Sleeping on Another Planet: Inside Utah’s Story-Driven Desert Retreat
A remote stretch of southern Utah desert, close to Zion National Park, is home to a hospitality project that looks more like a film set than a hotel. OutpostX covers around 240 acres and offers seven permanent accommodation units designed to resemble a post-apocalyptic settlement. Instead of conventional luxury cues, the site focuses on immersion, narrative design, and physical engagement with the surrounding landscape.
OutpostX was developed by Travis Chambers, the founder of Chamber Stays, who previously worked in media production. After years of building temporary film sets, Chambers began exploring how cinematic environments could become permanent places to stay. The result is an experience he describes as "ancient future," combining sculpted cave-like structures, geodesic domes, and handcrafted details built by specialist artisans rather than standard hotel suppliers.
The property operates on a small scale but with high investment per unit. Each accommodation reportedly costs about $380,000 to build, with funding partly secured through a successful Indiegogo campaign. There are no traditional hotel facilities such as a restaurant or reception. Instead, guests receive story materials, costumes, and guided audio content, and move around the site using customised sand cruisers adapted for desert terrain.
Its location puts visitors close to some of southern Utah’s most familiar scenery. Zion’s canyons, dark night skies and open desert tracks begin just beyond the site. Guests can move between planned on-site activities and time on their own, whether that means hiking, taking photos, or simply being outside. With little surrounding development, nights are quiet, which suits the retreat’s slower rhythm.
OutpostX treats accommodation as part of the experience rather than simply somewhere to stay overnight. A small number of units and an emphasis on guest involvement distinguish it from large resort models, without relying on familiar luxury markers. For travellers who prefer places with a clear sense of purpose and boundaries, it shows how location, design and scale can define future stays without increasing crowds or spreading further into the desert.