Rozivka Winery is a hospitality project in Odessa Ukraine, developed around winery. Rozivka Winery was envisioned as a contemporary wine estate where architecture, production, hospitality, and landscape exist as a single immersive environment. Rather than designing separate functional zones, the project creates a unified spatial narrative that connects the winery’s production facilities, tasting halls, restaurant, terraces, hotel, and pool areas through a shared architectural language rooted in Mediterranean warmth and artisanal tradition. The architecture juxtaposes raw stone facades, exposed timber structures, aged metals, and handcrafted textures with the clarity of contemporary industrial spaces. Natural light, double-height volumes, and layered materiality shape an atmosphere that feels both monumental and deeply intimate — evoking the timeless character of traditional wine estates while remaining distinctly modern. Inside, the wine becomes the central architectural element. Barrel walls, sculptural bottle displays, suspended woven installations, and tactile earthy surfaces transform the interiors into sensory environments centered around ritual, craftsmanship, and terroir. The boundaries between production, tasting, gastronomy, and leisure are intentionally softened, allowing visitors to experience the culture of winemaking as a continuous journey rather than a sequence of isolated spaces. The project explores the idea of slow living through architecture — spaces designed for atmosphere, rhythm, and emotional connection. From shaded stone arcades and vineyard-facing terraces to serene hospitality zones immersed in landscape, every element was conceived to create a dialogue between nature, material, and time. At Rozivka Winery, architecture becomes an extension of the winemaking philosophy itself: authentic, tactile, and shaped by experience. The work combines timber, stone, warm plaster with a scope focused on winery concept, guest atmosphere, material direction, creating a clear atmosphere for daily use, photography and long-term spatial memory.