Engel & Völkers
  • 6 min read
  • 16.10.2024
  • by Patricia Engelhorn

California Dreaming

Interior designer Paula Bruss

Photography by: Daniel Collopy
  • Issue

    04/24

  • Location

    Paris / France

  • Photography

    Julien de rosa/ Getty images

It all began with Pamela Anderson and a new interior design assignment for a streaming platform. Today, even without the celebrity factor, Paula Bruss is drawing attention in California thanks to the young German designer’s highly appealing style.

Interior designer Paula Bruss, whose ideas are inspired by Rose Uniacke, Giancarlo Valle and Pamela Shamshiri. Photo: Bliss Braoudakis

All she had really been planning to do was go on vacation. Paula Bruss was 14, a high-school student in Hamburg, when her parents took her and her little sister on a trip to California, to L.A. “I immediately fell in love with L.A., thought it was really cool. There were so many perspectives, the people were completely different and the weather was great,” she recalls. “All of us liked it, in fact, so we thought: Let’s move here!” The whim turned into reality and in 2014, the family left Germany for Malibu – first for six months, then longer, and then, it appears, permanently.

Paula Bruss: Young & successful interior designer

If you google Paula Bruss today, you’ll learn two things: that she and Dylan Jagger Lee, model, musician and son of Pamela Anderson and her ex-husband Tommy Lee, have been together for many years. And that Paula is now 24 and a successful interior designer. Both developments came about quite naturally: “Dylan and I were neighbors in Malibu,” she says, “we knew each other from saying ‘hi, how are you,’ as you do when you run into people often, but we didn’t know each other well.” That changed after a party she attended at Dylan’s house, just three doors away. “After that, we saw each other almost every day.” Their relationship even survived Paula’s relocation to New York, when she went there to attend college. “When I returned to L.A., we moved in together.”

Paula Bruss’s style combines European elements with a cheerful American touch.

“Shrimp Boat“ is a painting by Andrew Piedilato; the white block sofa is from Living Divani. Photo: Daniel Collopy.

Newsletter

Stay informed

Sign up for our regular newsletter with exclusive properties, inspiration, market reports, and the latest news.

I would like to receive the exclusive newsletter from Engel & Völkers GmbH by email. I consent to the processing of my data for the purpose of regularly receiving newsletters from Engel & Völkers GmbH.
You can find out which data Engel & Völkers GmbH stores in detail and what rights you have in this context here. You can revoke your consent for the future at any time here.

The first big project after graduation: designing the house of Pamela Anderson's son

Back in L.A., Paula attended the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising: “My mother was super interested in interior design and architecture, and when we moved to Malibu, she decorated our first house really well, it even featured in Architectural Digest. I thought I’d like to do something like that too, although I wasn’t sure it was really the kind of thing you could make a career out of.”

She soon learned that you could, and exactly how to do so. In school, but also from Vanessa Alexander, an interior decorator for whom she worked part-time. Paula was young and bursting with enthusiasm, but she also evidently had good taste: “Working for Vanessa, I learned how to remodel an entire house.”

When she graduated with a bachelor’s degree in interior design and interior architecture in 2023, she had almost already completed her first big project – the house she shared with Dylan, his brother Brandon and Brandon’s girlfriend Lily, and their dogs, Dinosaur and Zucchini.

The dining table originated in southern France. It was acquired through the online auction house LiveAuctioneers. The antique English chairs were purchased through 1stDibs. Photo: Daniel Collopy

British country house meets a cheerful American touch

It was a 1950s farmhouse on Rancho Street in Encino, just half an hour’s drive from downtown L.A. “Dylan and Brandon bought it and asked me to take charge of remodeling and furnishing it. This project was actually a couple of sizes too big for me, so in the beginning, I had to ask for help. Also because I was still finishing up my degree. I’m very happy with the result; all of us are happy living in the house.”

This hardly comes as a surprise: The house is very spacious, it has smooth timber floors and an open kitchen that is painted chocolate brown; natural tones dominate, there are Moroccan carpets, bathrooms with antique-looking mosaic tiles and carefully selected vintage furniture. It feels like a cozy British country house with European elements and a cheerful, American touch. And it even featured on television – this is America, after all – in Pamela Anderson’s home renovation reality show “Pamela’s Garden of Eden,” which first aired on pay TV channel HGTV and later on Hulu.

Renovation of Pamela Anderson's boathouse: romantic French style

The next season is in the works. It will focus on the renovation of Pamela Anderson’s boathouse on Vancouver Island in Canada. This time, Paula Bruss will be taking charge of the project, although the style will cater more to Anderson’s tastes than her own: “Pamela’s style is very romantic, she loves roses, comfy sofas, cushions, flowers and vanity tables for her perfume bottles. At her house, I feel like I’m inside a castle from a French fairy tale.”

This won’t be a problem for Paula at all since she’s very accepting of other people’s tastes and actually likes Anderson’s boudoir style. “It’s easy to work with Pamela because she’s so laid-back. And I know that she trusts me. Not just because I’m going out with her son but because I’m from Europe, am familiar with French style and understand her taste for it.”

Get inspired by dream homes in Los Angeles.

  • Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $12,990,000

    ~€12,418,121

    • 7 Bedrooms8 Bathrooms13,200 m² Plot area
  • Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $10,990,000

    ~€10,506,170

    • 5 Bedrooms6 Bathrooms3,600 m² Plot area
  • Nexus House

    Venice, Los Angeles, California, United States

    Nexus House

    $9,800,000

    ~€9,368,559

    • 7 Bedrooms6 Bathrooms533 m² Plot area
    Nexus House
  • Venice, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $7,900,000

    ~€7,552,206

    • 7 Bedrooms6 Bathrooms533 m² Plot area
  • Bel Air, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $6,990,000

    ~€6,682,268

    • 4 Bedrooms3 Bathrooms3,270 m² Plot area
  • Chatsworth, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $5,735,000

    ~€5,482,519

    • 3 Bedrooms2 Bathrooms0.741 m² Plot area
  • Luxury Development Opportunity

    Brentwood, Los Angeles, California, United States

    Luxury Development Opportunity

    $3,999,999

    ~€3,823,901

    • 5 Bedrooms5 Bathrooms790 m² Plot area
    Luxury Development Opportunity
  • Tarzana, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $3,498,000

    ~€3,344,002

    • 4 Bedrooms4 Bathrooms1,030 m² Plot area
  • Tarzana, Los Angeles, California, United States

    $3,498,000

    ~€3,344,002

    • 4 Bedrooms4 Bathrooms1,030 m² Plot area
See all properties

By collaborating with Pamela Anderson, Paula Bruss is naturally drawing a lot of attention to herself, but her customers usually find their way to her door in less spectacular fashion. A couple of months ago, she and a friend opened a gallery called Raum (which means room or space) in a top location in West Hollywood (home to Sunset Strip). Paula’s design studio is upstairs, and downstairs there’s a little store specializing in antique and mid-century furniture, home accessories, art and a host of other beautiful things.

Paula is also collaborating with two young entrepreneurs who flip houses – buy them, remodel them and sell them again. The remodeling part is naturally Paula’s job. Last June, she completed her first house in Woodland Hills.

Is it easier to be successful doing this kind of work in the U.S. than in Germany? “Absolutely,” Paula says, and goes on to explain: “Most people in Europe decorate their homes themselves, they don’t need a designer to do it for them. It’s different here in the States, people like to take advice.”

She thinks it helps that she’s originally from Germany because Americans love the old world look that she creates – even though she herself is still so young. “My style is a pleasant style, most people like it and feel comfortable with it.”

The curved couch is a custom design based on the Polar Bear Sofa by French designer Jean Royère. Photo: Daniel Collopy

You may also be interested in

GG Magazine exclusive content

GG is an independent magazine at the highest level. Exploring the world of architecture, lifestyle, design, fashion, yachting, luxury living and travel. We seek out the most exciting topics and personalities for you and invite you to get to know them from a fresh new angle. In GG, you will meet successful architects, interesting designers and exciting artists who are the talk of the town from London to New York and Berlin to Hong Kong.

See original article