Ammosphere began as a question: could a small group of houses, on a piece of land we love, hold a holiday in the way we wanted to live one ourselves?
The answer turned into four houses. Two pairs of mirror buildings on the dunes of Ammolofoi, sharing a single infinity pool and a single architectural language: solid wood, calm light, generous bedrooms, salt-cleaned water, materials that age well and don’t ask much of the planet.
Each house has its own personality. Ammosphere I and II sleep up to eight and feel built for an extended family or two couples travelling together. Ammosphere III is the more intimate of the four — three bedrooms, a loft with a private balcony, the right size for a smaller family or a couple who want room to spread out. Ammosphere IV is the same layout as III, but designed end-to-end for guests with reduced mobility or low vision: a step-free ground-floor bathroom, braille signage, an information folder printed in braille — the things that should be standard everywhere and somehow still aren’t.
Around the houses, life is quiet. The beach is a five-minute walk; Nea Peramos is two kilometres up the hill, with a bakery and a pharmacy and the kind of fish tavernas where the fisherman knows your face by the second visit. Mount Pangaeon — the ancient gold mountain — stands across the bay as the sunset’s backdrop.
We hope you stay long enough to slow down. That’s really all we built this for.