This week we’re revisiting some of our favorite all-time summer stories, like this one from 2022:
San Francisco designer Charles de Lisle needs no introduction among the design cognoscenti. He’s been the arbiter of cool for a couple of decades in the Bay Area, orchestrating interiors for local luminaries as well as far-flung clients. And he’s on the 2022 AD 100 list, the holy grail for designers.
But the project we most admire is his own Sonoma retreat—a simple yet sophisticated compound featuring repurposed, reclaimed, and eco-friendly elements—which he shares with his partner Ralph Dennis, a designer with Studio Volpe.
Above: De Lisle installed solar panels and sourced vintage windows from an old Air Force base. “I had always wanted to build my own house, and this site reminded me of where I grew up in Western Massachusetts.”
Scout the Salvage Yards
Above: A propane Jøtul stove (“it’s less spark inducing than a wood-burning stove”) supplements heat generated by the solar panels. The black chair next to the stove is by Italian designer Gaetano Pesci and the chaise longue is by Bruno Mathsson—”I like a funny mashup of things that are important and things that are not.”
Repurpose Family Stalwarts
Above: The interior is fully cladded in plywood. De Lisle repurposed a vintage shop work bench as a dining table (his father, a high school history teacher, rescued it; it still has teenage initials carved on the surface). The table is surrounded by vintage Josef Hoffmann bentwood chairs. De Lisle used Kohler fixtures for the existing cast-concrete laundry sink (“it was the only piece we kept from the original cabin”). The industrial worktable is from Grainger.