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This article originally appeared in the February 2016 issue of ELLE DECOR. For more stories from our archive, subscribe to ELLE DECOR All Access.As Honeymooners in 2009, the young couple who now own Villa Le Scale (House of Stairs) first visited Capri, the Mediterranean island near Naples that has been a popular resort destination since Emperor Tiberius moved there from Rome in 27 A.D. The groom, a hedge-fund manager, was so smitten by Capris idyllic beauty that he vowed he would someday own a home in its hills. They returned five years later when a friend, knowing the couple were looking for a vacation home, told them of an early-19th-century villa on the island that had come on the market. This time, it was the bride who was smitten. Now a mother of three, she fell in love with the place as soon as she ascended its marble staircase under a canopy of scented local flora. I wanted the house before I got to the front door, she recalls. Gaelle Le BoulicautThe living room sofas by Arketipo are upholstered in a fabric by Gastn y Daniela, the cocktail table is by Mogg, the marble fountain is from the 18th century, and the custom-made rug is by De Dimora.Although they live in Geneva, the husband and wife are both from warmer climates: Hes Australian; shes Mexican. They met as teenagers at the United World College campus in the United States and married while living in London a decade later. They were looking for a place that offered a bit of sea and sun, where the children could run free, that they would remember fondly for the rest of their lives, she explains. Eager to start enjoying the gleaming white villawhich has five bedrooms in the main house and two more in a guesthouse near the poolthe new owners gave their designer just three months to make it a lovely yet livable indoor/outdoor retreat with soul. The task fell to the Lausanne-based designer Jorge Caete, whom the clients had just hired to decorate their primary residence. Jorge is amazing, the wife says. He was not only interested in both her and her husbands opinions, but also those of the children. He even interviewed my two-year-old son about the colors and furniture for his bedroom, she adds. Gaelle Le BoulicautOn the terrace, the sectional sofa is by Gervasoni, the love seat is by Casamilano, the cocktail table is by Boca do Lobo, and the side tables are by Arketipo.The organizing theme of their seductive home is la dolce vita, not so much the film as the concept. It wasnt going to be a museum to the 1960s, says Caete, but we wanted to capture something about the sweet life. For the wife, it was about having beauty around you in a world of contrastsimagine a young woman on a Vespa riding on ancient cobblestones while wearing high heels. Given the schedule, the project became the eye of a minor interior design storm, made all the more complicated by island rules that forbid moving furniture during the day and streets too narrow for a vehicle. I could have sourced everything from Naples, but that would have been too easy, Step Inside This Family-Friendly Island Villa Caete says with a laugh. Caetes decor complements the original 19th-century marble bathtub, an 18th-century fountain, and a 16th-century fireplace with sleek modern pieces from companies such as Gervasoni, Casamilano, and Boca do Lobo and by such top-tier designers as Paola Navone, Ingo Maurer, and Patricia Urquiola. British artist Philippa Smith moved into the villa for several weeks to create site-specific artworks that would amplify Caetes playful spirit and signature style, which finds a poetic balance, he says, between memory and modernism. After a year in their new vacation home, the clients are thrilled. The children seem happy, too. My five-year-old daughter recently asked me why we could not live in Capri all the time, her mother relates. She told me, Im sure we could learn Italian very well. Originally published in ELLE DECORATION Germany.