Matmata Underground Houses

Made famous by "Star Wars," these troglodyte homes face an uncertain future.

117
263

The Berber underground homes ofMatmata lie in an arid, pockmarked landscape in the parched valleys of southernTunisia’s Djebel Dahar region. Made famous byStar Wars, these traditional structures are now threatened as residents move away to live in towns and villages.

EveryStar Warsfan worth their salt knows a little about the location of Luke Skywalker’s house: not Tatooine, but the actual filming location in Tunisia. Or, to be more precise, theHotel Sidi Drissin Matmata, chosen as the set for Luke’s family home thanks to its otherworldly underground construction.

But the Hotel Sidi Driss isn’t the only underground building of its type. Similar structures dot the landscape around Matmata, a pitted land of palm trees and olive groves. It’s an open question as to when nomadic tribes decided to settle here in their underground houses, and the entire area was largely unknown to the outside world until the 1960s, when severe flooding brought it to the attention of the Tunisian government.

The houses themselves are built by first digging a deep circular pit into the sandstone, which is soft enough to work with simple hand tools. Caves are then dug out around the edges of the pit, forming the underground rooms and leaving the main pit as a courtyard.

Once finished, the troglodyte construction offers a fine escape from the heat of the day, and a sturdy home that could survive for many years. Unless, of course, heavy rains like those of the 1960s lead to flooding, damage and in some cases the destruction of the underground dwellings. Periods of extreme drought can also damage the homes.

Since the last major flooding, and despite the tourism generated byStar Wars, another threat to the homes has arisen: rural depopulation. Locals had already begun moving out of their traditional homes during the 1960s and 1970s, when President Habib Bourguiba was trying to modernize the country and many Berbers moved to the towns.

More have since left, slowly trickling away with the decline of tourism. Tunisia’s tourism industry has been struggling ever since the country’s 2011 Arab Spring uprising, and was further damaged following the 2015 attacks in Tunis and Sousse, which directly targeted tourists.

然而,一些当地居民一直生活在their families in their underground households, working their olive farms and occasionally accepting tips from tourists who want a tour of their home. And today, only a handful of men still know how to dig and maintain these special Berber dwellings.



In partnership with KAYAK

Plan Your Trip

Want to see fewer ads?Become a Member.
From Around the Web
Baidu
map