Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Sheila Bridges on vice presidenti­al designs

- By Jura Koncius

New York interior designer Sheila Bridges has designed the official vice president’s residence for Kamala D. Harris and Doug Emhoff, a yearlong project finished at the end of 2022.

The Washington Post has confirmed that Bridges decorated the 1893 Victorian home on the grounds of the leafy U.S. Naval Observator­y.

“It’s an incredible honor,” says Bridges, 58, who in 2001 designed the Harlem offices of former president Bill Clinton and his staff. Other clients have included Sean “P. Diddy” Combs and software mogul and art collector Peter Norton. “The house is an architectu­ral landmark. I love old homes and figuring out how to use them for a family with a modern lifestyle. That is what we did.”

Bridges, who is known for her exacting eye for detail and imaginativ­e design sensibilit­y, has redone the public spaces on the main floor with furnishing­s primarily made by American companies, makers and manufactur­ers.

“This was an opportunit­y to celebrate American

design and crafts and small artisans,” says Bridges. The goal, she says, was to create a space that felt like a

family home, yet allowed the vice president and second gentleman to host events such as Diwali celebratio­ns, military family receptions and Latino small-business owner gatherings.

The spacious, 33-room white house with the wraparound porch at 1 Observator­y Circle in Northwest Washington, D.C., was designated by Congress as the official residence of the vice president in 1974. While the upstairs rooms are private quarters, the main floor is often used for official receptions and dinners.

It is usually refreshed for each family that lives there using furniture already in the house, pieces in storage from the residence’s official furnishing­s collection and the family’s own furniture or accessorie­s. In the past, the furnishing­s and refurbishi­ng budget came from private funds raised through the Vice President’s Residence Foundation. The Washington Post has confirmed that all costs of the project were paid for with private funds.

Bridges, whose office and home is in Harlem and who also has homes in Hudson, and Reykjavik, says she and her team initially met with Harris about the project, then continued the planning with Harris’s staff. “The

house needed to reflect her California sensibilit­ies and a more modern aesthetic,” she adds. “Some of the colors come from the landscape, the house has incredible gardens. I wanted it to have a modern feel and lots of interestin­g details reflecting the vice president’s cultural heritage from India and Africa,” Bridges says.

The walls keep to mostly a neutral palette, with the exception of a vibrant pink wallpaper in the library, a color inspired by crape myrtle tree blossoms, Bridges says. “The trees are right outside the library and I wanted to bring that color inside,” Bridges says. “It’s important to have a dialogue between the landscape, architectu­re and interior.”

Bridges sits in the top ranks of America’s interior design community. She did a room she called “Le Salon Des Chiens” in the 2019 Kips Bay Decorator Show House, which features A-list design talents. She regularly lands on the AD 100 List, Architectu­ral Digest’s list of top global designers, and Elle Decor’s A-List. Originally from Philadelph­ia, Bridges moved to Harlem in 1993, wanting to be near its rich African American cultural mix, and soon establishe­d her own design firm.

She is the author of two books. “Furnishing Forward — A Practical Guide To Furnishing For a Lifetime” was published in 2002. “The Bald Mermaid A Memoir” came out in 2013 and chronicled her journey with alopecia.

In 2006, Bridges introduced “Harlem Toile,” a line of wallpapers featuring a tongue-in-cheek twist on formal French 18thcentur­y toile de Jouy. “I have always loved French toiles but couldn’t find one that resonated

enough to put on my own walls. After searching unsuccessf­ully for the perfect toile for my own home I simply decided to create one with people who looked like me,” Bridges says. The Harlem Toile de Jouy line has included fabrics, clothing, candles, Converse sneakers and Sonos speakers. She has a special line of Harlem Toile products at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art shop.

Last year, Wedgwood debuted a fine bone china collection based on Bridges’s toile. Bridges, who posts on Instagram under @harlemtoil­egirl, says her Wedgwood designs were just accepted into the permanent collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture and the Brooklyn Museum.

Harris and Emhoff did not move into the official vice president’s residence for several months after the inaugurati­on in 2021. They lived temporaril­y at Blair House, the president’s guesthouse, while work was being done at 1 Observator­y Circle. At the time, Harris’s office shared that the repairs included HVAC maintenanc­e, replacing liners in the chimneys and refurbishi­ng hardwood floors.

Each resident of the house makes it their own. Dan and Marilyn Quayle added a heated pool, and the Cheneys upgraded an upstairs galley kitchen. The Bidens used New York designer Victoria Hagan to add more color and personalit­y, including creating an apple green and white sunroom where Jill Biden liked to grade papers and host small meetings. They added a garden and 75 place settings of Lenox china featuring the vicepresid­ential seal. Mike and Karen Pence painted the dining room matte blue and hung a few of Karen Pence’s watercolor­s using the designer Arlene Critzos of Interior Concepts of Annapolis. They also installed a basketball court and a beehive.

 ?? Katherine Frey / The Washington Post ?? One of Joe and Jill Biden's favorite rooms in the vice president's residence was the apple green and white sunroom.
Katherine Frey / The Washington Post One of Joe and Jill Biden's favorite rooms in the vice president's residence was the apple green and white sunroom.
 ?? Sheila Bridges / Handout ?? Sheila Bridges's laundry room in New York features some of the Harlem Toile wallpaper she designed.
Sheila Bridges / Handout Sheila Bridges's laundry room in New York features some of the Harlem Toile wallpaper she designed.

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