

Aerial view of Shebara Resort on the Red Sea
Shebara Resort: A Sci-Fi Escape on the Red Sea
Shebara Resort, located on untouched islands off Saudi Arabia’s Tabuk Province, offers a unique and futuristic experience. Rising from the Red Sea, the resort’s design is inspired by radical architecture. Created by Killa Design and developed by Red Sea Global, Shebara features 38 overwater villas and 35 beachfront retreats.
The orb-shaped villas appear like pearls floating across the lagoon, their mirrored shells reflecting both the sky and the sea. From above, the boundary between the architecture and the landscape seems to disappear, offering a seamless fusion of nature and design.
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For famed designer Paolo Ferrari, founder of Toronto’s Studio Paolo Ferrari, the challenge was to ensure the interiors matched the resort’s otherworldly exterior. “We began with the idea of natural futurism,” Ferrari tells me. “We wanted the spaces to feel forward-looking but grounded in minerality, nature, and craft. It was always about balancing refined engineering with the warmth of something human and handmade.”
That philosophy comes alive the moment you step inside. Curved walls embrace sculptural furnishings, such as sofas that bend with the architecture, bed frames that grow seamlessly into nightstands, and a monolithic bar cabinet that opens hydraulically to reveal a red leather interior. “Every detail is a negotiation between engineering and artistry,” Ferrari explains. “Circular mirrors float like planets above vanities, glass pendants hover like droplets over onyx dining tables, and baths mimic the tidal flow outside. It’s about creating an environment that feels both elemental and extraterrestrial.”

Aerial view of Main resort and pool at Shebara
Material choices became central to Shebera’s visual aesthetic. “We made an early decision to use polished stainless steel inside as a key anchoring material,” Ferrari recalls. “That choice alone pushed the resort into a new direction. It takes barefoot luxury and flips it on its head. You don’t expect to see stainless steel in a villa, and suddenly it feels refined, radical, and fresh.”
Perhaps the most unusual feature is the in-room bar. At first glance, it looks like a suspended steel orb, its purpose entirely mysterious. “We wanted an object that was iconic, almost sculptural,” Ferrari says. “Only when you touch the hidden buttons does it open, revealing a leather-wrapped interior. It’s an entirely new way to think about hospitality design-something functional becoming the room’s most surprising, memorable gesture.”

Steel orb bar cabinet floats over the living room.

Bedroom in overwater villa at Shebara Resort

Interior design featuring onyx bed frame.
The beachfront villas have the same futuristic design but emphasize the wider space with expansive terraces, infinity pools, and a seamless flow between sand and sea—the most exclusive residences, the Crown and Royal Villas, occupy their own islets. “In the Royal Villa, the bed itself is carved from a single block of onyx,” Ferrari notes. “That’s where you really see the level of craft and ambition in this project. Its architecture expressed through furniture, furniture expressed through architecture.”
While design is Shebara’s showstopper, the guest experience is another bonus. Visitors can choose between five signature restaurants, from Michelin Chef Marco Garfagnini’s Mediterranean Ariamare to the Japanese-Nikkei concept iki.roe, or retreat to the large spa offering pearl and caviar treatments with a meteorite scrub. Pools, yoga pavilions, underwater water adventures, and a dedicated kids club are among the available activities.

Lobby at Shebara Resort

Main pool at Shebara Resort
But perhaps most important is Shebara’s ecological focus. The entire resort runs off-grid, powered by its own solar farm, desalination plant, and circular waste management system, earning LEED Platinum certification. “We wanted to design something astonishing, yes, but also something responsible,” says Ferrari. “The mirrored architecture doesn’t impose- it reflects back the coral reef, the mangroves, the desert. It disappears into the very landscape it celebrates.”
Accessible from its own dedicated Red Sea International Airport, a quick seaplane ride or a 40-minute boat ride from Turtle Bay, Shebara feels like another planet. For Ferrari, it represents a new frontier in hospitality design. “There’s a ubiquity in how luxury resorts are often approached,” he says. “Here, we wanted to subvert that to create something iconic, futuristic, but still undeniably human. A place where architecture, nature, and craft are all in dialogue.”
Shebara is not just another island resort. It is a thrilling experiment at the edge of the Red Sea, where avant-garde design and ecological responsibility mix, and where, as Ferrari puts it, “luxury doesn’t just meet nature-it mirrors it.”

Gym at Shebara Resort

Four bedroom beach Royal Villa