Actor and model Laura Harrier paid $3.5 million for her Mediterranean-style Hollywood Hills home less than six months ago, but the Mike star has already relisted the four-bedroom, three-bathroom property for the same price that she paid for it, according to Dirt.
The 3,233-square-foot house, which was designed in 1922 by architect Arthur Barnes and remodeled by designer Mark Haddawy last year, still features plenty of charming period details throughout its renovated interiors. A white stucco and terracotta exterior opens into a small double-height foyer with access to the living room and a dark wood staircase with a wrought iron handrail that leads to the upstairs bedrooms. In the former, creamy cove plastered ceilings provide a sense of airiness above an original Batchelder fireplace and a row of arched mahogany-trimmed casement windows, also original.
Curved lines abound, thanks in large part to the numerous arched windows and doorways found throughout the dwelling. It’s no surprise that the BlacKkKlansman actor was drawn to the space, considering the lengths that she went to eradicate the hard angles of her previous Silver Lake pad. “I’m not really attracted to things that are hard or uninviting,” Harrier told AD during a tour of that home. “As cool as Lucite furniture is, that’s not what I want to sit in. I want everything to be soft.”
The 70s-inspired design aesthetic that she employed in that house is echoed here, which makes sense given that Harrier worked with interior designer Tiffany Howell in both locations. Some furniture makes a reappearance here, including Harrier’s pair of Italian ma+39 ivory armchairs, this time set across a huge curved olive green couch, and her rosy-hued vintage marble Gae Aulenti coffee table, all found in the living room.
In the kitchen, reclaimed antique wood floors are complemented by bright white original-style cabinetry. The dining room offers black-and-white abstract patterned wallpaper, a vintage iron chandelier, and access to a brick terrace outside. Multiple balconies and patios make efficient use of the small yard, which also hosts a fire pit with built-in seating.
Caroline Wolf of Compass has the listing.