Case study · Hospitality

Six Senses Red Sea. Geometry meets remote logistics.

Coordinating geometrically expressive resort architecture and luxury villas across a remote Red Sea site, where every curved roof, plantroom and barge delivery had to line up in one model before it lined up on the ground.

Client Red Sea Global
Engagement BIM coordination
Sector Hospitality · Resort · Villas
Disciplines Architecture · Structure · MEP · Marine · Landscape
Duration ~22 months
What's in the walkthrough

What you actually get

The walkthrough is the case study. Public sites can only show so much, here's what we send when you request access.

  1. 01

    Project setup.

    The brief from Red Sea Global, the design intent for the resort and villa clusters, and the remote-site constraints we walked into, access windows, barge schedules, and the consultants we federated against.

  2. 02

    Coordination through phases.

    How clashes were resolved on the curved feature-roof geometry, how MEP was driven to LOD 400 with maintenance access enforced inside every plantroom, and how marine and shoreline interfaces were carried in the same federated model.

  3. 03

    What we shipped.

    Federated models, discipline-specific shop drawings, plantroom and riser sets, clash reports, marine-interface views, and a sequencing pack tied to barge and road logistics for the remote site. With sample frames.

  4. 04

    What it produced.

    Quantified outcomes where we have them, site clashes avoided on curved geometry, programme weeks recovered against the logistics window, and post-handover defects on plantrooms. Honest numbers.