Interior Design Practice
Interiors That
Remember
the Land.
We design boutique hotel interiors sourced from the landscape around them — plaster, timber, stone, and light arranged so guests feel where they are.
Boutique hotels · Ranch conversions · Resort developments
Interior Design Practice
Interiors That Remember the Land.
Boutique hotel interiors sourced from the landscape around them.
Every room begins
with a conversation
about the land.
Before a single sample is pinned to a board, we walk the property. We learn which direction the afternoon light travels, where the soil changes color, what the air smells like after rain. That knowledge becomes the brief.
Our material sourcing is specific to place: a reclaimed Douglas fir from a dismantled Willamette Valley hay barn becomes a headboard in a wine country inn. A hand-poured concrete vanity, pigmented with localite clay from the same mesa where the hotel stands, carries the geology of the site into the bathroom.
Guests don't need to know the source. They feel it — a rightness, a weight, a warmth that manufactured interiors cannot replicate.
"Hand-troweled Venetian plaster, pigmented with ochre earth sourced from the property's lower field."
The Sycamore Inn, Paso Robles
Ready to root your property in its landscape?
Rancho Seco Inn, Sonoma County
Where sleep feels
earned by the land.
The Rancho Seco suite was built around one idea: a person who has spent the day walking the vineyard should fall asleep as if the room continued that walk. Headboard milled from reclaimed barn timber. Plaster walls in two tones of warm ochre. Linen bedding sourced from a Portuguese mill that hasn't changed its weave in forty years.
"I've stayed in design hotels across four continents. This was the first time I felt the room had been made for the specific light of that specific afternoon."
Marcus Ellery
Guest, Rancho Seco Inn — October 2024
From raw acreage
to finished room.
Scroll through four stages of a guest suite at Rancho Seco, Sonoma County — converted from a working cattle barn.
01 — Raw Structure
Exposed framing, concrete subfloor, unfinished openings. The bones of the space before anything is decided.
02 — Material Board
Reclaimed Douglas fir samples. Plaster tints on card. Linen swatches. The room in miniature, before scale.

03 — Installation
Plaster applied in two coats, finished by hand. Timber headboard set and leveled. Hardware placed at the first attempt.
04 — Finished at Dusk
Linen curtains drawn back. Bedside lamp on. The room at the hour it was designed for — golden, still, complete.
Every material we use,
sourced and named.
A curated PDF lookbook of 60+ materials, vendor partners, and sourcing notes from completed projects. Leave your email and we'll send it directly.
No newsletter. One PDF. That's it.
Mesa Verde Inn, Taos, New Mexico
A table that knows
where the food came from.
Mesa Verde's dining room was designed around its weekly farmers' market relationship. The communal table is reclaimed high desert juniper, 22 feet long, milled from a tree felled by lightning on the property. The hand-poured concrete bar top is pigmented with iron-rich clay from the same mesa. Nothing in this room is decorative — everything has a reason.
"We sat at that table for four hours. Not because the food was slow — because leaving felt wrong. The room held us."
Sofia & James Nakamura
Guests, Mesa Verde Inn — March 2025
Ready to root your property in its landscape?
The Sycamore, Paso Robles
Silence designed
as carefully as sound.
The Sycamore Spa was built for one purpose: to feel like stepping into the earth itself. Walls finished in raw tadelakt — the ancient Moroccan lime plaster that becomes waterproof as it cures. A soaking tub carved from a single block of local sandstone. The only sound is what comes through the window: wind in the olive grove, birdsong, the occasional bell from the property's working goat herd.
"I walked in and sat on the floor for ten minutes before doing anything. The room asked for that. It deserved it."
Dr. Amara Osei
Guest, The Sycamore — January 2025
Ready to root your property in its landscape?