3 Cliffside Communities and Underground Towns

Towns throughout the world strive for connection with their natural environment. Here are three which built very close relationships with local geology.

 Hotel Sidi Driss, Matmata. Scottroberts. CC BY 2.0 

Venice may be renowned for its aquatic urban planning, but it’s not the only place making resourceful use of its surroundings. Learn about the following three settlements whose residents literally live under a rock (or two). 

1.     Setenil de las Bodegas, Spain

Biking street in Setenil de las Bodegas. Kans1985. CC BY 2.0

In Southern Spain lies Setenil de las Bodegas, a town carved into towering bluffs of rock. The rocky cliffs are remnants of a canyon gorge eroded by the river Rio Trejo and were first developed for residence by the Moors in the 12th century. They built houses directly into cave walls to provide inexpensive, temperature-regulated dwellings at minimal risk from disasters such as earthquakes or wildfire. With expansive rocky overhangs serving as natural roofing, these houses are materially efficient and easy to maintain. The three thousand inhabitants of Setenil de las Bodegas take pride in local history; the town is named after seven battles fought by Catholic Spaniards against the Moorish rulers during the Reconquista. The Moors maintained their defensive stronghold throughout six attempts but were defeated by the Catholics on the seventh.

Visitors may tour the town’s Nazari castle, an Arabian fortress dating back to the Almohad Caliphate, and the signature church of Our Lady of the Incantation. In addition, Setenil de las Bodegas offers several restaurants and bars for visitors to sample among its stony streets; dine upon the traditional local delicacy sopa cortijera, a wild asparagus soup enriched with boiled eggs and chorizo.

2.     Matmata, Tunisia

Troglodyte house. Professor Mortel. CC BY 2.0

Just across the Mediterranean Sea, Berber descendants populate the town of Matmata, iconic for its traditional subterranean dwellings. Historians are uncertain about when these troglodytes first emerged; settlement may have occurred as early as the 11th century or as late as the 15th. The Berbers excavated clay from underground pits to form cool spaces within which they could evade the dry heat of the Matmata valley. Deep, circular pits were dug into the sandstone ground and hollowed out. The troglodyte spaces were subsequently dug out around the pit’s perimeter, leaving the central pit as a courtyard. Sandstone clay was soft enough to excavate by hand but would harden rapidly upon exposure to air. Such underground homes were sturdy but vulnerable to flooding; during the 1960’s Matmata were forced to evacuate due to extreme rains.

Visitors may immediately recognize Hotel Sidi Driss, the site selected by George Lucas to film Luke Skywalker’s childhood home on the planet of Tatooine, within Matmata. Hotel Sidi Driss operates to date, boasting twenty rooms, a hotel restaurant, and Star Wars decorations in homage to its movie history. 

3.     Coober Pedy, Australia

The underground church in Coober Pedy. www.wbayer.com. CC BY 2.0

In Australia’s outback, Coober Pedy is a storied subterranean town situated at the edge of the Great Victoria Desert. The town originated from the discovery of opal reservoirs in 1916 and soon became a premier mining community. Miners moved to Coober Pedy to try their luck at burrowing for gemstones but found extreme temperatures more often than opals. To deal with the dry summer heat, which can exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, miners started to sleep and eat in the mines. It wasn’t long before miners decided to dig out proper buildings from sandstone to reside in. Currently, Coober Pedy boasts public museums, libraries, churches, bars, a drive-in theatre and even a swimming pool,—all underground.     

But the ‘Opal Capital of the World’ has cause for another claim to fame: ‘Hollywood of the Outback.’ Coober Pedy is renowned for science fiction filmography due to its extreme environment and barren landscapes. Hardly any vegetation grows natively; Coober Pedy’s tallest tree used to be a sculpture of scrap metal before townsfolk planted seeds. Moviemakers have flocked to Coober Pedy to leverage the area’s uncanny resemblance to other planets. “Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome,” “Pitch Black,” “Red Planet” and “Until the End of the World Planet” are some sci-fi films shot in Coober Pedy.



Rohan A. Rastogi

Rohan is an engineering graduate from Brown University. He is passionate about both writing and travel, and strives to blend critical thinking with creative communication to better understand the places, problems, and people living throughout the world. Ultimately, he hopes to apply his love for learning and story-sharing skills to resolve challenges affecting justice, equity, and humanity.

Australia’s Underground Town

In the 100-year-old mining town of Coober Pedy, Australia, more than half of the population lives underground, escaping the heat. 

An underground bookstore in Coober Pedy, Australia. Smart Encyclopedia. CC BY-NC 2.0 

Over half of the few thousand residents of Coober Pedy, Australia, live underground. The town was founded over 100 years ago, in 1915, when a teenage boy out prospecting for gold discovered opals. A settlement was quickly established and miners began to flock to the area. Coober Pedy became one of the largest opal mining operations in the world, producing around 70% of the world’s opal and earning the title “Opal Capital of the World.” 

But the settlers of Coober Pedy had a problem: Coober Pedy is hot, with temperatures in the summer rising to over 113 degrees Fahrenheit in the shade. The opposite extreme is true during winter nights when the desert becomes very cold—considering this, life aboveground is greatly impacted by the weather. Rather than moving to a more temperate climate where opportunities for mining work would be more difficult to find, the settlers took inspiration from the mining industry itself, carving underground and hillside dugouts. In these cooler dugouts, the temperature stays at 75 degrees Fahrenheit year-round. 

The inhabitants’ subterranean lifestyle earned Coober Pedy its name, a corruption of the Aboriginal phrase “kupa piti,” which is often translated as “white man in a hole.” The name Coober Pedy was made official in 1920, but the settlement was not declared a town until the 1960s, after which it underwent another population boom and further development. 

Today, the underground residences have all the amenities that a regular home would on the surface, such as internet, water and electricity, as well as multiple bedrooms, bathrooms and living areas. Some homes, like the one carved by Faye Nayler and two of her friends, even have a swimming pool and bar. A large portion of the population live most of their life underground, and it is a comfortable and relatively normal lifestyle—aside from the lack of sunlight. There are stores, churches and museums underground alongside the residences; the town truly is an underground community. Coober Pedy’s inhabitants do have to venture aboveground for food, however, because both of the town’s grocery stores are located on the surface. 

An underground church in Coober Pedy. Werner Bayer. CC BY 2.0 

Coober Pedy is still a worldwide hub for precious opal, but mining is no longer its only major industry. The town has become a popular attraction for visitors hoping to experience subterranean life. Visitors can stay in hotels with underground accommodations, like the Desert Cave Hotel. Another lodging option is a homestay in family-operated underground apartment-style accommodations like Di’s Dugouts or the Underground B&B. There are also underground campgrounds available to book. 

A hotel in Coober Pedy. Smart Encyclopedia. CC BY-NC 2.0 

While the underground lifestyle is Coober Pedy’s main draw, visitors can also explore other attractions such as the Centenary Mosaic Garden; Kanku Breakaways Conservation Park, which is an Aboriginal heritage site; and can even try their hand at mining for opal using a digging technique called noodling. Faye Nayler’s house is now open to visitors as Faye’s Underground Home, where visitors can pay a small entrance fee to receive a guided tour of the house. There are a number of other tours available around Coober Pedy for visitors to learn more about the town’s unique history.  



Rachel Lynch

Rachel is a student at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, NY currently taking a semester off. She plans to study Writing and Child Development. Rachel loves to travel and is inspired by the places she’s been and everywhere she wants to go. She hopes to educate people on social justice issues and the history and culture of travel destinations through her writing.