• Kisawa is a resort on an island in Mozambique with sustainable, 3D-printed construction.
  • Rates will start at 5,000 euros per night when it opens in summer 2020.
  • Its founder has a background in luxury brands, and Kisawa has all the food, wellness, and adventure services visitors could want.
  • Visit Business Insider’s homepage for more stories.

Sustainability and preserving the local environment might be the next big thing in luxury travel.

Kisawa, a new resort on Benguerra Island off the coast of Mozambique, is betting that visitors will pay up for high-end travel using 3D-printing technology to build with the local environment in mind. The resort, which will open in summer 2020, has every amenity imaginable: a dedicated staff, private chefs, food and beverage, wellness and spa, hotel activities such as diving and marine safari, and electric vehicles and e-bikes to navigate the 750-acre property.

The resort will have 12 private bungalows of one, two, or three bedrooms, each on a private acre with its own beachfront. The one bedroom bungalows will start at 5,000 euros per night.

Press releases from the resort emphasize that it will not be fully 3D-printed, but the technology that is allowing sand and salt water to be used as a building material is still innovative.

Take a look inside.


The resort is on Benguerra Island, the second-largest island on the Bazaruto Archipelago, which broke off from the African mainland thousands of years ago.

Foto: Source: Photo by Planet Observer/Universal Images Group via Getty Images/Mary Meisenzahl

Kisawa was founded by Nina Flohr, a former executive at private jet charter company VistaJet.

Foto: Source: Photo by David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images for Assouline

VistaJet was founded in 2013 by Flohr's father, and appealed to a wealthy, international clientele. Flights reportedly cost as much as $15,000 per hour.

Foto: Source: David Slotnick/Business Insider

Source: Business Insider


Each Kisawa bungalow has a one-acre plot, complete with beachfront, a pool, outdoor kitchen, and more.

Foto: Source: The Boundary

According to Flohr's Instagram, the resort has an on-site farm to grow food that will be served to guests.

Foto:

http://instagr.am/p/B58XomXg23F


The building materials for the resort are made from the island's sand and saltwater to make a sand-based mortar.

Foto: Source: The Boundary

The mortar is used as the base material for the 3D printing technology to print construction elements including flooring, tiling, and masonry.

Foto: Source: The Boundary

Objects for the interiors of the 12 bungalows across the resort and their facades will be 3D printed, along with coral reefs and marine habitats.

Foto: Source: The Boundary

Buildings will also incorporate weaving, carpentry, and textiles from inhabitants of Benguerra Island.

Foto:

http://instagr.am/p/B6AqYvIgD5X


Kisawa says the resort will add 1,000 local jobs, and will "carefully preservethe environment and local culture surrounding it."

Foto:

http://instagr.am/p/BzKki-AAQMQ


Benguerra Island is home to wildlife including flamingos, dolphins, and turtles. Kisawa will have a diving center where guests can take marine safaris.

Foto:

http://instagr.am/p/B8W28fYgk-P