Browse the Architizer
The Kardashians are undeniably larger than life; controversial and ubiquitous trendsetters to the masses, yet simultaneously abhorred by many. Over the course of the last 15 years, their family has cemented itself as a constant fixture on our screens, providing carefully curated glimpses into increasingly extravagant homes and associated offices as they navigate “drama” and the work necessary to further expand their various beauty empires. Say what you will about them but their impact on American culture is indisputable and can be traced across multiple industries, including beauty, fashion and even architecture.
As Keeping Up With the Kardashians (2007-2021) documented the ascent of the Kardashian-Jenner family from reality television curiosities to established celebrities, the show’s cameras also laid bare the evolution of the family’s changing lifestyle. The show’s camerawork and editing amplified their increasingly lavish material surroundings, drawing on the success of prior shows like MTV Cribs (2000-present), which established the public’s obsession with celebrity homes. Across the roughly decade and a half that KUWTK was on the air, everyday social anxieties played out in carefully curated Los Angeles mansions that grew larger and more extravagant as the seasons wore on. As their popularity grew, the Kardashians engaged in a continual reconfiguring of their lifestyle and associated properties, acting as stewards of luxury real estate as they chased the American Dream, in continual pursuit of larger, more expensive homes.

An aerial photo collage detailing the various Kardashian homes. © the author
While no one would contend that the Kardashians are
Kim and Kanye tend to favor a form of contemporary architecture that exists in a certain state of contradiction — restrained, minimalist interiors that take inspiration from Japanese design, yet traverse floor plans that often break the 10,000 square foot mark. Post-divorce, Kanye is currently working on a secretive, subterranean project in rural Wyoming with the austere Swiss Architect, Valerio Olgiati, a practitioner of minimal extravagance.

A plan for Kanye West’s subterranean home in Wyoming by Valerio Olgiati © afasia
There is an inherent irony to the fact that Kim has publicly professed her love of contemporary Japanese architecture, and its ability to provide moments of Zen refuge, even as a team of cameramen and production assistants film her family’s every move from within. Monochrome, monastic interiors complete with sparse, extremely high-end furniture tend to define these spaces. The design language creates a sort of fuzzy, off-white canvas backdrop, foregrounding the clothing and products they advertise within as the cameras roll. Their homes accommodate multiple typologies simultaneously; as domestic spaces of refuge, places of business and multimedia performance.

Clean, minimal spaces with organic furniture in shades of off-white tend to dominate the West’s interiors. © Jackie Nickerson
Perhaps nowhere do we get a more carefully curated view of the domestic and commercial spaces that this family operates in than during the

We arrive through Kourtney’s backyard, stretching far into the California desert. © Youtube
As we transition from one family member to the next, without pausing to consider how much real estate this family collectively owns in close proximity to one another, we find ourselves flying through an active construction site. The camera sails under scaffolding and through an open window, then under a ladder in the living room in use by a worker (bad luck!), before moving back outside to encircle Khloe on the phone, as she expresses her excitement that the construction on her new home is almost finished. Here the intent is clear, an empowered business woman has assumed the role of Foreman, overseeing the small army of nearly invisible staff, laborers and contractors that construct and maintain these massive homes in a state of near perfection.

Khloe facetimes a friend from the construction site of her future home. © Youtube
The production’s decision to use a drone to maneuver through all of these spaces is telling, reflecting the notion that “behind the scenes” footage no longer exists as there is almost 360 degrees of access in any given interior, while these women operate a wide range of businesses at all hours. In today’s world, nothing is truly private, and celebrities know that reality all too well, whether

The plot of Kim’s future Tadao Ando designed home. © Virtual Globetrotting
Along with the homes showcased on The Kardashians, other television shows such as Succession have had a verifiable impact on sales surrounding the properties used for filming, which operate as a form of

An impossibly large kitchen island in Kim’s home. © Youtube
Herein lies the fundamental crux of the issue; the lifestyles that moguls like the Kardashians perform and sell with great effect have always been wildly unattainable and unsustainable for the vast majority of society. If these are the homes and spaces we are taught to desire, 99% of society will be left wanting. Similarly, the rapid rise of successful influencer lifestyles, born from the need to consistently generate new content, breeds an accelerated, inexhaustible desire to acquire and promote the newest commodities at all scales; it is an endeavor that is unhealthy for all and certainly unrealistic for the rest of us. That being said, can the architectural discipline at large learn anything from the Kardashian’s mastery of branding, in an effort to more effectively disseminate the critically important issues driving design today?
The Kardashians’ ability to lure architects from the other side of the world, such as Ando and Kuma, to help define and promote interior styles to the masses should be seen as a testament to their gravitational pull, although it is clearly one that speaks firmly to a capitalist culture of want. The very definition of their work is to inspire and guide the actions of others; and the continual reconstruction of their identities and bodies goes hand in hand with the architecture they reside in.
Browse the Architizer
The post