Casa Karina is a luxury home in San Miguel de Allende—one of the places in which I would love to retire—which perfectly blends contemporary design with eye-catching rustic elements. The attention to detail is second to none and the home features both indoor and outdoor living areas which are mindfully designed to complement your mood.
One enters Casa Karina through a commanding 19th-Century River Teak door which was imported from Rajasthan, India And are immediately welcomed by a handmade hammock which sits next to a fireplace. The floors and beams are made from recycled hardwood ‘Trojes’ from the state of Michoacán, which is prominent in the blue tones of the kitchen’s ceiling. All of the doors in the home are made from heavy antique mesquite wood, also from Michoacán.
The living room has a double-height ceiling which fills the floor plan with natural light, some of the light streaming through the glass-bottomed rooftop pool. The chef’s kitchen perfectly blends contemporary functionality—a complete range of Viking appliances—and vintage-chic finishes like raw quartzite countertops and a sink sculpted from a large river stone.
The ground floor hosts one of the spacious bedroom suites, which opens up to the main living room area. This bedroom is furnished with a king-sized bed and has a fireplace while the en-suite bath features a double vanity with sinks upscaled from coffee mortars, quartzite counters, and tan river stone flooring. The room is complete with a bathtub and shower.
The second bedroom is located on the upper level and also features a king- sized bed and fireplace along with a cozy reading nook-window seat which captures sight of the Parroquia. The en-suite bathroom is finished with grey shaved stone flooring, a river stone sink, and a large walk-in shower. Also on this floor are a TV room with a custom L-shaped sofa and an office with a desk and a Balinese day bed.
This stylish home—located at the top of a quiet pedestrian street [Callejon] just below San Miguel’s main lookout point—has another great selling point: a rooftop terrace that captures sweeping panoramic sunset views, including sight of the town’s most famous landmark—the Parroquia de San Miguel—and features a heated glass bottom swimming pool, a black marble firepit with wraparound seating, an outdoor kitchen with a Viking barbecue grill, a half bathroom and laundry room.
You could live up there!
Please include me on the guest list.
ReplyDeleteCheck!
Deletethe dog's mother
ReplyDeletexoxo :-)
Not fond of a U-shaped kitchen...and that TV...uh, hallway? would be a no. But the rest? Oh, yeah. Especially the rooftop (though, I'd need an elevator).
ReplyDeleteThe TV nook and the kitchen don't bother me, but an elevator? Yes, please.
DeleteI could live on the roof.
ReplyDeleteTruth!
DeleteI like the looks of it but Im not feeling this one. Not me at all. Im not sure what it is. But would love the locale.
ReplyDeleteI do wish there were more windows, though I love looking up through the pool!
DeleteNope
ReplyDeleteRed door??? Hot lifeguard at the roof pool???
DeleteNope. It's weird that the pool didn't even register with me.
DeleteThe house is interesting, though a bit stark in places. But the exterior views won me over!
ReplyDeleteYeah, get me an elevator and I would be fine staying most of the time on the roof!
DeleteBeautiful! I love the double-height atrium and the roof terrace. I had to look up where San Miguel de Allende is!
ReplyDeleteIt's a very artsy community, and can be very expensive; some gorgeous homes up there!
DeleteWe're all different, and this place leaves me cold. Sorry!
ReplyDeleteOh no, I understand. I like it but wish there were more windows.
DeleteAppears to be dark and claustrophobic. Love the location though. Maybe a trip to Palm Springs to buy Suzzanne Summer's old place. Take a look--- https://homesofcelebs.com/suzanne-somerss-former-palm-springs-estate-lists-for-9-35-million/
ReplyDeleteToo many separate buildings and even with the palm trees it comes off as desolate.
DeleteHaving visited Palm Springs many times and know the lay of the land, maybe desolate is what they're going for. The home is located as far West as one can go without living in the mountains. It's a prestigious neighborhood for a lot of movers and shakers but close enough to the main drag for fine dinning and shopping. Staying away from the public is intentional.
DeleteI don't like the barn doors, but otherwise I love it. That pool is spectacular.
ReplyDeleteBarn doors are kind of over.
DeleteDone.
ReplyDeleteI just booked a flight cause I’m moving in right away.
I love the location, of course (anywhere but in Cankleland) but it’s the idea of having this cocoon of a hose as my main residence . I love the spaces and that pool!
It’s very Moorish in the sense that it looks inside, not outside. Love that.
XOXO
It does have a look of those ancient Moroccan homes.
Deletexoxo
Quirky, and it does have appeal.
ReplyDeleteIt's not the house for everyone, but there are parts I like!
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