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Discover Casa Wabi: the growing art centre of high design

Nature and culture find synthesis at Casa Wabi, an art centre on the Oaxaca Coast, writes Neha Kale.

It ripples through my body somewhere beyond my line of vision, the sound of the wave that booms like a thunderclap. The surfers who have flocked here since the 1970s called it the Mexican pipeline, this swell that rises and falls with the insistence of a heartbeat on this golden stretch of Mexico’s Oaxacan coast.

The evolving charm of Casa Wabi

Last night, I marvelled at it on our balcony during one of those Fanta-orange sunsets that are synonymous with Puerto Escondido. But now, I am standing inside the 10-metre-tall observatory at Casa Wabi. It leans at a 60-degree angle in the direction of the Pacific, like a temple half-buried in sand. The acoustics are near-perfect: artists have been known to play their guitars here. I sit on the wooden bench and look up.

the Casa Wabi Observatory
See the sky anew from its observatory.

Through the aperture, a piece of the sky floats – a flawless, bleached-blue oval. Over the edge of the wall, the Sierra Madre del Sur mountain range hovers ghost-like on the horizon, four kilometres above sea level. Here, the collision of mountain, sky and ocean exudes an elemental power. My senses are stretched. I’m awake to the primal energy of the landscape in a way I’ve never been before.

an art exhibition at Casa Wabi art centre
Explore site-specific exhibitions at the art centre.

To get to Casa Wabi, the art centre founded in 2014 by the acclaimed Mexican artist Bosco Sodi and built by the Pritzker-winning Japanese architect Tadao Ando, you drive 40 minutes from the cheery Puerto Escondido surf town of La Punta to Punta Pajaros.

Bosco Sodi’s installations at Casa Wabi
Bosco Sodi’s installations at Casa Wabi.

Casa Wabi’s high-design movement

This piece of the Oaxacan wilderness is fast becoming a growing centre for high design and regenerative developments by stars of the architecture world. There is Hotel Escondido, a series of bungalows, which couples adobe-style interiors with a beachfront infinity pool by Mexico City’s Federico Rivera Rio. And Casa Tiny is a minimalist, concrete dwelling inspired by Henry David Thoreau’s Walden.

a stylish beach-chic bungalow at Hotel Escondido
Check into a stylish beach-chic bungalow at Hotel Escondido. (Image: bookings through designhotels.com)

Along a winding road, we pass agave fields. There are signs for cocos frios (fresh coconuts). Our driver takes a wrong turn and reverses down a one-way road until we see it, rising out of the jungle. The lines of a staircase. A rectangular archway. A palapa, a traditional thatched roof made from dried palm leaves. A series of geometric columns and planes, made from silken concrete, so cool you want to press your face to it. This place washes over you slowly.

a thatched roof in Casa Wabi
Casa Wabi also oversees an international artist residency program.

Traditional Japanese architecture with a twist

At Casa Wabi, named for the Japanese philosophy of beauty in imperfection, I walk through the austere corridors newly alive, not just to the sound of the waves, but the passage of shadows.

The strange intensity of the afternoon light. “I have the best job in the world," laughs our guide, a fast-talking artist. He works with the Fundación Casa Wabi, which oversees an international residency program where the likes of Swiss sculptor and painter Ugo Rondinone, Argentinian artist Dolores Furtado and French sculptor Daniel Buren are invited to collaborate with the local Oaxacan community.

an abstract sculpture in Casa Wabi
Casa Wabi is dotted with abstract sculptures.

Here, John Giorno has hosted his famous Dial-A-Poem project, and Mexican artists Claudia Fernandez and Benjamin Torres have worked with Chatino schoolchildren to make drawings of native plants and rescue their local dialect.

I stop at an outdoor terrace to admire tiles arranged in an elegant circle – an intervention by São Paulo’s Héctor Zamora. Outside there’s Sodi’s Los Atlantis, a piece of land art made with 1600 bricks using ancestral burning methods. A monumental structure looms against the mountains like a remnant of an ancient civilisation, a chimney tower – home to a kiln – by the renowned Mexican architect Alberto Kalach.

the concrete wall of Casa Wabi
Sculpture, art and architecture intersect at Casa Wabi. (Image: Gerardo Landa)

A mix of art and nature

Time feels different in Punta Pajaros. My internet is slow. We stop for lunch at La Palapa, a thatched restaurant surrounded by foliage, where you can drink mezcalitas made from maracuya, a passionfruit that thrives in Oaxaca, and eat pulpo a la parrilla – tacos piled with octopus and garnished with edible flowers – off earthenware. On the same site, there are 11 villas drawing on regenerative principles.

the main pool at Hotel Terrestre in Puerto Escondido
Hotel Terrestre is run on solar power.

Wraparound decks made from local wood face the sea. Butterflies and birds have returned to the area. They are surrounded by native vegetation, more than 100,000 plants reintroduced by Kalach and his team. Nearby Hotel Terrestre is a brutalist structure that channels the patterns of ancient Maya temples and is powered entirely by solar energy. In place of windows, slotted wooden doors, plunge pools and terraces exposed to the elements.

Hotel Terrestre in Puerto Escondido
Impeccably designed Hotel Terrestre.

Back at Casa Wabi, I walk through the gardens, the sun hot against my neck. The cacti stand tall, strange shapes against the sky’s canvas. I nearly miss a sculpture by the Pakistani-American sculptor Huma Bhabha, art blending into nature, architecture a portal to a deeper relationship with the natural world.

the exterior of Hotel Terrestre
The brutalist lines of Hotel Terrestre.

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Getting there

Puerto Escondido is around 90 minutes from Mexico City by air with flights operating several times a day. Hire a driver to travel between La Punta and Punta Pajaros. Tours of Casa Wabi must be booked in advance online.

Staying there

Casa da Volta, a set of dome-roofed dwellings by Mexican architect Ambrosi Etchegaray, blends vernacular materials with modernist principles. Hotel Terrestre and Hotel Escondido, members of Design Hotels, tune into the environment with architectural clout.

a brick villa in Casa da Volta
Casa da Volta is where modernity meets tradition.

Eating there

Book Kakurega Omakase, a 12-seat omakase restaurant helmed by Keisuke Harada. Here, the dishes – such as tostadas de camarón (shrimp) – meld Oaxacan produce with time-honed Japanese techniques.

Playing there

For a nightcap, swing by Cobarde, a sand-floored mezcaleria that sources unusual small-batch mezcals from around the country.

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Join whale researchers on this private luxury island in Panama

    Kassia Byrnes Kassia Byrnes
    This luxury private island stay in Central America is taking whale watching to a whole new level.

    The only thing better than spotting humpback whales as they make their yearly migration? Doing so during a stay on a private 14-island archipelago set off Panama’s Pacific coast. Which is exactly what you can experience during the soon-to-be-launched Whale Weeks program on Islas Secas, as part of its wider Marine Safari experience for guests.

    What is Islas Secas?

    islas secas aerial
    Islas secas is nestled off Panama’s Pacific coast.

    Located 20 miles off Panama’s Pacific coast, and on the doorstep to the region’s incredible marine environments, Islas Secas offers luxury accommodation across three properties: Casitas, Tented Casitas and Casa Cavada. The latter is the crown jewel, a four-bedroom exclusive-use super-villa perched high on the cliffs for seemingly endless views of the ocean. Not to mention it’s surrounded by tranquil rainforest. On the property itself, find a semi-Olympic-sized infinity pool, and indoor and outdoor dining areas.

    Islas Secas sits within a vast marine ecosystem, boasting abundant wildlife, the largest Pacific coral reefs in Panama and two protected marine parks. This is why the property focuses on guest experiences to deepen the learning and engagement of the environment around them.

    What to expect from Whale Weeks?

    Humpback Whale jumping on its back near islas secas
    The resort’s marine program will focus on humpback whales in August.

    Whale Weeks will be a month-long program starting in August, designed to showcase the annual humpback whale migration. Guests will have direct access to the waters, researchers and conservation work surrounding this annual event.

    Hear first-hand field stories from, and ask questions of, marine mammal scientists working for Panacetacea, who will be living on site for the entire month. Join expert-led whale-watching expeditions, take part in Whale Songs & Science sessions exploring humpback behaviour and acoustic monitoring and listen to whale vocalisations recorded through hydrophones.

    Once they’ve left the water, guests can become part of the research team by uploading whale photographs to Happywhale, contributing to a global database that helps researchers and citizen scientists identify individual whales and track migration patterns.

    While the focus may be on the humpbacks, guests will get a look into other underwater residents as well – including Panacetacea’s recent confirmation of a resident population of Bryde’s whales. Guests will be able to learn how scientists use field observation, drone work, acoustic monitoring and habitat mapping to understand their behaviour and distribution.

    Whale Week sits within Islas Secas’ wider Marine Safari offering, which also includes snorkelling, scuba diving, kayaking, stand-up paddleboarding, nature cruises, conservation talks, birdwatching and private island excursions.

    The details

    islas secas pool
    Spend your downtime relaxing by the pool.

    Dates: Whale Weeks run throughout the month of August, but wider Marine Safari offerings can be enjoyed year-round
    Cost:
    Starting from $3500 per night on an all-inclusive basis, including all dining and drinks, one spa treatment per guest/per stay and a variety of activities on and off-island.
    Contact:
    islassecas.com or call 800-377-8877.

    Casa Wabi: Art Centre Of High Design - International Traveller