Maya Garden Vienna is a hospitality project in Vienna Austria, developed around restaurant / beach complex. The design of Maya Garden is conceived as a contemporary interpretation of a tropical retreat, where architecture dissolves into the landscape and hospitality unfolds as an open-air experience. Rather than relying on decorative gestures, the project is structured through a sequence of lightweight timber pavilions, shaded terraces, waterfront lounges, and landscaped pathways that encourage guests to move naturally between dining, leisure, and social spaces. Timber becomes the primary architectural language, introducing warmth, tactility, and a restrained material palette that allows vegetation to become an integral design element rather than an accessory. Oversized tropical planting is used as living architecture, defining intimate seating areas, framing views, and softening the geometry of the built environment. Retractable textile canopies, generous umbrellas, and open pergolas create a layered relationship between light and shadow, giving the complex a dynamic character that changes throughout the day. The furniture follows the same philosophy of understated elegance, combining woven textures, natural finishes, and soft upholstery to reinforce the atmosphere of relaxed sophistication. Decorative lighting, suspended across terraces and gathering spaces, transforms the architecture after sunset, creating rhythm, intimacy, and a subtle festive identity without overwhelming the natural setting. Along the waterfront, lounge cabanas and flexible event areas extend the restaurant beyond conventional dining, allowing the project to accommodate everyday leisure as well as celebrations within a unified architectural composition. The entire complex is defined by continuity, where landscape, architecture, and interior design operate as a single spatial system instead of separate disciplines. The work combines planting, wood, metal detail with a scope focused on restaurant concept, dining room planning, decorative atmosphere, creating a clear atmosphere for daily use, photography and long-term spatial memory.