The Cycladic landscape of Tinos with its strong features and rocky morphology brings the need for an architecture integrated with this land. Six cave houses in a linear arrangement are developed next to each the other, following the terrain. Caves dug into the earth, accompanied by volumes that protrude from the slope like rocks, create a system of voids and solids.
The common areas constantly frame the sea view through large openings. The limits of the indoor and the outdoor become indiscernible as the “inside” extends to the “outside” through U-shaped volumes, which, like engravings in the ground, intensify the