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Gwyneth Paltrow’s Houses: Here’s Where the Style Icon Has Lived
Gwyneth Paltrow’s houses are just one aspect of the health and wellness entrepreneur’s lifestyle that fans are fascinated by. (The Marty Supreme star made headlines when she announced that she’s back to eating sourdough bread and cheese during a recent episode of her Goop podcast, for instance.) This obsession with Paltrow’s practices and aesthetic are a direct result of her particular brand of aspirational healthy living, which includes clean eating, natural beauty, and exercise regimens meant to restore balance and inner calm—and which extends into her living spaces as well. Just last fall, the actress and entrepreneur launched her second furniture line with CB2, a collection that embodies her elegant style. “I’m a Libra, so I live for the feeling of beauty, and I am very visual,” she told Architectural Digest. “For me, it’s an inextricable part of my wellness.” Fittingly, over the years, Paltrow has owned and sold many homes located everywhere from London to New York City to Malibu, and she’s left her distinctive mark on each one. Below, we’re sharing a glimpse into some of her most well-known residences, each curated with her considered aesthetic and eye.North London Art Deco mansionChris Martin and Gwyneth Paltrow’s former North London home Photo: Neil P. Mockford/FilmMagicPaltrow and Coldplay frontman Chris Martin tied the knot in December 2003, and a few months later, purchased a sizable residence in the tony North London neighborhood of Belsize Park. The couple reportedly bought the flat from Kate Winslet for $4.1 million, and acquired the two homes on either side of the original pad to create a massive 33-room mansion. The pair worked with Martin’s architect brother to restore the home’s Art Deco period details, and made a few renovations to accommodate their family’s needs. In particular, they added three more bedrooms, a bathroom and a half, a rec room for the kids, and a home gym, as well as a garden and a swimming pool out back. The pair held onto the London property for about a decade; they finally listed it on the market for $11.5 million just a few months before they famously announced their “conscious uncoupling.” It has since sold, though it is unclear what the final sale price was.Hamptons getawayPaltrow and Martin made their first stateside purchase two years into their marriage, in 2006, snapping up a Hamptons home for $5.4 million. Located in Amagansett, the extremely stylish dwelling measures 7,000 square feet and boasts five bedrooms and seven and a half bathrooms, all decked out in Goop-approved furnishings and decor. Although the color scheme of the residence is primarily pastel-colored, the kitchen offers a bit more dramatic flair, with dark-colored wood cabinets popping in sharp contrast to stark white walls punctuated by strategically placed skylights. Four years after her split with Martin, Paltrow married her now husband, Brad Falchuk, in the backyard of the Hamptons home. In a 2023 tour around the property for Vogue’s 73 Questions video franchise, Paltrow showed off a farmers-market-worthy vegetable garden and an apple orchard, as well as a sauna and cold plunge—all very on-brand for the wellness entrepreneur. “Cold plunges and saunas are amazing for detoxification and circulation,” she explained to Vogue. She still owns this property.Tribeca penthouseIn 2007, Paltrow and Martin picked up a three-bedroom and 3,892-square-foot penthouse in Tribeca for just over $5 million. Paltrow enlisted the help of AD100 design firm Roman and Williams to bring her airy and sophisticated vision to life. The posh pad featured painted white floors, French doors, and a unique sofa swing. It also had an enviable 500-square-foot decked terrace. A description of the unit on Goop’s website pointed out “pastel silks, hand-embroidered wallpapers, and cool swaths of marble” that balanced “centuries-old techniques and antiques with a confident, breezy modernism.” (Years later, Paltrow would turn her love for delicate wallpapers into a collaboration with luxury wallpaper brand Fromental.) The home hit the market for $14.25 million in 2016 before the listing price was dropped to $9.95 million. It ultimately sold for $10.7 million in 2017.California equestrian estateThe couple set their sights on the West Coast next, paying $10.5 million for an equestrian estate in the Mandeville Canyon community in Brentwood, California, in 2012. The six-bedroom and eight-bathroom 1950s mansion was once on the cover of Veranda magazine as part of a collective showcase of nine different designers. Measuring 8,000 square feet, the single-story main house included high ceilings, a professional-grade gourmet kitchen, wood-paneled walls, and a built-in outdoor barbecue. During Paltrow’s tenure, she also added a guest house, a wine cellar, an office, a gym, and a home movie theater. The horse stable also had its own celebrity pedigree—it was designed by Kathryn Ireland, star of Bravo’s Million Dollar Decorators. The picturesque estate served as home base for Paltrow as she raised her two children, but in 2024, she listed it on the market for $30 million after officially becoming an empty nester. It sold for $22 million the following year. Fun fact: Paltrow’s buyer not only gained a home in the transaction, but also an A-list neighbor—Kendrick Lamar reportedly purchased the mansion next door in 2024.Malibu residenceTwo years after picking up the Mandeville Canyon property, Paltrow doubled down on her West Coast holdings with the $14 million purchase of a Malibu estate known as the Garwood Residence. The secluded Point Dume property was designed by world-renowned architect John Lautner. The four-bedroom post-and-beam pad features heated sandstone floors, a yoga studio, landscaped gardens, a pebble stone pool, a tennis court, and protected backyard anchorage for a yacht. Perhaps unsurprisingly, Paltrow still owns this property.Montecito retreatThe entryway at Paltrow’s Montecito home Photo: Yoshihiro Makino; Styling: Colin KingPaltrow brought her Jim Zivic for Ralph Pucci hammock from her Brentwood home to Montecito. Photo: Yoshihiro MakinoIn 2016, Paltrow made headlines with the purchase of a $4.9 million Montecito retreat that was deemed a fixer-upper, and which the Oscar-winner razed to build a new structure. “It was like Grey Gardens. There were wild animals living there and swarms of bugs, but I fell in love with the land and the views,” she told AD of the first time she encountered the estate. Working with her design dream team Roman and Williams and Romanek Design Studios, Paltrow created a bucolic home steeped with intentionality. Architectural details like high ceilings and hand-painted scenic wallpaper, as well as exacting proportions made every room feel curated and calm. Influenced heavily by Old World barns, the designers created something that felt “generous yet manageable at the same time,” she told AD. “The strength of the house is in the subtleties of light and space. We spent a lot of time assessing family patterns, how we really live, what makes us most comfortable.” This home graced the March 2022 cover of AD, and Paltrow still lives there.
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