An Abudance of Wildlife: The Importance of Eco-Design

Sloths climbing tree trunks, howler monkeys foraging in the branches, agoutis running under the cabins, toucans flying overhead, red-eyed tree frogs laying their eggs by the pond at night, and an olingo passing silently through the darkness.

We’ve been travelling in Costa Rica for six months now and we have never stayed in a place so alive with wildlife as La Kukula Lodge. As we witnessed yet another troop of howler monkeys scouring the trees above our balcony, we realised the important role eco-design played in allowing the lodge to exist in harmony with the jungle.

The Importance of Eco-Design

The aim of sustainable building design is to reduce environmental impact. Pepo, the affable owner of La Kukula Lodge, enthusiastically told us that they worked closely with architects over the course of two years to design a structure that would work with the Costa Rican climate and environment.

The cabins at the lodge are constructed with teak wood, which is sustainably grown on Costa Rican plantations for commercial use. Its durability and natural weather-resistant qualities make it an ideal building material for tropical climates . Unfortunately, many of the hotels in Costa Rica are built from giant trees that were hundreds of years old when they were felled. These trees don’t make for long-lasting lumber and the wood needs to be replaced. By using teak, Pepo avoided cutting down trees and damaging the surrounding jungle.

Charlie at La Kukula ecolodge in Puerto Viejo Costa Rica - Charlie on Travel

La Kukula Lodge is built on an abandoned cocoa plantation, which – unlike banana plantations – left the largest trees standing for shade. With those important trees in place, reforesting the smaller trees is a much quicker process and animals can return (and have) in greater numbers. In order to increase the canopy for wildlife, the lodge has planted a rows of new trees, including cecropias which feed sloths, monkeys, toucans and kinkajous; mountain almond trees which are good for green macaws; and various other hardwood and fruit trees.

The extremely thoughtful eco-design at the lodge has ensured that the existing animals’ habitats are disturbed as little as possible. The cabins are built on raised platforms leaving the ground space underneath the cabin free for animals – and they do use it, whilst in the shower I saw an agouti run right out from under the cabin and into the jungle. The trees around the cabins are naturally dense and the surrounding paths are very narrow so as to maintain an unbroken canopy sweeps overhead, this allows troops of howler monkeys and other animals to forage and cross deeper into the jungle.

Sloth on way to Playa Chqiuita 1200 - Charlie on Travel

Eco-Design for the Costa Rican Climate

Costa Rica is one of the world’s greenest countries with over 90% of their energy coming from renewable resources and big plans to be entirely carbon neutral by 2021. At all of the eco-lodges we’ve visited, solar panels are being used to heat water. In line this ethos, none of those lodges has air conditioning.

Not only does air-con negatively affect the environment by guzzling energy and releasing carbon emissions, but moving between the high humidity outside to a room that’s pumping cold artificial air isn’t good for your breathing either. Coming from the UK where air-con is pretty much non-existent (the air is cold enough, right?) and after living out the year in our sweaty apartment in Taiwan without one, the thought of having an air conditioner doesn’t even cross mine and Luke’s mind. In Costa Rica however, where the tropical climate can get really humid, there are a lot of tourists who feel a room without an air-con is just suffering.

Eco-design harnesses alternative methods of heating and cooling, meaning that air-con isn’t needed to keep the room cool. Stepping into our room for the first time, we immediately noticed a fresh smell and we were relieved by how cool the tiles felt on our bare feet. Unlike many other rooms that we’ve stayed in while travelling in Costa Rica, the cabins here avoided that slightly damp smell which comes from a combination of cheap wood and humidity. By designing cabins with high ceilings, good ventilation and shaded windows, the room stays naturally cool.

High ceilings eco-design at La Kukula ecolodge - Charlie on Travel

An Abundance of Nature in Costa Rica

During our nature escape at La Kukula we met nature photographer and snake enthusiast, César Barrio, also known as Doc Frog. While on a hunt for a yellow eyelash pit viper (which I didn’t want to find), he showed us an incredible amount of frogs, including Costa Rica’s famed red-eyed tree frog. We watched him comically splash around in La Kukula’s tiny pond which he discovered, in awe, is home to three different species of turtle! When it comes to wildlife, eco-design really makes a difference; the abundance of wildlife at La Kukula Lodge speaks for itself.

What’s your opinion on eco-design? Have you ever stayed anywhere with such incredibly thoughtful eco-design as La Kukula Lodge?

Disclaimer: A special thank you to La Kukula Lodge for hosting us during our time in Puerto Viejo.