Home & Garden Colorado Feature: White Space Rising

Home & Garden Colorado Feature: White Space Rising

Modern open kitchen with wood beams, marble island, wooden cabinets, bar stools, and large windows showing mountain views. Adjacent living and dining areas feature neutral colors and natural light.

This piece was featured in Home & Garden Colorado for Winter 2025-2026

Airy Scandinavian restraint retunes a Silverthorne home into something warmer and more lyrical than its mountain modern neighbors.

Colorado mountain homes have, for the most part, followed a design trajectory: rustic cabins, then basic condos, and now mountain modern houses.

“We think of mountain modern as dark wood, earthy tones and texture, stone, and live-edge tables. Basically, anything you could use outside moved to the inside,” says Emma Fraga, lead interior designer with Collective Design, a Frisco-based interior design studio.

Summit Sky Ranch in Silverthorne is a haven of mountain modern design. But when a young family of five bought one of the new homes in the development, they wanted a different look. So, they hired Collective Design to create a refined Scandinavian-style interior reminiscent of mountain chalets in Europe.

 

Modern kitchen with light wood cabinets, a white marble island with three wooden stools, a black pendant light, a bowl of apples on the counter, and an arched doorway leading to a pantry with a built-in microwave.
A modern breakfast nook with a rounded table, two textured chairs, bench seating with green pillows, and three black wall-mounted lamps. A window lets in natural light, showing a snowy outdoor scene.

“You don’t see this style traditionally in the Colorado mountains,” says Adrienne Rynes, Collective Design’s president. “When 70 percent of the year, the view out your window is white, people don’t lean into white interiors. But there’s a lot of white space in this house.”

Collective Design embraced the opportunity to do what Rynes calls “something a little different in the mountain modern market.” The result is a house that she says has had “a ton of feedback. A lot of people are loving the Scandinavian style.”

This house had “every right to just be another ski retreat,” says Collective Design senior marketing manager Alex Fitch. But the clean, uncomplicated style gives it “the more homey feel of people who live here full-time,” Rynes says.

Bright dining room with a wooden table set for eight, dark chairs, large windows showing a snowy landscape, white pendant lights, bird art on the walls, and a vase of greenery as a centerpiece.

AN OVERARCHING FIRST FLOOR

 

The 4,000-square-foot, four-bedroom, four-and-a-half-bath house was already constructed when Collective Design took over the interior design. Along with a timeless Scandinavian feel, the homeowners wanted a playful aesthetic that could evolve as their three young children grow up.

The design team chose all the finishes, including flooring and fixtures. They kept the color palette simple and classic: white, light wood and black metal with subtle pops of jewel tones like an azure blue leather cushion on the bench next to the fireplace and emerald green beds in the bunkroom.

They didn’t remove any interior walls but added arched doorways, ceilings, and even bunk beds to create a more traditional European look.

On the main floor, there’s a sweeping arch from the great room to the dining room. Doorways to the office and powder bath are also arched. The curved tongue-and-groove ceiling in the dining room serves as a focal point, while custom-stained wooden beams span the length of the great room and kitchen, highlighting the peak of the ceiling.

Modern bathroom with a glass shower, dual sinks on a wooden vanity, black fixtures, two rectangular mirrors, and a vase with flowers on the counter. Light tiles and a patterned rug create a bright, clean space.

UPSTAIRS, DOWNSTAIRS

The bedroom’s tongue-and-groove ceiling echoes the ceiling in the dining room, and the stone fireplace is carried up from the great room.

In the primary bath, the white and light wood aesthetic is offset with dramatic black plumbing, light fixtures, and mirrors. The patterned tile floor is “a little bit of a change and a little bit of fun,” Fraga says.

The kids’ bunk room is even more playful, with bright colors and a secret staircase through the bunks, rather than a traditional ladder. And the arcade room next to the garage is designed for both children and adults.

A cozy bedroom with large windows showing snowy mountains and pine trees. The room features a stone fireplace, modern decor, a soft beige chair, a bed with patterned bedding, and a wood ceiling.

The centerpiece of the room, the Penfield arcade game, was custom-built for the family and is complemented by a shuffleboard table and a built-in custom wet bar. With its green velvet sofa and ski artwork, the room is more traditionally Colorado than the great room and primary suite.

“There’s a cool duality between the Scandinavian upstairs and the mountain modern downstairs,” Fitch says.

The design team suggests this duality may be the beginning of a new phase in Colorado mountain homes.

“As we see these newer mountain markets sort of dry up, people are buying existing homes and changing the interiors. They want to take a big jump from what’s typical in the old ski towns,” Fitch says. “We’re seeing a new style that’s different than the traditional ski home.”

Read the original story here.