Kvareli Lake Reception Pavilion

Architects: David Giorgadze Architects Year: 2025

Location: Kakheti, Kvareli Lake, Georgia

Lead Architect: David Giorgadze

Team: George Giorgadze, Tamo Tekhova

Instagram: @david.giorgadze.architects

Collaborators: Edisher Tsotseria, Darejan Beshkenadze

Status: Built

Categories: Concrete, Eco, Georgia, Glass, Small

 

 

The Reception Pavilion is conceived as an imaginary purgatory — a passage from the polluted urban realm into a landscape of ecological clarity.

It stands both grounded and  imaginary kinetic: a tectonic circle in motion, where nature enters from every side and the visitor becomes part of it.

 

Located in Kakheti, Eastern Georgia, by the gem Kvareli Lake — a natural basin embraced by mountains — the pavilion marks the meeting line of forest and water.

It serves as the reception building of a resort: guests arrive, leave their cars, and transition to eco-transport toward the hotel. The architecture mediates between the lake’s serenity and the density of the woods.

The challenge was to design a reception space that balanced guest comfort, staff efficiency, and environmental sensitivity.

 

A large parking zone for 75 cars risked isolating the building from nature, so the square volume was rotated 45° to open visual and spatial connections on all sides.

Boundaries between inside and outside dissolve; the pavilion breathes with its landscape.

Under a floating concrete roof, open and covered zones merge in a fluid system that allows natural airflow.

Beneath the roof lie the reception area, guest restrooms, service spaces, and back office — the latter discreetly separated to ensure both operational efficiency and tranquility for visitors.

 

The tectonics are defined by a square reinforced-concrete roof resting on four supports: two enclosed concrete volumes — a circular one for restrooms and a square one for the back office — and two slender columns.

Between these, transparent glazing creates a 360° open main space.

The roof extends as a 6-metre cantilever, its rigidity ensured by a dynamic pattern of four beams.

The simplicity of concrete and glass ensures durability and minimal maintenance, while the structure’s openness allows passive airflow and reduced energy use — a solid frame for an architecture of lightness.