Retreat Cabin Construction
Retreat Cabin Construction
Functional Dunhuang Retreat Spaces Today
The "Living" Dunhuang
The Meaning of the "Caves"
Dunhuang West Reimagines the "Caves" in the Modern Era
Rather than replicating form, we aim to reconstruct the spatial conditions necessary to support deep contemplation and long-term practice.The first phase of this practice is unfolding in the Arizona desert, exploring the contemporary possibilities of the “caves” while maintaining deep reverence for the local landscape and cultural heritage.
These spaces are built to be actively lived in, not symbolically observed.
Why Arizona?
- A Natural Environment Superbly Suited for Deep Retreats
- A Proven Foundation of Long-Term Retreat Practices
- An Opportunity for Innovative Construction with Ecological Reverence
Reactivating the caves for lived practice, while opening the gates for the world to step inside.
Three Types of Retreat Cabins
To make it truly usable, we must provide distinct entry points for individuals at different stages of their journey. Some require short-term silence to swiftly find their bearings; others need extended, deep practice; while some seek to master these methods into enduring capabilities, enabling them to anchor and support others.
Deep Retreats
Diamond Mountain · Cave Retreat Cabin
Project Introduction
Dunhuang West is dedicated to constructing Dunhuang-style retreat caves in the Arizona desert, inheriting ancient traditions through modern methodology and integrating them with the local desert landscape to enable the grotto to regain its vital purpose in the contemporary world.
Diamond Mountain lies far removed from the hustle of the world, possessing years of accumulated silent energy and an exceptional “material silence,” making it the ideal sanctuary for deep, immersive retreats.
Three Key Highlights
Marble & Deep Contemplation
Diamond Mountain sits atop a deep, 800-meter marble vein that extends beneath the range. By integrating this native material into our modern cave design, we create a living dialogue between the site and its history—an architectural synergy impossible to replicate in the original Dunhuang caves.
Mural Arts: Heritage + Innovation
Our team has conducted an in-depth comparative study between Dunhuang’s mineral pigments and those native to our site. We aim to synthesize these geological narratives, preserving the authentic spirit of Dunhuang murals while innovating through a unique, local color palette.
The Grotto Art: A Cross-Cultural Co-Creation
We have begun connecting artists from East and West, successfully launching initial sculpture trials that fuse Diamond Mountain marble with our cave concepts. This marks the beginning of a living dialogue between diverse creative lineages.
Who Is This For
- Those who wish to engage in deep retreats or long-term practice.
- Those in architecture, art, and academia who research how space supports mental training and creativity.
- Co-creators who believe that ancient wisdom is not disconnected from modern business and technology.
How Can You Support
Co-building: Supporting cave construction, research into materials and craftsmanship, translation, and archival work.
Collaboration: Artist residencies, and partnerships in murals, sculpture, film, and documentation.
Short-Term Retreats
Dragonshead · Treehouse Retreat Cabin
Silence, Even in the Short Term
The Dragonshead Treehouse Retreat Cabin is designed for busy entrepreneurs and creators, offering a lower barrier to entry and a more contemporary rhythm to help you complete a high-quality cycle of “pause, restore, and relaunch” within 2–7 days.
Core Experience
Rapid Transition
Depart from your daily environment and return to your inner order through the embrace of nature and solitude.
Efficient Structure
Built upon a framework of “silence + documentation + light guided practice,” making inspiration both visible and actionable.
Understated Luxury but Restrained
Comfortable, secure, and private, while preserving essential space for contemplation—a retreat is not a vacation, but a return to clarity.
Who Is This For
High-pressure decision-akers, entrepreneurs and managers.
- Creative professionals, writers, directors, designers, and anyone in search of “new ideas.”
- Individuals needing short-term recovery for sleep, and the rebuilding of focus and rhythm.
How Can You Support
- A clearer “Innovation Domain / Problem Boundary”
- An actionable “Next Steps” checklist
- A more stable routine and renewed sense of focus
Training Retreats
Mesa · Teahouse Retreat Cabin
Cultivating the "Cable Retreatants"
We are planning to build a retreat center near the mesas of Arizona, USA, designed for training and long-term practice. Students can stay for 2–3 weeks at a time, receiving close-proximity support and guidance whenever they encounter challenges.
Design Philosophy: Tang-Dynasty Teahouse meets Arizona Mesa Architecture
We aim to integrate the spirit of the Tang-Dynasty teahouse with the vernacular architecture of Arizona: utilizing locally sourced cob (earth and straw) construction systems that are inherently adapted to the desert climate and provide long-term stability, while incorporating Eastern traditions into the roof design and overall spatial atmosphere.
Core Purpose
Facilitator Training: Learning to design schedules, maintain silent, facilitate documentation, and bridge the transition back to reality.
Long-Term Practice Space: Designed to support extended periods of silence and deep self-observation.
Who Is This For
Individuals who wish to systematically learn the methodology of the retreat and are interested in leading others in the future.
Dedicated students who require a stable support system and the opportunity for recurring, advanced training.
These caves are not monuments; they are spaces designed for the users of the next thousand years.
Additional Information
Meditation Grottoes in the Mogao Caves’ North Area
How to Build a "Habitable Cave"
The caves of the Mogao Grottoes offer more than just a spectacle to be observed. Beyond the south-facing caves, where the focus lies on worship, patronage, murals, and polychrome sculptures, the north area preserves a wealth of spaces closer to everyday utility: stripped of ornamentation, they emphasize quietude and functionality.
These are dwelling-like retreats carved into the rock face—spaces designed for sitting, for living, and for long-term presence, where practice transitions from ritual into daily life.
Three Common Structural Archetypes of the Northern Meditation Caves
Single-Chamber Cave
Beyond the entrance lies an intimate space for solitude, fulfilling the fundamental need for a place to sit and be.
Multi-Chamber Cave
Beyond the main space lies a smaller meditation chamber, leading from communal engagement to solitary practice—a gradual progression inward.
Monk's Living Cave
Integrating daily living into the cave allows one to “reside” within the practice, grounding it into the rhythm of everyday life.
Five Observation Points to Master The Structure
- Is there a sense of greater privacy and more enclosed space?
- Is the light controlled to create a transition between light and shadow, guiding one into stillness?
- Is there a clear hierarchy between the "main chamber" and the "inner chamber"?
- Are there signs of daily life that suggest a space meant for dwelling?
- Is the movement flow more streamlined, reducing distractions?
The North Area offers not a paradigm of decoration, but an architectural method: using the structure itself to hold the practice. It allows us to more easily imagine how to create spaces for long-term practice in a contemporary context—in ways that are more concise and sustainable.
