The design at Pearns Point is organized around a single discipline: let the land lead and the architecture follow. A natural valley on Antigua’s western coast frames the sunset through a 150-meter corridor, and every decision flows from that alignment. The Great House anchors the high point, acting as an aperture rather than a destination. From there, guests descend through a protected sanctuary of native flora and cascading lagoons toward the beach below. Stone pavilions built from local volcanic rock sit below the ridgeline so the natural silhouette remains unbroken. Seventy villa keys carved into the flanking ridges face either the planted valley or the open Caribbean. No structures interrupt the center. No cars enter the valley. What arrives at the western edge is not an amenity but a ceremony, where the sunset becomes a shared event and the architecture simply holds the frame.