There is no gentle way to prepare someone for Uluru. You can describe the scale, the colour, the way it rises from the flat desert floor with the improbable authority of something placed rather than formed. None of it lands until you are standing in front of it. Longitude 131° understands this, and has arranged things so that the first view you get is from your own bed.
Sixteen tented pavilions sit atop ancient red sand dunes at the edge of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, each positioned so that the floor-to-ceiling glass at the foot of the bed faces directly toward Uluru. A bedside switch raises the blinds. The monolith is there before you are fully awake, and it will be the last thing you see before you sleep. In between, the light moves across it in a way that shifts constantly: deep ochre at dawn, bleached and vast through the heat of the day, burning red and violet at sunset, and then dark against a sky with more stars than most people have ever seen in a single sitting. The experience of watching this from a private deck, wrapped in a luxury swag beside an outdoor fireplace with a glass of something Australian in hand, is the central offer of Longitude 131°. Everything else is in service of it.
The camp was designed by architect Philip Cox and has been operated by Baillie Lodges since 2002. The 2017 renovation updated the interiors without losing the logic of the original design: white domed canvas roofs, billowing drapes, bespoke furnishings, and original artworks by local Indigenous artists that bring the culture of the Anangu, the Traditional Owners of the land, into the rooms in a way that feels considered rather than decorative. The Dune House, the central gathering space, holds the restaurant, an open bar, and a library furnished with Indigenous woven sculptures and artworks. It has the quality of a very well-appointed expedition base camp, which is precisely what it is designed to feel like.
The dining programme is taken seriously. The kitchen works with premium Australian produce brought into the Red Centre and combined with native bush ingredients to reflect where you are. Menus draw inspiration from Anangu seasonal knowledge: Kuli, the hot time; Wari, the cold time; and Piriakutu, when the north-west winds arrive and the food plants begin to flower. The signature experience is Table 131°, a four-course dinner served on a remote dune top under the outback sky, where chefs prepare beneath the outback sky and a guide walks guests through the southern constellations before dessert. It is the kind of evening that earns its reputation.
The guided experience programme is included in the stay and structured around early mornings and evenings, when the landscape is at its most rewarding and the heat is bearable. Experiences developed in consultation with Anangu traditional owners, the Walpa Gorge walk at Kata Tjuta as the dawn light reaches the rock walls; the Mala Walk where cave paintings and cultural sites revealing one of the world’s oldest continuous living cultures. At night, the Field of Light installation by artist Bruce Munro, 50,000 illuminated stems spread across the desert floor, glows between the property and the monolith in a display that bridges the ancient and the contemporary in a way that is surprisingly affecting.
The Details
- 16 tented pavilions, each with direct floor-to-ceiling views of Uluru, private deck with eco-fireplace, luxury swag, king bed, ensuite with rain shower, and complimentary in-suite bar
- Dune Pavilion: the premium two-bedroom suite with private plunge pool and views of both Uluru and Kata Tjuta
- All meals, most beverages, return Ayers Rock Airport transfers, and a curated programme of guided experiences included in the rate
- Table 131°: signature four-course outdoor dinner on a remote dune top under the stars, included in stays of two nights or more
- Field of Light: access to Bruce Munro’s acclaimed light installation at dusk
- Spa Kinara with Indigenous-inspired treatments
- Private touring available for all experiences on request
- Children aged 10 and over welcome
- Fodor’s Finest 100 Hotels 2025; Conde Nast Traveller Readers’ Choice Awards 2024 (Australasia, fourth place); member of Luxury Lodges of Australia and National Geographic Unique Lodges of the World




