Ultraviolet-Melon Star Bastion Manor
Abandoned Victorian mansion, ultraviolet-melon, teal-flame, cobalt-saffron, a compact star-bastion manor constructed as a low fortified Victorian villa with five outward-pointing wings forming a grounded geometric star plan anchored directly into a desert oasis basin. The silhouette is tightly radial and deliberately defensive in composition, where each wing extends only modestly from a central core, creating a controlled exterior footprint that reads as both aristocratic residence and engineered bastion shaped by climate, ceremony, and spatial discipline.
Roof architecture is flat-angled and segmented, designed for heat and exposure management rather than ornamented height. Short crenellated parapet ridges run along each star point, paired with narrow chimney vents and thin ornamental iron edging that traces the full radial geometry with precise Victorian restraint. The overall massing remains low and stable, emphasizing grounded permanence over vertical expression.
The façade is fully exterior and sharply articulated: ultraviolet-melon enamel stone panels form the structural skin, teal-flame arched window frames punctuate each wing with measured repetition, and cobalt-saffron iron latticework reinforces junctions where the star arms meet the central core. These intersections read like structural ornamentation, binding the geometry together while preserving its radial clarity.
The sky hangs in a deep desert-cyan heat haze, naturally lit and matte, diffusing sunlight evenly across stone and metal surfaces without glare, bloom, or directional drama. Light behaves uniformly, revealing subtle erosion in enamel coatings, faint oxidation along iron edges, and heat-weathered stone texture softened by arid wind exposure.
The estate sits in a desert oasis biome where saturated green grass grows in circular clusters around shallow water pockets, radiating outward between star-shaped stone walkways etched into the sand. The geometry of the landscape subtly mirrors the architecture, reinforcing the sense that both land and structure were shaped by the same underlying radial logic.
At the outer approach lies a broken sunstone obelisk gate marker, fractured cleanly at mid-height and partially buried in drifting sand, once serving as a ceremonial threshold into the bastion’s controlled perimeter.


