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The management of ecotourism architectural projects requires a technically oriented approach to integrate administrative, social, and environmental dimensions. The objective of this article is to propose an integrated administrative management strategy based on multidimensional sustainability for an ecotourism architectural project in Escobal, Colón Province, Panama, within a context where Panama's Sustainable Tourism Master Plan (2020-2025) is driving significant investments in the region. The study employed a quantitative, correlational, and cross-sectional methodology. Data analysis was conducted using descriptive and inferential statistics to test the proposed hypothesis. Dimensions such as multidimensional sustainability, legal regulations, and the visual perception of the architectural design were addressed. The proposed hypothesis statistically validates an administrative management strategy that proactively mitigates risks and synchronously encodes regulatory and perceptual variables, significantly optimizing operational viability and community acceptance. It is concluded that an administrative approach that minimizes risks from the design stage allowed for surpassing conventional feasibility analyses, guaranteeing operationally competitive infrastructure fully integrated into the natural and social environment.