2024 Residential Interior Design Award: Michael Hilal
Author:Anh-Minh LeMichael Hilal jokes that he had no business working on the 8,500-square-foot Hillsborough residence that effectively launched his interior design career. “The scope was so large,” he says. “And the project really became on-the-job training for me.”
The homeowners were familiar with his talents through friends for whom he had done a much smaller undertaking: “zhuzhing,” as Hilal describes it—mainly selecting pillows, art and accessories. For the new clients, he continues, “we did the entire house and picked out everything, from finishes to light fixtures … even down to the kitchen towels.”
The extensive transformation got underway in late 2018, when Hilal’s professional ambitions were shifting from the tech industry and he was starting a master’s program in interior architecture. Although he had completed side jobs here and there, he still considered himself an “extreme hobbyist” back then. The four-and-a-half-year effort with Architecture Allure and Innovative Custom Builders changed that.
“I was a sponge with the architect and the builder,” he says. In the place of a dated ranch-style home now sits a contemporary stunner composed of glass, stone and wood. “It is very indoor/outdoor, with massive walls of doors and windows everywhere,” Hilal notes. The stone that is prominent on the exterior also appears on the fireplace in the double-height living room, which previously had a standard eight-foot ceiling.
Throughout the dwelling, consistency was a priority for Hilal. White walls and European rift oak floors contribute to a neutral base, upon which he layered color, texture and pattern. In the living room, behind custom burl-wood doors, is a deep maroon bar. Elsewhere, a reading nook beckons with a blue, black and white motif—Eskayel’s La Scala—on the walls, daybed upholstery and decorative pillows.
Since the clients expressed a desire for wallpaper in the primary bedroom, Hilal obliged with Eskayel’s Roman Ram in a gray with gold and rust accents. “She wanted something a little fun, not just painted walls,” he says. Meanwhile, the son’s and daughter’s bedrooms are awash in shades of blue and peach, respectively.
In the pool house bathroom, Hilal opted for hues that “pull from the natural landscape around it,” he explains. “That’s why you see a lot of greens and warmer tones.” For the walls—which, like all of the bathrooms in the home, feature plaster—he chose Color Atelier’s Minted limewash paint.
While the clients gave Hilal a lot of leeway, they did request the inclusion of antiques, in the hopes of avoiding an overly modern aesthetic. In the dining room, an early-1900s Chinese sideboard is joined by chairs and a table designed by Hilal as one-offs. “The clients allowed us to prototype some of our furniture pieces with them,” he recalls.
That aspect was especially enticing. “The clients were happy to let us experiment with making furniture,” he elaborates. “At that point, I hadn’t conceived that I wanted a furniture collection. But I was thinking, how do I approach this house in a way that it feels custom, that it feels interesting?” He estimates that 70 percent of the furniture in the home was designed by and fabricated for his firm.
Shortly after finishing the project, Hilal launched his furniture line, to which he may add the clients’ Perla Venata quartzite-topped dining table, whose legs consist of a series of bronzed steel arches. Stools from his Big Sur collection can be found in the living room and kitchen nook; the former has a walnut version with a Dedar fabric, while the latter seating is composed of bleached and limewashed cherry wood with Nobilis textiles. Also in the kitchen, Hilal devised a custom fluted kitchen island made of white oak. “We wanted it to feel like a separate piece of furniture, but also be consistent with the floor,” he shares.
Not only did this sweeping endeavor mark Hilal’s first project of significance, but it was also the homeowners’ first time working with an interior designer. In this case, with great risk came great reward. “They liked the idea of supporting someone who was emerging,” he says. “The clients took a chance and I think it turned out beautifully.”