HOLLYWOOD STAR
The LA home of the owners of Atelier AM deserves accolades for its beautiful style
Sitting under the brushwood shade of the pergola in Michael and Alexandra Misczynski’s Los Angeles garden, soothed by the surrounding olive trees and cool blue waters of the swimming pool, Michael says of their family home in the West Hollywood hills: ‘People can’t believe we’re only a few hundred feet from the bustle of Sunset Boulevard. Here, it really does feel like you’re somewhere else.’
However, this dreamy scene might never have existed had the couple not moved fast to snap up the property in front of their Spanish-style, three-storey villa when it came up for sale in 2017. It was a bold move, made mainly to preserve their magnificent existing view that stretches past the Chateau Marmont hotel and then out towards the twinkling lights of downtown LA, but also to accommodate two boys who needed more space to grow and be with friends.
What they hadn’t expected was how it would ‘completely change our lifestyle,’ says Michael. Rather than use the second property to expand their existing house, they transformed it to feature a garden, pool, pool house and pergola – inspired by Massimo Ferragamo’s Castiglion del Bosco Tuscan estate, a favourite holiday destination for the family – which provides them with somewhere to relax with friends. ‘We never really entertained in the main house,’ he says, ‘but we use this more than I thought we would.’
The couple bought and overhauled the main 1920s house just over 15 years ago, when their eldest son Miles, now 16, was born (their second son Henry is 13). They were drawn to the location because of ‘the energy of the Strip,’ says Michael. ‘It felt a little bit more alive, with cars honking in the distance, than what you find with the classic LA sprawl.’
The main property’s terracotta façade may imbue a sunshiney Mediterranean feel, but the interiors resonate with a more northern European sophistication that is a hallmark of the pair’s creative approach as founders of interior design firm Atelier AM. Here, their unique style has married modernist lines and a neutral palette with antiques, from 4000BC Bactrian idols and 18th-century tables from Axel Vervoordt to 20th-century design classics by Jean-michel Frank and Pierre Chareau, and the rough-hewn tactility of old stone sinks, pock-marked woods and luxurious linens. ‘We use texture as our pattern,’ Michael says.
The hand-trowelled polished plaster walls, imbuing rooms with an ethereal shimmer as the light bounces off the walls, were a fortuitous accident after the plasterer forgot to add white into the gypsum mix. ‘It just felt natural, cement-like and honest,’ says Michael.
For the pool house, the couple took off a third of the existing ‘nondescript 1970s small ranch house,’ says Michael, working with the building to create a family room, kitchen, bathroom and gym. In both the pool house and the main home, the furniture is unexpected – ‘you wouldn’t think of it being in this kind of rustic-style home’ – but relaxed and comfortable. ‘We still have white rugs. We still have boys running around and everything survives,’ he says. ‘Some of the things are expensive, but hopefully there’s a foil in each room working against this to make you feel comfortable enough to touch or even kick your feet up in them.’ &&
“THE RICH PATINA OF RECLAIMED OAK AND STONE FLOORS LENDS THE HOUSE GRAVITAS”