The large practical potential of exotic quantum states is often precluded by their notorious fragility against external perturbations or temperature. Here, we introduce a mechanism stabilizing a one-dimensional quantum many-body phase exploiting an emergent $${{\mathbb{Z}}}_{2}$$
Z
2
-symmetry based on a simple geometrical modification, i.e. a site that couples to all lattice sites. We illustrate this mechanism by constructing the solution of the full quantum many-body problem of hardcore bosons on a wheel geometry, which are known to form Bose-Einstein condensates. The robustness of the condensate against interactions is shown numerically by adding nearest-neighbor interactions, which typically destroy Bose-Einstein condensates. We discuss further applications such as geometrically inducing finite-momentum condensates. Since our solution strategy is based on a generic mapping, our findings are applicable in a broader context, in which a particular state should be protected, by introducing an additional center site.
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