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Top 10 Skim Milk Posts of 2025

Perched at 10,600 feet in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains, this home is a quietly powerful study in restraint, trust, and dialogue with the landscape. Designed by Gabriel Yuri of New Operations Workshop as an addition to his parents’ retreat, the project balances a charred Shou Sugi Ban exterior with a luminous, oak-lined interior. Rooted in Japanese and Scandinavian traditions yet unmistakably American, the house preserves the original structure while reframing it around light, views, and family life. Thoughtful material continuity, passive solar strategies, and seamless indoor–outdoor connections reveal a mountain home shaped as much by respect for place as by architectural intention.

Tucked into a narrow Mallorcan alley, Casa Mila is a quiet yet radical study in light, thresholds, and spatial invention. What began as a modest renovation evolved – thanks to the addition of a slim adjacent plot – into an architectural experiment by Isla Architects that rethinks how a home breathes, opens, and gathers. A choreography of pivot windows, skylights, and sliding panels animates interiors throughout the day, while restrained materials and crafted imperfections add depth and warmth. From a kitchen that doubles as a social hinge to a guest house that opens like a chiringuito, Casa Mila reveals how ingenuity can transform tight constraints into luminous possibility.

Before the foundation was poured, a distinct green marble set the tone for this 3,500-square-foot Ontario residence by Studio Brocca. Rooted in Italian heritage yet distinctly contemporary, the home balances crisp architectural lines with soft curves and arches, a dialogue the studio calls “warm minimalism.” Deep greens, terracotta rusts, and sculptural details evoke the Tuscan landscape while responding to the site’s lush surroundings. From marble that anchors both public and private spaces to thoughtfully framed openings that recall cypress-lined hills, the house becomes a sensory bridge between Canada and Italy – proof that material choices, made early and with intention, can shape an entire architectural narrative.

In Toronto’s High Park, the Westminster Residence reimagines the familiar gabled house as an exercise in weight, tension, and quiet provocation. Designed by Batay-Csorba Architects, the home celebrates the roof as architecture – its steep terracotta form appearing to hover above a dark brick base. Asymmetrical dormers ground and cantilever in equal measure, unsettling expectations while remaining rooted in context. Inside, richly weighted materials like travertine and walnut are offset by white oak and lime-washed walls, creating a careful balance of heaviness and light. Even outdoors, a seemingly floating concrete patio reinforces the house’s poised dialogue between gravity, craft, and time.

A single pivot of teak sets the tone at the Inland Lane Residence, where designer Sophie Goineau reimagines a 1965 mid-century home as an exercise in “harmonious disruption.” Working within tight zoning constraints, Goineau treated the house like a musical score – opening walls, redistributing light, and embracing its unusual T-shaped plan to create a villa-like flow between interior and poolside living. Overhead, sculptural waves of thermally modified ash temper Malibu’s intense sun while casting ever-shifting shadows that animate the space. The result is a home that breathes with its environment, honoring its modernist bones while composing an entirely new rhythm.

Tucked within Seoul’s historic Bukchon Hanok Village, Le Labo Bukchon Hanok reimagines perfumery as a living dialogue between past and present. Rather than imposing itself on tradition, the lab inhabits a former noble residence with quiet reverence – pairing untouched stonework with newly patterned wood floors, hanji-wrapped walls, and hand-dyed hemp surfaces that soften sound and light. Every gesture heightens the sensory journey, from a raw stone basin that opens the space to a fragrance organ room where scent-making becomes a visible ritual. Part sanctuary, part workshop, the lab invites visitors to experience fragrance through craft, stillness, and deeply rooted Korean design philosophy.

A modern living room with minimalist furniture in soothing skim milk tones, a brick fireplace, and large sliding doors opening to a patio with lounge chairs, a pool, and lush greenery.

Photo: Evan Ramzi

In Los Angeles’ Brentwood neighborhood, the restored Park Lane home offers a thoughtful conversation between mid-century modernism and contemporary living. Originally built in 1963, the house was reimagined by designer and developer Jordan Bakva, who turned to the city’s iconic Case Study Houses for guidance. Rather than erase the past, Bakva amplified it celebrating features like the brick exterior, terrazzo entry, kidney-shaped pool, and even a sunken tub – all refreshed with modern finishes. Expansive pocketing doors reconnect every room to the landscape, creating a home that feels relaxed, light-filled, and timeless, honoring its architectural lineage while adapting gracefully to life today.

From the street, this West 84th Street Residence reads as a classic New York brownstone – carefully preserved and historically intact. Step inside, however, and the project unfolds as a radical rethinking of townhouse living. Designed by Placeholder, the interiors introduce unexpected generosity, anchored by a 32-foot-long great room that brings light, proportion, and flow rarely found in urban homes. Across two distinct residences, refined materials, sculptural stairways, and thoughtfully framed outdoor spaces blur the line between architecture and furniture. Kitchens and baths become crafted objects, while gardens and terraces extend life beyond the walls, revealing a brownstone transformed with restraint, intelligence, and quiet ambition.

Modern living room with large floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking a swimming pool, patio, and trees; neutral-toned furniture in calming skim milk hues and natural light fill the space.

Photo: Chase Daniel

In Austin’s Travis Heights, one of Texas’ oldest brick homes has been thoughtfully reawakened through a renovation by Michael Hsu Office of Architecture that treats history as a living material. Built in 1851, the residence now pairs its storied masonry and frontier craftsmanship with a luminous glass addition that frames city views and invites light deep inside. Fossil-filled limestone floors, repurposed fire-scarred wood, and layered landscapes weave together geology, memory, and modern life. Set on a rare 1.25-acre urban site, the project reveals how past and present can coexist – each era clearly expressed, yet deeply connected through place, craft, and time.

And the most popular Skim Milk post of 2025 is…

A spacious, modern living room with neutral tones reminiscent of skim milk, light beige furniture, wooden accents, large abstract art, and tall wooden doors opening to an adjoining room.

Photo: Courtesy of Aman

High above Tokyo’s skyline, Aman’s first branded residences redefine urban luxury as an experience of calm rather than excess. Perched atop Japan’s tallest residential tower, the project – designed by Pelli Clarke & Partners with interiors by Yabu Pushelberg – transforms monumental scale into a sequence of intimate, contemplative moments. From a meditative arrival marked by water and floating sculpture to interiors shaped by muted, earth-toned materials, the residences balance Japanese restraint with global comfort. Traditional spatial principles are reinterpreted through contemporary design, creating a new language of luxury that prioritizes serenity, sensory depth, and connection to nature within one of the world’s densest cities.

Check out the rest of Design Milk’s end of the year coverage here!

With professional degrees in architecture and journalism, New York-based writer Joseph has a desire to make living beautifully accessible. His work seeks to enrich the lives of others with visual communication and storytelling through design. When not writing, he teaches visual communication, theory, and design.

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  • Elephant’s Hill House

    The privileged view of nature was the core starting point for this project on the mountainous region of Nova Lima, State of Minas Gerais/Brazil. An adventurer couple chose us to create this special project in such an exclusive area. At first, the site’s high declivity seemed to be a big challenge, but it was also what inspired us to come up with the implantation’s solution. Exploring its natural landscape and the Elephant’s Hill view, it was possible to set the social floor at the height limit, above the trees. The street facade turned out to be the side elevation and the main facade now faces towards the side boundary. Due to the high declivity of the area, we were able to create a 3 level house. On the ground floor: garage, laundry, and storage. On the first floor, the office was fully integrated with the living room and a guests’ ensuite. Finally, on the second floor, there’s the hosts’ ensuite, with the most privileged view of the landscape. A slight angulation to the east gave us the opportunity to have both the ensuite and the barbecue area to take advantage of the morning sun and the region’s predominant ventilation. At the same time, it helped to protect the ground floor from the sunset light using a concrete wall that blocks the sunlight inside the house. With the major orientation E-W, the house opens to the northern landscape. Extensive eaves on the north view’s perimeter protect the openings of the summer sun, at the same time as the glasses receive the necessary natural heat to naturally warm the inside during the winter.
    We requested that two trees were precisely placed by the topographer in the middle of the elevated deck that connects the house to the suspended heated pool. These also work as a natural filter to the sun’s radiation, minimizing the sun’s entry in the living room and the kitchen. The 25m pool, a client wish, is a fundamental part of the volumetric composition of the house. Sustained by two concrete columns, they elevate the pool 6m above the natural floor level, providing to whom’s inside the pool a view of the treetops and the imponent Elephant’s Hill. With the capacity to generate about 1400kW of energy per month through photovoltaic panels, the house is self-sufficiency on energy, warming the pool water and neutralizing the energy consumption from equipment and artificial lightning.
    Columns and ribbed slab represent the constructive system. The use of apparent concrete in the house’s wall, swimming pool, and slabs bring the timelessness wanted to the project.