Among the golden dunes of Egypt's Western Desert, Siwa stands as a lesson in harmony between man and the desert. Here, time does not erase, it shapes. Light dictates the rhythm of life, and the earth becomes shelter.
Made of karsheef - a natural fusion of salt and clay - Siwa's architecture is a pure expression of ancestral intelligence. Each wall breathes with the desert, absorbs light, and returns coolness. Each line is born of necessity and beauty, effortlessly united. It is an architecture that does not impose itself: it grows from the landscape itself, as if it had always belonged there.
The Siwi people knew how to transform scarcity into art. They built with what the desert offered and, in this simple gesture, created a timeless aesthetic - where imperfection is balance, and silence is presence.
Between myth and matter, Siwa remains a testament to the union between spirit and form. A place of wisdom and light, it inspires a creation that rises from the same essence: solid and ethereal, contemporary and eternal.
In Alma de Luce, this memory takes shape in a collection that reflects the architectural thinking of Siwa - the serenity of its construction, the poetry of its simplicity, and the silent strength that can only come from the dialogue between man and the earth.
