Oxford Road Estate
808 N Oxford Road, Provo Utah 84606
This home is the result of remarkably talented teams coming together, each bringing their craft and care, and being given the freedom to do what they do best.

The Entry Hall
The main entry serves as the architectural thesis of the home, a singular space that introduces the language of the entire estate. Reclaimed limestone is laid in a large-format cabochon pattern beneath a sweeping barrel vault, while the soft glow of an alabaster pendant casts a warm, diffused light throughout.
Raised paneling, marble baseboards, and a solid limestone first step establish European permanence from the moment of arrival. The room itself is shaped to frame the mountain view straight through to the backyard, holding you briefly before the home opens into the spaces beyond.

The Great Room
The true core of the estate, the Great Room is designed to comfortably hold a family of nine, along with countless guests, without the need to rearrange a single chair.
A custom asymmetrical Brombal steel window and door system, developed in close collaboration with the Italian fabricator, draws in mountain light and opens the room to the terrace beyond.
An inglenook fireplace forms the threshold between interior and landscape. A 14-foot built-in with a rolling ladder anchors one wall, a Steinway grand piano sits ready for family sing-a-longs, and an 18th-century Aubusson tapestry conceals the television on a Roman mechanism, marking the point where the architecture of the home and its daily life intersect.

Powder Bath
The estate's primary powder bath is tucked just off the main level and designed with guests in mind. Hand-painted Gracie wallpaper wraps the room, depicting flowering trees and bushes in ivory against a deep olive background.
A custom limestone vanity with slender metal legs anchors the space beneath a bespoke mirror, flanked by antique brass semi-cylindrical lanterns.

The Breakfast Nook
The breakfast nook is where the household begins each day, framed by the Italian steel windows you see throughout the home and softened with sheer drapery that filters the morning light.
The space features a custom limestone table with a curved edge and a stone base, surrounded by charcoal-blue performance leather chairs with reeded aprons and brass caps. Plaster ceiling detailing quietly references the medallion in the Entry Hall, while vintage Spanish bowls mounted above the built-in cabinetry lend a collected, lived-in feel.

The Chef's Kitchen
The estate’s chef’s kitchen is intentionally intimate in scale, designed for a family that truly cooks. A custom Officine Gullo range wall in a smoky blue-grey sets the tone, fitted with a built-in pasta maker, griddle, warming cabinet, and dual cooktops. Nautical-inspired brass plumbing fixtures offer a complementary contrast.
Custom-stained oak cabinetry carries a varied mix of knobs, drop pulls, latches, and mesh grills, while the paneled marble backsplash and custom hood echo the Great Room's inglenook for architectural continuity. The result is a tailored, performance-driven kitchen built to support both daily family life and large-scale entertaining.

The Scullery
A Dutch-inspired tribute to the family’s love of the Netherlands, this hidden jewel of the estate is tucked just behind the main kitchen. Delft-inspired hand-painted blue and white tile lines the walls, paired with a mixed marble checkerboard floor detailed with a double border. Above the furniture-style island, an antique brass pot rack anchors the space, displaying a collection of copper pots both vintage and new.
A commissioned portrait of Whitney's grandmother, "Grammie," hangs as a surprise from Jason, making the space both highly functional and deeply personal.

The Formal Dining Room
The estate's formal dining room was envisioned as an enclosed, glass-lined pavilion to create an outside-in experience. Hand-painted mural walls by James Mobley reflect the surrounding landscape, while bluestone carried in from the exterior reinforces the feeling that the room is a true extension of the outdoors.
A 14-foot barley-twist table commands the center of the room, grounded by bluestone laid in an ashlar pattern and anchored by a marble fireplace drawn from Belgian farmhouse precedents.
On the walls, the hand-painted murals bring softness and movement to the space, while a geometric brass drop fixture offers a subtle modern counterpoint to the room's historical references.

The Craft Room
Designed as both overflow dining and a homework hub made to hold paint, paper, and growing ideas. Soft cream millwork with exposed hinges, corbel details, reeded glass, and label holders introduce a nostalgic, atelier-like quality, while ruffled cushions soften the built-in benches. Rise-and-fall pleated pendants hover above central worktables, keeping the room cheerful rather than utilitarian and flexible enough to evolve alongside seven children.

The Laundry Room
A deliberate departure from the estate's neutral palette, the Washroom embraces charming blue cabinetry as a moment of color in the working wing of the home. Brick-cut limestone floors in a herringbone pattern introduce texture, while café curtains soften the sink base. Sconces above each window elevate what could have been purely utilitarian.
The Garage
Conceived as an extension of the home rather than a utilitarian afterthought, the garage carries the same architectural intention as the rooms inside. Dark-stained tongue and groove paneling wraps the walls, balanced overhead by an ivory plastered ceiling that softens the space and reflects light. Industrial Ralph Lauren pendants hang above each stall, paired with built-in charging stations to support the way the family lives day to day.

The Boot Room
Essential for a busy family of nine and still layered with beauty even in its most functional details. Creamy white tile walls grounded by a garnet soldier-course base wrap the room, with custom brass nameplates marking each locker.
A marble drinking fountain modeled after an 18th-century Dutch wall fountain introduces unexpected refinement, paired with a light fixture referencing historical European design.

The Conservatory
A dedicated performance and practice space for a family of musicians, designed with a separate entry so tutors can come and go with ease.
Two Steinway pianos sit beneath burnished brass picture lights. The space is framed by Chantonnay wallpaper carrying up the walls and across the ceiling, while windows raised above the horizon line capture the openness of the sky and protect the instruments below.
The family's 15 meaningful songs inform the design narrative, making it a space designed not only for performance, but for memory.

The Family Parlor
Distinct from the formal Entry Hall, the Family Parlor is the home's true daily arrival point, designed with the same care as the more formal areas of the estate.
A large jute rug grounds the circulation space, while built-ins with mesh grills and a drop-down secretary desk add both storage and charm. A branching bronzed iron sconce introduces sculptural warmth, bridging public and private in a space that is practical, personal, and quietly elegant.

The Primary Wing
Conceived as a private retreat within the home, the primary suite was designed to balance separation and connection, creating a dedicated environment for rest, focus, and daily renewal.
The sequence begins with a tucked-away office that serves as a transition from the activity of the home into a more personal setting. Beyond, the bedroom is oriented toward views of the mountains and water feature, establishing a calm, restorative relationship with the surrounding landscape.
The retreat unfolds through a spacious bath and concludes with a dedicated wellness room featuring a cold plunge and sauna. Together, these spaces support a daily rhythm centered on privacy, well-being, and restoration, offering a quiet sanctuary within the larger home.

The Study
A quiet workspace for the woman of the house, designed for planning travels and shaping lesson plans.
An L-shaped oak built-in with antique brass picture lights wraps the room, paired with an angled bookshelf made to display sentimental family heirlooms.
Commissioned portraits of the children dressed as characters from The Sound of Music, a beloved film of the woman of the house, hang as the room's most personal note.

The Canopy Suite
The primary bedroom for Jason and Whitney was developed with a sense of volume and openness while remaining a restful everyday retreat.
The architectural themes from the Entry Hall return in raised paneling, plaster, and a quiet repetition of creamy tones.
A limestone fireplace with subtle curvature anchors the room, with a commissioned painting from a Danish artist hung above. The custom bronze four-poster bed with linen drapery and brass chandelier with hand-forged leaf detailing soften and sophisticate the space.

The Canopy Ensuite
A bath composed around a single moment — a carved Calacatta Gold soaking tub set beneath an alabaster bowl pendant that echoes the fixture in The Hall.
Paneled Calacatta Gold shower walls and tumbled limestone flooring make this the estate's most direct architectural echo. Stepped mid-tone oak vanities with chamfered legs, marble countertops, and swan-neck brass sconces complete the material story.
Spa-level luxury without excess. Architectural continuity carried through to the most private retreat.

His Dressing Room
Tailored and quietly masculine. This dressing room features rich oak millwork wrapped in grey grasscloth, with marble countertops and routed flush hardware throughout.
Wardrobes are stored behind glass-fronted cabinets, while an integrated steam cabinet and washer/dryer disappear into the same architectural language.
A dressing room designed like a fine piece of furniture — utility absorbed into craft.

Her Dressing Room
A companion to its counterpart across the suite, but with a different material vocabulary — softly painted cabinetry paired with natural striped grasscloth. Glass-fronted cabinets are dressed with pleated drapery, lending femininity and charm.

The Fitness Room
Overlooking a private courtyard, the Fitness Room reinforces the estate's indoor-outdoor integration — white oak paneling wraps the lower walls before transitioning to plaster above, with integrated mirrors set flush within the paneling to maintain the architectural rhythm.
Custom-finished equipment in walnut, beige leather, and stainless steel reads tailored rather than industrial.
A 17-foot built-in cabinet spans one wall with refrigerated drawers and warming drawers for towels.
Disciplined materials, residential proportion — a workout room held to the same design standard as the rest of the home.

The Wellness Room
This room draws you in with a custom cold plunge, inset in marble with a sculpted ogee edge — its side profile rendered with the same restraint as the estate's most formal rooms. A cedar sauna sits alongside, wrapping the space in warmth and quiet ritual.
Natural materials and architectural continuity carry the home's design language into the most private corner of daily life.

The Girls' Lounge
A shared gathering space for the five daughters of the house. This room is layered, soft, and European in character, designed to grow with the people who use it.
One of several lounges and library moments threaded through the second level, it acts as both destination and connector — part of a sequence that turns what could have been a corridor of bedrooms into a progression of rooms. A floor plan resolved not by scale, but by rhythm.

Upstairs Laundry
Positioned within the children's wing, this secondary laundry was designed to encourage independence as the children grow older.
Three stacked washers and dryers line the room with six rolling carts below. The skylight overhead is fitted with unique lighting on an antique brass truss system suspending two pendants into the space.
Finished with the same attention as the rest of the estate: proof that even the most functional rooms deserve thoughtful detailing.

The Bunk Room
A room designed with foresight, built not only for the children today, but for cousins, visiting friends, and eventually grandchildren.
Custom upholstered bunks in a beige English oak leaf fabric are integrated into the architecture of the room, each bed fitted with an antique brass reading sconce. To maximize space, two twin beds tuck into the dormer windows.
Durability and charm in equal measure: a room made for whispered late-night conversations, shared stories, and the kind of memories that outlast childhood.

The Meadow Suite
Designed for the second daughter, a self-described girly girl with a love for pink. Pink plaster sits above crisp white paneling, framing a custom-shaped headboard upholstered in an embroidered floral fabric. The paneling detail carries through to her ensuite, where it shapes the tile work: a single architectural language extended from bedroom to bath.

The Petal Suite
A girl’s room with a multicolored floral trellis wallpaper setting the tone and a canopy bed upholstered in beige gingham check at its center.
At the daughter’s request, a desk and glass-front bookcase were built in to display trophies and treasures, giving the room a place for the things she’s most proud of.
A child's bedroom that takes her interests seriously without feeling staged.

The Trellis Suite
Designed for the eldest daughter, the room leans into her favorite color with a blue and white palette and coastal-inspired details throughout.
White paneling meets blue wallpaper, with trellis details, floral moments, a canopy overhead, and a window seat framed in painted paneling.
Feminine without being fussy, grounded in sensibility, and built to last.

The Blossom Suite
Designed for the sixth of seven children, with a youthful pink palette anchored by a fabric canopy overhead. The walls layer traditional paneling with recessed tongue-and-groove detail at center.
Her ensuite carries the same playfulness through a skylight, hand-painted floral motifs on the vanity, and pink and white marble tile patterned after a quilt.
A bedroom built to feel like hers now, but detailed with the architectural rigor to grow alongside her.

The Garden Suite
Designed for the youngest, with chinoiserie mural panels of multicolored florals, branches, butterflies, and birds wrapping the room beneath a ceiling painted baby blue like the sky.
A box-pleat slipcover bed in trellis fabric introduces yellow, her favorite color, while a vestibule outside the room layers in a Gustavian-inspired sideboard, an antique silver Louis mirror, and an embroidered lampshade on a candlestick lamp.
Her ensuite carries the story forward with a yellow vanity, pleated drapery behind glass-front cabinets, brass fixtures, and Delft-inspired tiles featuring animals: a child's bedroom built like a small, considered world.

The Tent Room
A whimsical, fully tented playroom: acrylic-backed fabric installed as wallpaper with attached valances that complete the canopy effect overhead.
Three brass netted globe pendants float in the vault like hot air balloons, while a cozy nook with a built-in bench is tucked into the corner for reading.
The storage closet is its own moment, doubling as a play kitchen modeled after the home's chef kitchen — a custom build with a play range, marble countertops, and Delft tile: a child's room that takes imagination as seriously as architecture.

The Library Hall
The Library Hall is a quieter counterpart to the Playroom, connected through an arched passage that marks the shift from active to contemplative.
Floor-to-ceiling built-ins line the vaulted hall, scaled for children but detailed with the same design hand as the rest of the home, and the windows are dropped to a child's height to make the panoramic western views feel approachable rather than imposing.
A place for reading, settling in, and the particular kind of quiet that a large family has to build intentionally.

The Boys' Lounge
Mirroring the Girls' Lounge in purpose but tailored differently in tone, the Boys' Lounge layers grasscloth walls, two-tone painted trim, and a plaid sofa adorned by personal memorabilia above.
Built-ins along the south wall ground the space and conceal a hidden door, with a playful cut-out detail worked into the cabinetry.
A room built for gaming and Lego building but detailed with the same architectural rigor as the rest of the home.

The Studio Suite
Designed for the fourth child, an older boy with a love for sports, the room is wrapped in natural oak paneling paired with olive grasscloth above.
A colorful chandelier introduces an unexpected note overhead, while sport-inspired details weave through the space without ever feeling thematic.
Tailored, warm, and grounded: a bedroom built to grow with him.

The Collector's Suite
Designed for the fifth child, an avid sports and Lego enthusiast whose favorite colors are blue and red. The palette runs through red-based table lamps, navy blue corduroy ottomans at the foot of the bed, and a geometric wool rug grounded in rust and navy on a neutral field, with a tree tucked into the corner at his request. A bedroom that takes a young boy's interests as seriously as the architecture that holds them.

The Guest Retreat
A complete guest retreat tucked into the sloping rafters, designed with the comfort and completeness of a private suite.
A vintage hutch adds height and texture to a multifunctional layout that flows between dining, desk, and lounge, while a custom built-in follows the wall and slopes down toward the staircase.
Monopoint lights run the length of the room in place of canned fixtures, drawing the eye through the long, nestled space and the views that define it.

The Guest Staircase
A floating curved plaster stair that wraps in front of an expansive corner window, lined with hurricane sconces that mark the ascent.
Sculptural from the front of the house and quietly authoritative from within, it was designed to do more than connect floors: it defines the threshold between the everyday life of the home and the private retreat above.
Not a utilitarian passage, but a moment of craft worthy of the rooms it leads to.
The Viewing Porch
A west-facing porch that grew out of a quiet design problem, how to preserve the panoramic views across the site while concealing the theater volume on the main level.
The solution opens the home to the landscape, framing the car park, the neighborhood, and the lake and mountains beyond, while creating a fully usable outdoor room in its own right.
A space that feels discovered rather than announced, the kind of moment that rewards the family member who finds it most often.

The Theater on Main
A private screening room placed on the main level — a deliberate decision to keep media and gathering close to the Great Room and backyard, where life already happens.
Custom cinema chairs upholstered in dark green velvet are accented with Ralph Lauren-inspired plaid lumbar pillows, and column-base side tables in stone sit at every seat for drinks and snacks.

The Lower Level
The lower level was designed as a spirited retreat for play, gathering, and escape. A place where the home’s more formal rhythms give way to ease, energy, and fun.
Anchored by a bowling alley, the level creates an unexpected destination for family and friends. It offers room for activity, conversation, and casual connection, while maintaining a sense of refuge tucked away from the main living areas above.
Whether used as a cool retreat during the heat of the day or a lively hideaway for kids and their friends at night, the lower level brings a playful dimension to the home. It is a surprise within the residence - relaxed, welcoming, and designed for play.

The Game Room
The lower level’s gathering hub, designed with the same editorial hand as the floors above — because the design philosophy of Oxford Rd extends all the way down.
A custom air hockey table anchors the space, paired with a custom pool table that converts to ping pong, while a built-in nook offers additional seating for those waiting their turn.

The Kitchenette
A secondary kitchen on the lower level, fronted by diamond-leaded glass cabinets and finished with Calacatta Gold countertops and backsplash.
A built-in dining banquette anchors the room, designed to serve equally for meals and game-playing, with a stone-topped table that complements the surrounding wood.

The Screening Room
A dedicated screening and entertainment space for the younger generation. Comfortable, considered, and unmistakably part of the same home as everything above it. Mirrored seating arrangements frame the room for optimal viewing, anchored by large leather sectionals. Custom console tables and ottomans double as snack bars, ready for movie nights and everything in between.

The Bowling Alley & Lounge
The lower level became a hub for gathering, movement, and activity, with easy access to the outdoors. The lounge itself leans into mood, with rich paneling, layered lighting, and adjacent seating on a custom plaid Chesterfield sofa. This allows the space to operate as both recreation and retreat.
The estate's most unexpected room, and perhaps its clearest proof of principle. A bowling alley treated with the same level of design intention as every other space.
A fiber optic starry night ceiling, integrated directly into the plaster, sets the mood overhead. Twenty leather-wrapped sconces flank the lanes alongside brass rails, while a trophy case at the end of the alley houses a collection of vintage bowling trophies.

The Barn
A multi-purpose space designed to function as both an indoor basketball court and an entertaining space, with projection flooring that allows the room to adapt seamlessly from one use to another.
Because it houses a basketball court that could have easily felt oversized on the property, the structure was nestled into the landscape rather than allowed to dominate. A shift in the material palette, with reduced masonry and the introduction of wood siding alongside landscape-driven stone, gives the building a relaxed, barn-like character that feels integrated into the overall composition of the property.

The Dance Studio
A dedicated practice space for the dancers in the home, or for visitors wanting to rehearse, complete with mirrored walls and ballet barres.

The Barn Office & Conference Room
A private workspace set apart from the main house, designed for focus rather than formality.
Deep-toned millwork and library-style shelving define the office, while vaulted ceilings give the conference room real presence.
Originally part of the main home, the office was separated by the creative teams to create a place distinctly set apart for work and thought.
Jason is an incredibly creative business leader, and it felt important to give him a space of his own. Somewhere he could step away, take in the panoramic views of the valley, and find inspiration.
Positioned on its own, the office becomes a place for reflection and creative thought, where ideas can develop and where he can gather with his team.





