Main Living & Culinary Spaces

This is where the design language of the home first speaks -- where clean lines, curated textures, and panoramic sightlines immediately set the tone. Walls of glass erase the line between indoors and out, and each element, from underlit stone surfaces to museum-worthy lighting, is as functional as it is sculptural. The great room, kitchen, and dining area operate as one cohesive environment -- designed not just for show, but for living well, every day. No guesswork, no lead times, no compromises.

  • Framed in Fleetwood-crafted glass and steel, the entry is designed to stop you -- not with drama, but with intention. Even before the 9.5-foot pivot door opens, light moves across textures, sightlines extend to the desert beyond, and the home's quiet confidence becomes clear. It's a curated welcome, layered with architectural depth and a sense of calm luxury -- the kind of entrance that makes you pause before you step forward.

     

    Gallery Notes:

    Shakuff 64-Light Raindrop Chandelier - handblown glass in clear, amber, and grey; a suspended installation that plays with light and shadow
    Peruvina Woven Leather Mirror - artisan-crafted surface texture, blending tradition and contemporary form
    Fleetwood 55" x 114" Pivot Door - glass and black-anodized aluminum; momumental scale with seamless glide
    Frankl Lloyd Wright-Inspired Clerestory Windows - corner-glazed design offering unobstructed lines and softened light
    Cantilevered Fleetwood Windows with Steel Lintels - structural and sculptural; framing views and intentional compositions

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Indoor Ease, Outdoor Connection

This second sequence carries the architectural language of the home into its more casual and connective spaces -- the den, breakfast nook, and outdoor living zones. But there's nothing secondary about them. The craftsmanship and curation remain exacting, with textures, furnishings, and layout calibrated for ease of movement, comfort, and conversation. It's a testament to the home's cohesion: form and function, lifestyle and design, all speaking the same refined dialect.

  • This is where luxury turns inward -- a space intentionally softened in scale and tone to create contrast with the expansiveness elsewhere. With layered textures, panoramic Mt. Lemmon views, and the home's lowest ceiling height, the den becomes both refuge and retreat. Thoughtful lighting choices and rich materials give the room a cinematic quality, and when the automated blackout shades descend, the experience shifts from day lounge to private screening room. Built-in concealment and designer furnishings elevate this from a casual retreat to a gallery-caliber hideaway.

     

    Gallery Notes:

    Camouflage Marble Counters, Imported from Italy - veined like desert riverbeds after a monsoon; soft ripples and organic movement paired with under-counter wine fridge and hammered sink
    Wall Covering in Soho Hemp Doe by Phillip Jeffries - a refined, organic texture that envelops the room in warmth
    Itineraire Sectional by Philippe Bouix for Roche Bobois - highly engineered modularity meets ergonomic luxury; a designer piece that adapts to the rhythm of the room
    • Quartet Cocktail Table by Roche Bobois - a play of contrasts; two matte-finish discs + two in reflective black glass, arranged in offset harmony, anchoring the space with quiet drama
    Exterior Sapphire Glass Table (Visible from Den) - a shimmering visual anchor beyond the glass; echoing the home's palette of reflection and restraint
    Concealed Wall Storage Behind TV Nook - push-to-open panels keep essentials tucked away; clean lines uninterrupted, function beautifully disguised

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The Private Collection

Where the public spaces celebrate movement and light, the private sequence turns inward -- a study in repose, reflection, and quiet material mastery. Each suite is composed with the same architectural integrity as the main living areas, but scaled to the intimacy of daily life. Textures soften, light warms, and the furnishings blend the curated with the commissioned -- each piece thoughtfully placed, each finish deliberate, together forming a lived-in composition of luxury and intention.

  • Concieved as a private observatory overlooking the pool terrace and Catalina Mountains, the primary suite embodies quiet luxury throught balance and restraint. Velvet wallcovering, polished plaster, and stone accents create a harmony of softness and strenght, while scupltural furnishings invite both rest and reflection. Above the iconic Vladimir Kagan Serpentine Cloud sofa, a crystal "solar system" chandelier glows like art -- purposefully visible from the main living area at night, casting light and shadow that animate the home after dark. Floor-to-ceiling glass opens directly to the terrace, connecting this serene retreat to the living desert beyond.

     

    The adjoining bath continues the story in stone, glass, and light. Cremo Delicato Quartzite and art-glass tile define a sculptural composition around a Japanese soaking tub framed by mountain views. Heated floors, finterprint-resistent fixtures, and dual floating vanities glow softly under integrated lighting, while dual custom closets extend the design language with glass shelving and furniture-grade cabinetry. This suite is both sanctuary and statement.

     

    Gallery Notes:

    Wall Covering (Bed) - Phillip Jeffries Velvet Vibes, Beach Day; tactile textile wall finish tath modulates natural light
    Fireplace Facade - smooth plaster with Silver River stone hearth and Vertical Illusion Synergy Convex Silverwood tile accent
    Lighting - Resoration Hardware Boule De Cristal chandelier; chrystal and metal solar system interplay above seating area
    Furnishings - Vladimir Kagan Serpentine Cloud sofa in heavy white boucle; Pierre Beucler & Jean-Christophe Poggioli for Knoll ottomans, modern scupltural seating in olive leather
    Bath Surfaces - Cremo Delicato Quartzite counters and shower walls; ADKO Beacon Ikat Calico glass backsplash; Agora Alverso 4x4 shower floor tile
    Soaking Tub - freestanding Japanese design with ceiling-fill faucet and full-height glazing
    Closet Millwork - furniture-grade cabinetry with integrated lighting and glass shelving
    Wall Finish (Bath) - polished plaster Piazzo Grey wallpaper; hand-applied, textural depth with subtle reflectivity

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