Beta Village: Living With Intention
- Jan 28
- 2 min read
When we first imagined our Tierra Zen cabins, we were thinking about how we choose to live, how we want to live, and how we relate to land, materials, and time.
We are happy to introduce Beta Village, a limited collection of Tierra Zen cabins that emerged from that same inquiry.
Beta Village is an evolving place where 21 Tierra Zen cabins come together within a curated community of entrepreneurs, makers, builders, and kindred spirits who share a way of living that is grounded, intentional, and closely tied to the landscape.
To arrive at Beta Village is to step out of the pace of ordinary life.
The path moves through forest and light, across shifting ground, until architecture begins to appear, emerging from the landscape. Timber, shadow, and vegetation frame the experience, gradually shifting focus towards a return to presence: to living with materials, with land, and with the rhythms of daily life.
This is not conceived as a resort, nor as a short-term destination. Beta Village is designed as a place to settle into, a place to establish rhythms of living and working, to make and to reflect, to inhabit architecture over time.
Architecture as a framework for daily life
Life at Beta Village is shaped less by programming and more by proximity to nature, to craft, and to people who value depth over scale.
Days unfold through simple rituals: light filtering through timber, the sound of wind and birds in the trees, the material presence of wood under hand and foot. Some residents come to focus on their work; others to build, to write, to design, or to recalibrate their pace. What they share is a commitment to living deliberately, with care for place, materials, and one another.
Tierra Zen cabins provide the spatial framework — warm, grounded, and adaptable — but the character of Beta Village is shaped by the community that forms around them. Here, architecture is not the end goal; it is a support system for life.
Intentionally small, by design
Beta Village is intentionally limited in scale.
It is not designed to expand endlessly or to appeal broadly. It is shaped for those who feel drawn to a slower, more grounded way of living rooted in landscape, shared values, and long-term presence rather than short-term use.
For those exploring what it might mean to spend part of their lives in a place like this, whether as a long-term home, a retreat, or a base for creative work, Beta Village offers a quiet alternative to conventional models of development.
You can learn more about the project here:👉 https://betavillage.com
If something resonates, we welcome a conversation.
Living with the land begins with how we choose to live.



