Celebrity Homes
Get inspired by the spectacular bedrooms, kitchens, living rooms, and pools from your favorite celebrities—from Hollywood stars to musicians to fashion icons. #celeb #famous #film #music #art #culture #singer #model #family #estate #mansion #beverlyhills #designer #movie #tv #television
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An Architect Refreshes a 1912 Craftsman House in Silver Lake
When Barrett purchased the low-slung bungalow, it had not been touched in half a century. On the one hand, that meant there was loads of charm and original detailing—much of the interior was clad in California redwood, which gave it character in spades. But it also meant they had to do battle with old, wall-to-wall carpeting, ceiling tiles, and no contemporary air conditioning or heating. The good news? Under those old ceiling tiles were beautiful redwood joists; and ripping up carpet revealed the home’s original Douglas fir floors, which were sanded down to reveal their original raw beauty. Photo: Dusan Vuksanovic

Architectural Digest
Inside Lenny Kravitz’s Regal Paris Refuge
Superstar musician Lenny Kravitz has loved Paris since he first landed there in 1989, at 25, to promote his debut album, Let Love Rule. Finally, in the early 2000s, he felt it was time to find a pied-à-terre: “a little apartment, maybe on the Seine—one bedroom, two bedrooms, maximum—where I could write and hang out,” he recalls. “One day, the real estate agent says, ‘I have something. It’s not what you’re looking for, but you need to see it.’ ” Photo: Matthieu Salvaing, Styling: Sarah de Beaumont

Architectural Digest
Pamela Anderson’s Renaissance Started in Her Home Garden: “That’s Where I Found Myself Again”
Today, the seven-acre property known as Arcady (“It means peaceful, rustic place,” Anderson explains) is home to fragrant roses, ground cherries, all sorts of melons, and much more. It’s also where her parents first lived after they married, and where her sons Brandon and Dylan took their first steps as babies. For Anderson herself, Arcady is “where everything came back together for me. This whole new chapter? It started in the garden,” she tells AD.

Architectural Digest
Phoebe Dynevor Loves to Live Among Beautiful Old Things—and Now You Can Shop Her Favorites
When Phoebe Dynevor bought her first home in 2021, she knew she wanted to honor the historic roots of her space while updating it to her taste. “I decided to completely go and rebuild, essentially,” she tells AD. “It’s in London, I live on a cobbled street, and it’s very old London, and I just wanted to keep that feeling.” To fill her new home, the Bridgerton star wanted to find pieces that were, yes, beautiful, but had lived a life, so she turned to antiques. “I like history, I love knowing that I’m living in a home with pieces that have been in different homes,” she says. “That’s just so inspiring.” Photo: Justin Chung #bridgerton #phoebedynevor #architecturaldigest

Architectural Digest
Step Inside the Red Hot Chili Pepper’s Montana Ski Chalet
Perched three quarters of the way up the mountain, the cabin had recently been built to replace a smaller, more rustic one that had—as legend goes—been nearly burned down by a famous domestic goddess. It was a new structure of timber and stone but lacked the character and charm of its inhabitants, so we set out to craft deeply comfortable spaces, intentionally eccentric but high-performing, and ready to accommodate a multitude of family and friends. Photo: Douglas Friedman

Architectural Digest
Inside Model Adut Akech’s Easy, Breezy Nursery in Studio City
Australian and South Sudanese model Adut Akech has, momentarily, exchanged haute couture for cuddles. She and her husband, Samuel Elkhier, welcomed their first daughter, Imani, in December. “There’s nothing I can compare the feeling to, but it is just the most amazing thing I’ve ever experienced in my entire life. I just can’t imagine what life was like before her,” says Akech. The new mom focused on the essentials when designing the space they designated for the baby, embracing a sense of minimalism. Photo: Tim Hirschmann

Architectural Digest
Inside Actor Michael Shannon’s Meditative Brooklyn Home
Throughout the project, interior designer Colleen Newell saw her role as both collaborator and translator. “The honor was in helping [Michael] figure out what feels like him at this moment in his life,” she says. Rather than erase the past, she wove it in—giving new life to storied objects and making space for future memories. The result is a place that feels warm and lyrical, one that hums in quiet harmony with its alchemist and his family. “Before Colleen came in, it didn’t quite feel like a home,” Shannon says. “But now it does. Every corner, every object—it just fits.” Photo by Michael Clifford

Architectural Digest
Inside Actor Olivia Cooke’s London Victorian, a Home Fit for a Queen
“I wanted it to feel like an old cigar-slash-’70s shag pad,” says actor Olivia Cooke with a laugh, recalling the unconventional brief she gave her interior designers, Lisa Jones and Ruby Kean of the London- and New York–based firm Atelier LK. “But then I also wanted it to have this sort of Japanese-slash-château vibe.” That last bit feels particularly fitting for Cooke, who most know as Queen Alicent Hightower, the cunning second wife of King Viserys I Targaryen in HBO’s hit series House of the Dragon. Photo: Kate Martin, Styling: Sara Mathers

Architectural Digest
Visit LuckyChap’s New Office With Margot Robbie, Tom Ackerley, and Josey McNamara
Margot Robbie doesn’t consider herself an “office person,” but the design of LuckyChap’s new Los Angeles headquarters makes it hard to stay away. “I don’t like sitting in one room for a long time—I get antsy,” she admits. “So as beautiful as my office is, and it’s incredibly beautiful, I spend way more time there than I ever imagined I would.” Photo: Jenna Peffley

Architectural Digest
Tour Actor Michael Shannon’s Moody, Meditative Brooklyn Home
“I was pretty open-minded,” Shannon says about the design of his home. “I wanted to see what Colleen would come up with. The space was already pretty much what I wanted—it was more about the little touches.” Art: Dustin Yellin, Photo: Michael Clifford

Architectural Digest
Chris Evans Lists Hollywood Hills Estate for $7 Million
Chris Evans is letting go of his longtime Los Angeles mansion. The actor, known for his role as Captain America in the Marvel cinematic universe, is offloading the property for a hair under $7 million. Evans purchased the Mulholland Canyon estate for $3.5 million in 2013. Though the 1940s property retains much of its original charm, the Avengers star personalized the pad with contemporary upgrades in collaboration with the LA-based design firm Stewart-Gulrajani. Photo: Noel Kleinman

Architectural Digest
Tour Mexican Celeb Couple Alejandro Fernández and Karla Laveaga’s Guadalajara Retreat
Architectural forms can go beyond the physical to provide refuge for the senses, to provide a home for the ephemeral. En route to visit the singer Alejandro Fernández and model and influencer Karla Laveaga at home in the Mexican state of Jalisco, these were the thoughts that ran through my mind. Perhaps this is because the power couple are the current owners of Casa Rosa, a jewel of contemporary architecture designed by Andrés Casillas de Alba in 1978. It has just undergone an extensive renovation, which was maybe why I kept a metaphysical line of questioning: What does architecture sound like? Photo: Pepe Molina, Art: Jacob Vilato, Fanny Haiat

Architectural Digest
Inside Rhett McLaughlin’s “Fairy-Tale Chic” Log Cabin in the Woods
“When people walk in the door, I don’t want them to know when they are or where they are,” says Jessie McLaughlin of the whimsical log cabin she reimagined in North Carolina. “I really want it to feel like a storybook.” The cabin’s woodland setting partly inspired the fantastical narrative. And creating an offbeat atmosphere made sense for Jessie and her husband, Rhett McLaughlin, one half of the popular YouTube duo Rhett & Link. Creatives as well as avid readers, Jessie and Rhett hoped the cabin would be a space to lose themselves in a book or a daydream—while also grounding roots, in a very personal way, in their home state. Photo by Jenna Peffley

Architectural Digest
Julio Torres: Inside the Multihyphenate Creator’s Williamsburg Mysterious Palace
“In the Julio universe, everything has a more metaphysical sense to it, because it’s not just functional and it’s not just designing for Julio, it’s designing with Julio,” Sophie Parker says, who designed the space alongside Micah Rosenblatt. “We have this spontaneous quality where we each bring to the table things that we are delighted by in the material world and start to riff off of that and see that get announced in his space. And then all of the pieces in the apartment start to talk to each other. As if it’s its own world.” Photo: Seth Caplan, Styling: Sophie Parker, Art: Max Wittert.

Architectural Digest
Ana de Armas Sells Her Nate Berkus–Designed SoHo Loft for $3.5 Million
Ballerina actor Ana de Armas is bidding farewell to her downtown Manhattan apartment three months after listing the property. Its original features—including exposed brick, ultra-high ceilings, and tall south-facing windows—have been preserved, though she tapped AD100 designer Nate Berkus to update the space, resulting in elegant, modern interiors. Photo: DD Reps

Architectural Digest
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