Construction site of Villa Moana and Villa Manatis in Vrbnik, Krk Island — 2022
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How We Built Villa Moana and Villa Manatis: Two Years of Construction in Vrbnik

Benjamin Haller · Last updated March 2026 · 11 min read

In September 2022 we broke ground on the site in Vrbnik. The site was an olive grove — 300-year-old trees, limestone bedrock, a view across the Kvarner channel to the mainland. My father Hans and I stood there on a cold morning and agreed we would not touch a single olive tree. Everything would be designed around them.

Why Vrbnik?

We already had Villa Marim in Stara Baška — built on a rock above the sea, remote, wild. Vrbnik is the counterpoint: a wine village on a cliff, 8 minutes from the beach, 5 minutes from one of the island's best restaurants. The character of the two places is completely different.

That was the point. We did not want to build a second version of Villa Marim. We wanted to build something that belongs to its place just as specifically — and Vrbnik, with its medieval tower, its Žlahtina wine, and its narrow streets, has a character entirely its own.

The Construction

Villa Moana and Villa Manatis in Vrbnik during construction — 2023
The site in Vrbnik during construction — 2023. The olive trees were already defining where the buildings would go.

We hired a local Krk contractor and oversaw every stage of the build. My father Hans visited every second weekend during 2022 and 2023. I was there most of the time. We made decisions on-site — the orientation of the pool, the position of the whirlpool, which trees to build around.

The contractor thought we were insane for how much we changed things mid-build. We were. The changes made the villas what they are. A construction project is a negotiation between the plan and the reality of the ground, the light, and what you see when you stand in the space with the walls half up.

The Olive Trees

The site had 23 olive trees. We kept all of them. The architecture follows the grove — the pool extends between three trees that now stand at the water's edge. The main terrace of Villa Moana is open on three sides so you are in the grove, not beside it.

Guests write to us about the olive trees more than any other feature. The age of them — some are 300 years old, which means they were already mature when Croatia as a political concept did not yet exist — does something to the experience of sitting beneath them. We know exactly which tree they are describing when they write.

The Furniture — Austrian Workshop

We run a small furniture workshop in Austria — it was not originally connected to the villa project. But once construction was underway, it became obvious that the right furniture didn't exist in any catalogue. Every piece that existed was either too generic or too obviously from a supplier's range.

So we made it. The dining tables, beds, terrace furniture, and shelving in both villas were designed and built specifically for each room. The wood is Austrian oak and walnut. None of it was produced for general sale. When a guest opens a drawer in Villa Moana, they open a drawer that was made for that room in a workshop in Austria by people who knew which villa it was going into.

The Sand Court — An Unplanned Addition

The sand court at Villa Manatis was not in the original design. Three months before opening, we decided to build it — a court filled with fine sand, suitable for volleyball, bocce, and badminton, and for children to play freely in a way that stone or grass terracing doesn't allow.

No other villa on Krk has one. The decision added 6 weeks to the construction schedule and required us to level a section of the site that had been planned as a secondary terrace. We have never regretted it. Every family that stays at Villa Manatis uses the court. Every adult group does too.

The Whirlpool Position

The whirlpool at Villa Moana is positioned at the edge of the cliff terrace, looking directly at Vrbnik old town's medieval tower. In the evening, the tower is illuminated and reflects across the water. The whole old town turns amber in the last 30 minutes before dark.

This was not the original position. We moved it twice during construction. The first position was more sheltered — logical from a wind perspective, wrong from every other. The second position was closer but not quite at the edge. The final position was chosen by standing in the spot ourselves at 9pm and seeing exactly what we saw. The view justified the concrete work required to move it again.

Opening Day — May 2024

Villa Moana and Villa Manatis from above — the completed estate in Vrbnik's olive grove
The completed estate from above — both villas in the olive grove, the 12-metre pools, the sand court at Villa Manatis.

The first guests arrived in early May 2024. The first thing they did was sit by the pool and not say anything for 20 minutes. The second thing was ask about the olive trees. The third was ask whether they could borrow our Vespa.

We gave them ours. Two weeks later we ordered a second one. It is now included with every Villa Moana booking, at no extra charge. The decision that started with a guest asking a question on their first morning became a permanent feature of the villa.

That is how most of the best decisions in this project happened — not in the planning, but in the response to what we actually saw and heard.

"Everything was thought of. It didn't feel like a rental — it felt like staying with people who care about you having the best possible time."

— Familie Bauer, guests at Villa Manatis
Benjamin Haller, owner of Marim Luxury Villas

Benjamin Haller

Owner, Marim Luxury Villas

My father Hans and I built these villas the way we would want to stay in them. Every decision made on-site, not in a planning meeting. That is the only way we know how to do it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who owns Villa Moana and Villa Manatis?

Villa Moana and Villa Manatis are owned and operated by the Haller family — Benjamin, his wife Anna, and his parents Hans and Angelika. The family also owns and operates Villa Marim in Stara Baška, which opened in 2018. All three villas are directly managed by the family, not by a rental agency.

What is special about the design of the Vrbnik villas?

Both villas were built around 23 existing olive trees — none were removed during construction. The furniture in both villas was made in the family's Austrian workshop, designed specifically for each room. The villa layout was adjusted multiple times during construction to optimise views and the relationship between the buildings and the grove.

Are the villas built for families?

Yes, with intention. Villa Manatis has a unique sand court (volleyball, bocce, badminton) — the only one on Krk Island. Both villas have large private pools. The outdoor gym at Villa Moana works for teenagers and adults. The two villas together as the Estate accommodate two families of up to 7 each (14 total) with independent living spaces and shared grounds.

How long did the construction of Villa Moana and Villa Manatis take?

Ground was broken in September 2022. Both villas opened to guests in May 2024 — approximately 20 months of construction. The project ran longer than originally planned due to mid-build design changes (including relocating the whirlpool twice and adding the sand court at Villa Manatis) and supply delays during 2023.

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Villa Moana + Villa Manatis · Vrbnik, Krk · From €570/night