Tour a Green (and Pink) New Orleans Victorian Home With Its Own Carriage House
Dusty pink with forest green accents is an unconventional colorway for the façade of a house. But when it came to a New Orleans Victorian renovation, those are just the hues that Samantha Wetton and Alexandra Neu of Los Angeles–based Lafayette Studio decided were best. “We were driving around town, looking at other people’s color combinations and trying to come up with our favorite,” explains Wetton, as she talks about the property they renovated for a retired Southern California couple moving to the quiet neighborhood to be closer to their daughter and son-in-law. In a place like New Orleans, where vibrant architecture is a visible language, their choice “speaks to the playfulness the city has to offer,” Wetton says.
Their desire to embrace the essence of the city continues inside. After a series of unfortunate decorating efforts in the 1980s and ’90s left the 1904 structure with terra-cotta tiled kitchen countertops, colored bathtubs, and carpets the color of spoiled avocado, the designers wanted to restore the dignity of the house while honoring its original era. “I envisioned all the ways in which we could bring it back to its potential, because it still had a lot of its architectural bones,” Wetton says. “They were just hidden by all of these bad renovations over time.”
After peeling away the lamentable decor and updating the plumbing, wiring, and some of the flooring—a fire in 1991 had left a gaping hole in the kitchen floor, which had been merely covered by a rug—Wetton and Neu got down to outfitting the space. In the process, they fashioned a dynamic color story in the public rooms by using fabric to connect the rooms. By the time the duo finished, they had created an elegantly classic interior filled with bold textures, local and imported antiques, a few modern spins on traditional accents, and some religious iconography for emphasis.
In the opulent dining room, robust green pigment makes the strongest color statement. “[In] New Orleans, you see that green is a big color used on a lot of the architecture. That very rich, vibrant green hue [is] representative of the city. You [also] see it in the beautiful oak trees and the lush greenery,” Wetton says. “We were trying to figure out what would make this room feel really luxurious. That color was the first to come to mind.” As for the space’s furnishing, antique Thonet Bentwood chairs surround an oval table, and a 20th-century six-light crystal bronze chandelier straight from a Milanese Palazzo adds to the sense of extravagance.
Although many of the home’s pieces were brought into the city, much of its look and feel come courtesy of local salvage yards, antique shops, and craftspeople. “A big part of our design process was trying to highlight local artisans and makers,” Wetton says, referencing contributions by the likes of Chip Martinson. “Our overall design intent was to preserve the historical shell and details of the home,” Wetton says. Neu adds: “[On] all the projects we work, we want [them] to feel like there’s a history, and [they’ve] been lived in. I think we did a pretty good job.”