'Simplicity and Proportion Are The Only Decoration' – Kim Kardashian's Minimalist Entryway Lets The Architecture Speak for Itself

Rather than adorning the hall with decor, the socialite's home is a 'minimal monastery,' and the curves of her home serve as beautiful decor

kim kardashian on a white background
(Image credit: Stephane Cardinale - Corbis via Getty Images)

Layered, textural, patterned, heritage interiors are our bread and butter at Homes & Gardens, but that doesn't mean we think simplicity is boring. In fact, it's sometimes only by stripping away the color and texture from a room that the bones really shine. Kim Kardashian's 'minimalist monastery' home in the Hollywood Hills wonderfully demonstrates this principle.

In 2020, the Skims mogul and her then-husband, Kanye West, worked with the Belgian designer and tastemaker Axel Vervoordt to transform their suburban Los Angeles home into an otherworldly, minimalist masterpiece. Every wall and ceiling is finished with a matte bone plaster, creating a shift in perspective as you walk through the door, as if the design goes on forever.

This eerie effect is most visible in the home's entryway, which embodies the idiosyncratic philosophy behind the property. As Axel puts it in an Instagram caption about the home: 'simplicity and proportion are the only decoration.'

Latest Videos From

Though this idea feels more applicable to an art piece than to a residential space, Kim's home breaks down the dichotomy between the two, demonstrating that when you strip everything back, you are left with the walls themselves shining. The arching ceilings of the entryway are the perfect example. In another space, these curves might be an afterthought, but here, they are the center of the design.

In this way, the home's look prioritizes ultimate simplicity. Axel told Architectural Digest: 'Kanye and Kim wanted something totally new. We didn’t talk about decoration but a kind of philosophy about how we live now and how we will live in the future. We changed the house by purifying it, and we kept pushing to make it purer and purer.'

In 2026, as maximalist interiors are returning to fashion, it feels like an important time to return to the elegance of a more understated space so we can understand both ends of the spectrum.

Shop The Minimalist Sculptural Edit

Though most of us probably won't go quite as minimal as Kim in our interiors, textural white pieces can still help make your home feel like a sculptural masterpiece in the same way as hers. These are our editors' picks for adding personality, subtly.

Though some people find these swaths of white to be stressful (what do you do with your shoes?), for Kim, minimalism is how she brings calm to her home. 'I love the simplicity of the design,' She told AD in 2020. 'Everything in the outside world is so chaotic. I like to come into a place and immediately feel the calmness.'

Of course, this approach to design is polarizing. Many people want their homes to feel warmer and more lived in. However, if you hope to create something more unsettling, like a visit to a gallery, Kim's minimalist entryway presents an interesting method of highlighting by paring back.

It's not just celebrities who embrace this technique; certain members of the design community also subscribe to a less is more method for creating beautiful homes. In fact, the mastermind behind the project, Axel Vervoordt applies this approach to all of his work. In a 2013 interview for 032c Magazine, he explained: 'I don’t believe in style rules. It’s just listening, seeing, feeling, and a kind of humbleness. I generally prefer the more hidden qualities. I don’t want things to show off too much or be too loud. I like it more silent.'

As Kim's hallway shows, for many people, the lack of style can be a style in and of itself. Axel stated: 'I think to make something beautiful and pleasing is always a bit dangerous. I try to avoid it. I think it’s fantastic when it is pleasing, but more importantly, for me, is that you feel the spirit and that you create a positive tension – a positive connection between the objects and yourself.'

He continues: 'For myself, I try to be as little present as possible in the sense of putting forward my own style. I prefer to have no style. It’s my way of doing things. I love doing simple things in a great way.'


Love celebrity news and interior design inspiration? Sign up for our newsletter and get the latest features delivered straight to your inbox.


Sophie Edwards
News Editor

Sophie is a writer and News Editor on the Celebrity Style team at Homes & Gardens. She is fascinated by the intersection of design and popular culture and is particularly passionate about researching trends and interior history. She is an avid pop culture fan and has interviewed Martha Stewart and Hillary Duff.

In her free time, Sophie freelances on design news for Westport Magazine and Livingetc. She also has a newsletter, My Friend's Art, in which she covers music, culture, and fine art through a personal lens. Her fiction has appeared in Love & Squalor and The Isis Magazine.

Before joining Future, Sophie worked in editorial at Fig Linens and Home, a boutique luxury linens brand. She has an MSc from Oxford University and a BA in Creative Writing and Sociology from Sarah Lawrence College.