Narköy Eco Hotel & Training Center is a built sustainable hospitality and learning campus developed as a holistic model combining accommodation, training spaces, and an organic farm within a forest valley environment. The project positions sustainability as a system—linking energy, water, materials, and daily operations into a circular approach rather than treating “green” as a visual theme.
Sustainability System Overview
Narköy’s ecological approach is explicitly framed around circular cycles: water management, upcycling & recycling, and waste reduction, coupled with local social impact and ecological awareness programming.
Construction Method and Low-Impact Site Strategy
Key construction decisions were made to reduce disturbance to the ground ecosystem:
-
Lightweight prefabricated steel modular units, designed as elevated structures on columns to minimize soil intervention and preserve below-ground continuity (water flow, microorganisms, soil ecology).
-
Raised walkways on piles, reducing ground contact while creating continuous movement through the landscape.
-
Accommodation volumes oriented to maximize southern daylight as part of passive comfort strategy.
Energy and Comfort Strategy
The operational strategy prioritizes reducing mechanical dependency:
-
Use of renewable/natural energy systems, including solar collectors/panels and a pellet boiler referenced in published project documentation.
-
High-performance insulation enabling thermal comfort with reduced need for air-conditioning; published sources cite Cellubor insulation (recycled paper + boron) as part of the envelope strategy.
-
Preference for natural ventilation instead of conventional air-conditioning noted in multiple sources.
Water Management and Circular Use
Water is treated as a closed-loop resource:
-
Rainwater collection used for landscape irrigation.
-
Greywater treatment and reuse for toilet flushing is described in published project documentation.
-
Additional published coverage describes rain + drainage water collection and solar-heated domestic water systems as part of the sustainability approach.
Materials, Interiors, and Upcycling
Sustainability continues into interiors and procurement:
-
Use of recycled / natural-content materials and upcycled elements, including furniture produced through reuse of construction waste in some cases.
-
Timber cladding is described (e.g., Finnish pine in published coverage) as part of the material language and envelope approach.
-
The site’s integrated model includes an organic farm; published sources note that a substantial portion of food served is produced on-site.
Role and Attribution
This project is presented as built work delivered during prior employment:
-
Employer: Emir Drahşan
-
Role: Project Architect & Construction Supervisor
-
Focus: construction-stage coordination, detailing follow-through, QA/QC and on-site resolution supporting sustainability intent through execution.