A Caribbean-Inspired Palm Beach Retreat with Modern, Tropical Materials
The condo was almost perfect: the penthouse in the breakers boasted magnificent views of the ocean and the city of Palm Beach and was large enough to accommodate visiting family members and friends. There was only one real problem, says the owner: “I loved the space, but I hated everything else about it.” Slathered in marble with low, dropped ceilings and a maze-like configuration of rooms, the apartment needed, at minimum, a tweak. “I said to my husband, ‘Let’s get rid of the dining room wall and the marble, and we’ll be fine.’”
They consulted with New York-based interior designer Bruce Bierman, principal of Bruce Bierman Design, who noticed one other major flaw: “Many of the views of the ocean were obstructed by the architecture,” he says. It needed more than just one lost wall and new floors, so Bierman told the couple, “Let me show you what I think this could be.” “Within 24 hours, he’d shown us sketches of something completely different,” says the owner, who gave Bierman’s drawings an enthusiastic thumbs up. So began a gut renovation.
“We took it all the way back to the blocks, and then we began the remodel,” says Hunter Johnson, project manager for West Palm Beach-based builder Woolems—headed by owner Jim Woolems—who supervised construction. Bierman’s vision was to transform the space from what Johnson calls “a very 1980s kind of layout—ma’s bedroom, pa’s bedroom and the kitchen, all compartmentalized,” into an open, flowing and ingeniously versatile floor plan that showcases the views.
The kitchen, dining and living areas are now one open space. Beyond them lie the master bedroom, study and library, and, yet, those feel open as well, thanks to pocket doors that slide out of sight. “The doors become the walls, and the walls can disappear,” says Johnson. The non-bedrooms are furnished with sleeper sofas so that, when the couple’s two children come to visit, these spaces can become private bedrooms as the doors reappear and slide shut.
The clients, who live most of the year in New York, wanted their Palm Beach pied-à-terre to feel like a Caribbean beach house: tropical, lighthearted and comfortable. “So many of my friends have such serious apartments, but they could be in any city,” says the owner. “I’m in Florida. I want it to look like I’m in Florida.”
Inspired by a Nassau, Bahamas, hotel room the couple loved, Bierman boldly added entire walls of walnut paneling in the library and floor-to-ceiling bamboo shutters elsewhere. He incorporated furniture made of tropical materials—rattan and bamboo—but modern in look and feel, with oversized armchairs stained dark brown and contemporary, square-shaped lamps from Paris.
Almost all of the furniture is neutral in tone—beige, cream and brown—so that it harmonizes with the owner’s other direction for Bierman: “Give me color. I love it.” Thus, the owner’s closet is a vibrant cornflower blue; there’s bright, leafy green in the master bedroom; and, in the living room, a wall is painted a dramatic Venetian red, with matching silken pillows on the ivory couch. “Down the road, if I get tired of the color, I can change the pillows and paint the wall another color,” says the owner, “without having to change the furniture.” Bierman thinks of these neutral-toned pieces as the little black dress found in many women’s closets. “Once you accessorize it,” he says, “it really comes to life.”
Perhaps Bierman’s biggest achievement was showcasing the views that had been restricted by the previous layout. In the living area, he angled a mirror over the couch so that the owners could see the ocean’s reflection from the kitchen. The sofa’s placement takes optimal advantage of the waterside vistas, and even the master bath shower stall is surrounded by clear glass to maintain the views.
With the open plan, sliding doors, grand rooms and heightened ceilings, the place now feels deceptively more like a house than an apartment. That led to one other unforeseen problem: “It was supposed to be our weekend hideaway,” says the owner. “But now we want to be here all the time.”
—Lisa Selin Davis