Hambrick Holdings is a design and architecture studio shaping warm, deliberate interiors and the structures that quietly carry them. We work in plaster, oak, stone, and time.
Get in TouchWe design for the long arc — rooms that feel inevitable on the first visit and still feel right two decades on.
Our work begins with the site: how the light moves, where the wind settles, what the land already wants to be. From there we draw plans that prize proportion over fashion and texture over polish. We believe in the honest weight of materials — lime-washed walls that age into themselves, white oak that softens underfoot, brass that earns its patina.
Every project at Hambrick Holdings begins as a conversation and ends as a place that holds a family's particular life. We are a small studio by choice. We take on a handful of homes each year so that each one can be made with care.
We specify what will improve with use. Stone, plaster, linen, wood — surfaces that record a life rather than resist one.
Quiet rooms, generous proportions, considered light. We remove before we add.
Every home is drawn for its landscape, its climate, and the people who will live inside it. Nothing is borrowed from a portfolio.
From the first sketch to the last shelf, we offer integrated design and architecture under one roof — so the line, the light, and the linen all answer to the same hand.
Ground-up homes and considered additions. We draw with the site in mind and the seasons in view.
Rooms drawn from the inside out — layouts, palettes, and furniture that earn their place over years.
For clients already underway. A working partnership for selections, edits, and second opinions.
A small selection from the past several years — private residences, considered renovations, and a quiet hospitality project or two.
A four-bedroom farmhouse rebuilt around a single hearth, clad in board-and-batten and shaded by the willows that gave it its name.
A low courtyard home in olive country — lime plaster, terracotta floors, and a kitchen built around a single olivewood table.
A careful restoration of an 1840s single house. New mechanicals, original cypress, and a back garden returned to the brick.
A two-room cabin on a working ranch — reclaimed timber, a steel-and-stone fireplace, and windows sized to the mountain.