Design Legend Tom Dixon’s New Mykonos Villa Is Selling For $25 Million
British designer Tom Dixon has unveiled one of the Mediterranean’s most striking new residences, nicknamed Aimasia, a nearly 10,000-square-foot villa now on the market for $25 million.
Completed in 2024 in collaboration with A31 Architecture, the biomorphic estate is perched just above Mykonos’ famous Psarou Beach, where its low-slung silhouette blends into the rocky folds of Elia.
With six bedrooms, Aimasia is a work of art carved into the island’s terrain, its Brutalist curves shaped from local boulders, Greek marble, and handcrafted elements that echo Mykonian tradition.

Property Highlights
Price: $25 million
Size: 9,924 square feet
Bedrooms: 6
Bathrooms: 10
Notable Features: Three swimming pools, suspended stone staircase, sea-view infinity pool, outdoor kitchen, green roof of native plants, low-carbon concrete construction, and energy-efficient systems
Approaching The Greek Villa
Walking up to Tom Dixon’s newly completed villa in Mykonos begins with architecture that reveals itself gradually, starting with a rectilinear form of raw stone and white concrete rising from the landscape, its minimalist geometry softened by the earth-toned terrain.

Timber-clad doors are placed within thick stone walls, creating rhythm and shadow, while the upper level is lined with glass windows framed by a cantilevered roof that hovers above it all.

Living Room With a Sea Breeze
Inside, the living room is wrapped in concrete and softened with sculptural furnishings such as a low-slung modular sofa in creamy upholstery, black steel shelving, and abstract decor that add a grounding, gallery-like presence to the room.

The sliding glass walls separating the living room from the outside retract entirely, giving you a breathtaking view of the horizon.
Minamalist Dining Room
Around the corner from the living room, a minimalist corridor lined with concrete walls leads to the dining area where a raw-edged table sits surrounded by chairs with woven wicker seats.

Natural light pours in from another disappearing wall of glass that frames uninterrupted views of the Aegean, while the jagged coastline mirrors the black chandelier overhead.

Sculptural Kitchen
In the kitchen, a monolithic, curved-stone island is framed by simple dark cabinetry and an integrated wine wall. Above, Dixon’s iconic ceiling pendants cast soft, concentric shadows within the room that shift with the island sun.

Slide open the glass wall, and the space spills into a raw concrete terrace featuring an outdoor kitchen and a communal dining table carved from solid wood. It’s a seamless indoor-outdoor setup, where prepping, plating, and toasting all happen along the cliff’s edge.
Minimalist Office Hallway
Within the villa, a network of concrete-clad hallways doubles as an architectural experience, with one hall showcasing a huge boulder cradled mid-air between two walls, hovering above a stairwell that leads to the lower level.

Follow the winding halls and you’ll find an elevated landing featuring a discreet office space where a slender desk and sculptural chair sit in front of warm-toned cabinets and beneath an angular skylight cutout.

Bedrooms Made For Island Relaxation
Each bedroom in Tom Dixon’s Mykonos villa is a thoughtful study in light, texture, and clean design reflecting the home’s simple, sculptural aesthetic.
Patio Bedroom
One suite opens to a small patio, where a potted flowering plant reaches toward the sunlight, cutting diagonally through the concrete walls. The bed, draped in slate-toned linen, faces a raw, sculptural wall with minimalist hanging globe lights.

Terracotta Bedroom
Another bedroom introduces a warmer palette of earthy terracotta walls that play off the coarse stone façade with dark wood cabinetry.
A geometric white wire chair positioned beside the built-in desk nods to Dixon’s well-known sculptural designs, and slim vertical windows diffuse the Aegean light in rhythmic slits.

Bedroom With a Private Pool
The third bedroom is the most cinematic with a floor-to-ceiling glass wall opening directly to a private patio with a small pool and two woven loungers looking out towards uninterrupted sea views.

Bathrooms That Belong in a Museum
Even in the most utilitarian spaces of Tom Dixon’s Mykonos villa, the artistry continues.
One bathroom, in particular, is paired with a jet-black stone pedestal sink with a carved green marble partition wall. On the other side, Dixon’s classic molten-looking light fixture glows like liquid amber, casting soft shadows across the textured concrete walls.

In contrast, another bathroom offers more traditional architecture featuring a long terrazzo sink with dual basins that runs beneath a gold-framed mirror and vertically mounted glass sconces that echo the villa’s minimalist-meets-industrial aesthetic.

Infinity-Edge Pool
Outside, the infinity-edge pool is framed by clean concrete surfaces and minimalist loungers, set under the cantilevered roofline that reaches toward the horizon.

With its edge seamlessly blending into the sea below, the water appears to spill into the cliffs, offering a cinematic vantage point over Mykonos’ iconic coastline.

From dawn to dusk, the pool acts as a mirror, reflecting the crisp geometry of the villa by day and the glowing Aegean skies by night.
Green Rooftop
Aimasia’s design is rooted in a commitment to sustainability that goes beyond aesthetics, evident in its rooftop, where native Mykonian vegetation creates a living green canopy that blends seamlessly into the hillside.

Low-emission materials and energy-efficient systems are also built on the roof, further reinforcing the idea that luxury and environmental responsibility can go hand in hand.
Final Thoughts
What began as nothing more than a rugged hillside has transformed into one of Mykonos’s most striking design statements, thanks to the vision of Tom Dixon.
Listed for $25 million, the villa reflects years of planning, collaboration, and craftsmanship, melding architecture into the landscape with custom-sourced materials and meticulous site integration.
The multi-year project is a testament to Dixon’s dedication to form, function, and place, turning raw terrain into a livable work of art. Now on the market, the home stands as a rare opportunity to own a piece of design history shaped from the ground up.