Breaking News

A Modernist Pedigree Preserved by Studio OSKLO in This Trousdale Estate Home

Crisp edges, clean lines, perfect planes. Homes where sweeping surfaces dissolve into breathtaking vistas. Perched high above Beverly Hills—where the Los Angeles grid fades into canyon shadows and city lights—Trousdale Estates remains one of Southern California’s most intact concentrations of Mid-Century Modern architecture. Developed beginning in 1954 by Paul Trousdale, the neighborhood quickly drew Hollywood’s elite and the architects shaping postwar California modernism. Homes here were conceived as horizontal compositions: single-story structures stretching across the hillsides, their flat roofs, glass expanses, and restrained geometries framing expansive views rather than competing with them.

Modern living room with a large stone fireplace, beige armchairs, a matching sofa, and a wooden coffee table with books—an inviting space inspired by OSKLO’s signature neutral decor.

A modern OSKLO-inspired living room with a tan sofa, matching armchair, and chaise lounge around a low coffee table on a patterned rug; sheer curtains cover the large window in the background.

It was within this storied enclave that Studio OSKLO founders Arya and Alex Nazarian discovered what they immediately recognized as a rare architectural specimen: a 1966 post-and-beam residence by Benton & Parks. “Upon first seeing the house, we were obsessed,” the pair recalls. “It was one of the most pedigree specimens of mid-century architecture we had seen in our work or travels.”

A modern living room with OSKLO-inspired neutral-toned furniture, a large window, and a view of a garden and swimming pool outside.

Modern living room with OSKLO-inspired brown curved sofas, a round coffee table, a tan tufted bench, and a wall-mounted shelf displaying small objects; kitchen visible through doorway.

For the couple—collectors, designers, and longtime advocates of design history—the goal was never reinvention. Instead, the project became an act of stewardship: preserving the architectural pedigree of the original structure while introducing a contemporary layer reflective of their evolving work through OSKLO.

Modern home interior by OSKLO featuring a curved marble bar with gold accents, plush barstools, neutral-toned seating area, and warm lighting.

Modern bar interior by OSKLO with a curved marble counter, beige paneled front, plush round stools, glass shelves with bottles and glasses, and soft ambient lighting.

Spanning roughly 6,000 square feet on a single level, the house unfolds through a sequence of courtyards and long sightlines. Its plan resembles two inverted U-shapes: one framing the entry courtyard and Japanese-inspired atrium, the other wrapping around an angular pool and garden oriented toward the Santa Monica Mountains and the distant glow of Century City. A corridor along the atrium connects three guest suites to the primary bedroom, while an additional bedroom sits near the kitchen alongside a pool bath and outdoor cabana.

A minimalist home office nook with a wooden desk, woven chair, books, decor items, and a boxy table lamp, set against an OSKLO-inspired wood-paneled wall beside a marble divider.

A modern OSKLO living room featuring a dark curved sofa, two black square coffee tables with books and decor, a tan lounge chair, abstract wall art, and striking dark marble panels.

Courtyards, glass corridors, and open landscapes form the core of Trousdale’s architectural DNA. Neighborhood guidelines famously required homes to remain single-story to preserve views, creating residences that balance dramatic scale with horizontal restraint. The OSKLO home continues that lineage through its exposed structural steel façade, expansive glazing, and a striking circular standing-seam glass wall in the primary bedroom overlooking the pool.

Modern OSKLO-inspired living room with neutral tones, a brown sectional sofa, lounge chairs, dark coffee tables, a textured rug, fireplace, and large wall-mounted TV.

A modern OSKLO dining room with a dark wooden table, rust-colored chairs, a large abstract painting, and a striking black chandelier.

Remarkably intact—having undergone only one renovation since the 1960s—the home invited a restoration guided by both reverence and curiosity. Original stonework was preserved wherever possible, while new details were modeled on period precedents found throughout the neighborhood. Sculptural urns flank the entry gates, and custom ironwork echoes ornamental elements still visible along Trousdale’s winding streets.

Modern kitchen with beige cabinets, marble countertops, and a central island featuring a gold faucet—reflecting OSKLO’s signature elegance. Large windows overlook greenery, while a vase of flowers and a bowl of onions adorn the island.

Modern OSKLO kitchen with beige cabinets, marble countertops, a central island, gold fixtures, built-in ovens, and a large window overlooking greenery.

Material choices reinforce the dialogue between past and present. An unfilled silver travertine wall and colonnade frame the approach to the atrium, while restored walnut doors are fitted with Paul Evans Brutalist pulls that lend the façade tactile weight. Inside, visitors encounter the original slab limestone fireplace and a figurative sculpture striding across the south lawn beyond the glass.

A small, minimalist dining nook by OSKLO features a round stone table, curved sofa seating, a bowl and vase on the table, simple framed artwork, and a decorative ceiling light.

A hallway with large windows on one side, wooden paneled walls, white doors, and a wooden chair beside framed artwork at the far end reflects OSKLO’s signature blend of warmth and modernity.

Rather than adhering to a single stylistic doctrine, the interiors weave together a constellation of mid-century references. Italian modern lighting from the 1960s hangs above the dining table, while the bar retains a distinctly Hollywood Regency spirit. Millwork and stone vanities in the primary suite nod to British designer David Hicks, and elsewhere subtle echoes of Pierre Cardin, Achille Castiglioni, and Arne Jacobsen appear in custom screens and seating.

A modern OSKLO bedroom with a large bed, sofa, potted plants, abstract wall art, and a window revealing an outdoor statue surrounded by greenery.

A neatly made bed with neutral bedding, a curved textured OSKLO headboard, a wooden nightstand with books, and an abstract painting hanging above.

The palette evolves from the period without becoming nostalgic. Original saw-cut concrete floors remain, paired with lighter oak that softens the architecture’s structural rigor. Creamy whites and muted earth tones dominate, punctuated by darker plaster finishes in spaces like the TV room and primary bedroom. Fireplaces clad in limestone and travertine mirror the granite hues of the surrounding Hollywood Hills landscape.

A neutral-toned OSKLO nursery with a crib, plush chair, wooden stool with a toy sheep, rug, scattered building blocks, table, chairs, and toys arranged near a curtained window.

A modern OSKLO living area with curved beige chairs, a brown sofa, stone coffee tables, and sheer curtains allowing natural light into the neutral-toned space.

Outdoors, the Nazarians introduced one of the home’s most poetic gestures: a stylized Japanese garden inspired by their travels. The central atrium is planted with imported grasses forming a moss-like carpet, punctuated by four sculptural bonsai pines. Seen simultaneously from the living room, dining area, and corridor, the vivid greenery becomes a visual anchor for the home’s circulation.

Modern OSKLO bedroom with a curved headboard bed, textured bench, two nightstands, wall sconces, beige curtains, and a framed artwork above the bed.

A modern OSKLO bedroom with a brown bed, neutral bedding, a wooden nightstand with books and a vase holding foliage, and a large framed painting of nude figures on the wall.

Other interventions are more discreet. A retractable-canopy cabana forms a hidden outdoor lounge along the lawn, complete with a bar that appears to float within the grass. Inside, an asymmetrical TV room was recalibrated with a travertine partition fitted with pivoting marble screens, concealing a compact library and office behind the media space.

A modern OSKLO walk-in closet with wooden shelves, a marble-topped island, a potted plant, various trays with accessories, a lamp, and stacked clothes visible in the background.

Modern bathroom with OSKLO-inspired touches: freestanding tub, large plant, marble vanity with chair, decorative mirror, and a patterned rug on the floor.

Today the home functions as more than a residence. It houses the first OSKLO House—an immersive design environment where the couple’s Studio OSKLO furniture line lives alongside antiques and artworks collected over decades. Works by Julian Schnabel, Ed Ruscha, Catherine Opie, and the Campana Brothers mingle with furniture by Jean Royère, Adolf Loos, and Viggo Boesen, creating an interior landscape shaped equally by personal history and architectural heritage.

An OSKLO vanity with a marble top, large framed mirror, plush chair, framed artwork, decorative items, and wall sconces sits against a neutral-toned wall with a potted plant nearby.

For the Nazarians, this layered approach mirrors the ethos behind their debut furniture release, the Trousdale Collection. Inspired by the neighborhood’s cinematic architecture and its interplay of city views, coastal pines, and decomposing granite hillsides, the collection translates the home’s atmosphere into sculptural forms.

Modern OSKLO house with large glass windows, a swimming pool, lounge chairs, umbrellas, and manicured lawn surrounded by trees and hills under a partly cloudy sky.

Modern OSKLO outdoor patio with white lounge chairs and umbrella beside a curved swimming pool, surrounded by garden, palm trees, and a covered seating area in the background under a partly cloudy sky.

In many ways, the project reflects the lesson embedded in Trousdale Estates itself: great architecture is not something to overwrite, but something to continue. By preserving the bones of a remarkable mid-century structure while carefully extending its story, the OSKLO House proves that architectural pedigree can remain not only intact—but vividly alive.

A modern backyard patio by OSKLO with a pool, lounge chairs, couches, umbrella, and dining table, surrounded by lush greenery and palm trees.

Modern house exterior with flat roof, beige walls, and tropical landscaping by OSKLO, featuring a white sculptural bench under tall palm trees on a cloudy day.

Modern courtyard by OSKLO with circular landscaping, a central stone fountain, and a minimalist building entrance featuring large wooden doors and glass walls under a partly cloudy sky.

A modern OSKLO courtyard with sculpted trees, a circular stone fountain, a white abstract chair, and a gate in the background, all surrounded by palm trees.

To learn more about the designers’ practice, visit osklo.com.

Photography courtesy of Douglas Friedman.

With professional degrees in architecture and journalism, New York-based writer Joseph has a desire to make living beautifully accessible. His work seeks to enrich the lives of others with visual communication and storytelling through design. When not writing, he teaches visual communication, theory, and design.

Adblock test (Why?)



from Design MilkInterior Design Ideas for Your Modern Home | Design Milk https://ift.tt/dC1zbrK
via Design Milk

No comments