Some buildings ask you to slow down. This one asks you to look twice.
The Private Jet Villa in Uluwatu, Bali, is exactly what it sounds like — a decommissioned Boeing 737 converted into a private villa. Parked on a clifftop above the Indian Ocean, it’s one of those stays where the building is the experience.
The Architecture
The fuselage serves as the main living and sleeping space. The cockpit becomes a sitting area with a view most pilots only see from altitude. The wings stretch outward, no longer carrying anything through the air — just holding the structure above the jungle and the sea below.
What makes it work architecturally is restraint. The designers didn’t overload the interior with aviation memorabilia or theatrical details. The original form does the work. Oval windows. The narrowing corridor. The curved ceiling overhead. These aren’t decorative choices — they’re what the aircraft already was.
The contrast between the rigid industrial shell and the lush Uluwatu landscape around it creates a tension that’s hard to shake. Green cliffs, blue water, and a grounded jet. It shouldn’t work. It does.
The Stay
The villa is private, which means the whole aircraft is yours. There’s a pool, open-air living areas, and staff on site. The cliffside location puts you close to Uluwatu Temple and some of Bali’s best surf spots — though from here, you might not want to leave.
Rooms are designed for comfort within the constraints of the fuselage shape. The narrowness creates intimacy rather than limitation. Morning light through the oval windows is something specific to this place and nowhere else.
Who It’s For
Design-curious travelers who want a stay that’s genuinely different — not just decorated differently. If you care about how a space was made and what it used to be, this one gives you a lot to think about.
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