Love Island’s Casa Amor is the famous second villa producers have used to separate islanders by gender and subsequently welcoming new eye candy to the series. But where exactly is this villa located and what else should you know about it? Here’s the lowdown… What is Casa Amor? Casa Amor is the second “secret” villa […]
Love Island’s Casa Amor is the famous second villa producers have used to separate islanders by gender and subsequently welcoming new eye candy to the series.
But where exactly is this villa located and what else should you know about it? Here’s the lowdown…
Casa Amor is the second “secret” villa on Love Island.
It was introduced during the third series of the show in 2017.
Producers arranged for a set of new girls to join the boys in there.
Just like the other villa, the boys have to couple up with a girl and share a bed.
This can throw a spanner in the works if they are already happy with a girl in the main villa.
The second villa is VERY close to the main one.
Both villas are within a stone’s throw of each other.
They can be found off a back road called the Ma-3323 in the shadow of the Levante hills, about a mile-and-a-half north-west of the town.
Last year the villas were so close to each other, the boys could hear laughter from the main villa when they were sent to Casa Amor.
The Sun revealed that couples such as Amy Hart and Curtis Pritchard will be torn apart next week as the female Islanders remain in the main villa while the boys will make their way over to Casa Amor to settle in with a bunch of new arrivals.
Producers are believed to have recruited “the sexiest Islanders who they feel will turn heads and push couples like Amber Gill and Michael Griffiths to the limit.”
It had already been mentioned by Love Island boss Angelia Jain that Casa Amor was certainly not a thing of the past – it was definitely going to return in season five, but fans just didn’t know when.
She revealed: “What we do in terms of format twists – as this is ongoing casting – we’re trying to mirror real life and relationships do get tested, that’s entirely normal.
“So we will test them and the islanders are fully aware their relationships will get tested.
“We will do that because that’s the expectation for the audience and the islanders.