approach that departs from the traditional whitewashed Greek island style. Located at Cape Chalaka, where the wild volcanic terrain meets the Aegean Sea, the hotel features 41 suites, each with a private pool and expansive sea views. Prices during peak season exceed 1,000 euros per night, positioning Eréma at the high end of Milos' hotel market.

Designed by Aristides Dallas Architects in collaboration with Micromega Architecture & Strategies, the hotel integrates with the island's volcanic topography, natural caves, and geological layers. Instead of a single large building, the hotel consists of low volumes, sculpted openings, and terraces that extend the local landscape, aiming to appear as a natural extension of the ground rather than an imposed structure.

The design emphasizes simplicity, natural light, and climate adaptation, avoiding the iconic Cycladic white and blue palette. Instead, it uses local materials such as natural stone and marble in earthy, sandy tones to create a calm, monochromatic atmosphere. Interiors continue this theme with natural hues, soft textures, and locally sourced materials, fostering a sense of a private home rather than a conventional hotel room.

Each suite combines sleeping, bathing, and outdoor areas seamlessly, with features like large beds, rain showers, and wide openings to maximize natural light and views. The hotel promotes a slow-living experience with open communal spaces that maintain a constant dialogue between architecture and nature. Environmentally, the project prioritizes gentle integration into the sensitive geological setting of Milos.

Eréma represents a new wave of Greek hotels that move away from the uniform "Greek postcard" style toward a deeper local identity rooted in the island's unique volcanic landscape rather than its iconic white villages or beaches.

Read the original at Mako
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