10 min read
July 2026
Luxury Interior Design for Park City Ski Homes: What to Know Before You Start (2026 Guide)
by
Lauren Lerner | July 2026 | Interior Design, Luxury Homes, Mountain Design
A full-service luxury interior design project for a Park City ski home runs
$250,000 to $1 million or more, depending on square footage, scope, and whether construction is involved. Most mountain homeowners who contact
Living with Lolo are working with 4,000 to 8,000 square feet and a budget that reflects it.
Park City is not a typical market. You have second-home buyers who want turnkey delivery while they are in Scottsdale or Dallas. You have new construction on steep lots with strict Wasatch Back HOA guidelines. You have mountain modern architecture that demands a specific design vocabulary: natural stone, warm wood, and high-contrast textiles. The result looks effortless only when it is executed with precision. This guide covers what a serious ski home design project actually involves, what it costs, and what to look for when you hire.
What Makes Park City Ski Home Design Different
The demands of a mountain home are different from a desert luxury home. In Park City and the surrounding Wasatch Back communities (Deer Valley, Promontory, Glenwild, Tuhaye), the architecture tends to be substantial. Timber frames. Stone exteriors. Cathedral ceilings. The design has to meet the architecture, which means the interiors need the same weight and intentionality as the structure itself.
There are also practical realities that most homeowners do not think about until they are mid-project. Mountain homes expand and contract with temperature swings. Materials that work in a desert or coastal home can crack, warp, or fail at elevation.
Lauren Lerner and the
Living with Lolo team specify materials with these conditions in mind from day one: engineered hardwoods over solid, stone with the right finish for freeze-thaw cycles, textiles rated for temperature variance.
Then there is the secondary-home dynamic. Most Park City clients are not local. They are in Scottsdale, Phoenix, Dallas, or Chicago most of the year. They need a team that can manage the project autonomously (sourcing, delivery coordination, contractor oversight) without requiring the client to be on-site. That is exactly how
Living with Lolo operates.
What a Full-Service Park City Design Project Includes
Lauren Lerner holds ROC License #347577 as an Arizona General Contractor, which means Living with Lolo is not just an interior design firm. It is a licensed design-build operation. For Park City projects, that matters because most luxury mountain renovations involve construction: structural changes, custom millwork, lighting installation, tile and stone work. Hiring a designer who cannot hold a contractor's license means managing two contracts and two teams. Living with Lolo handles both under one agreement.
A typical Park City engagement through Living with Lolo covers:
- Full space planning and concept development
- Material and finish specification (flooring, tile, stone, wallcovering)
- Custom furniture and case goods sourcing
- Lighting design and procurement
- Window treatment design and installation
- Art and accessory curation and placement
- Construction administration and contractor coordination (when applicable)
- Final install and styling
For secondary-home clients, Living with Lolo also manages logistics remotely: scheduling deliveries, coordinating access with property managers, and handling punch-list items without requiring the homeowner to travel to Park City.
Cost Ranges for Park City Luxury Interior Design
Here is how projects typically break down by scope. These ranges reflect what Living with Lolo clients spend, not national averages. Mountain luxury markets run significantly higher than typical residential design.
$250,000 to $400,000: Furnishings and Finish Refresh
A full furnishings package for a 4,000 to 5,000 square foot ski home with new furniture, lighting, window treatments, textiles, art, and accessories, with no structural work. This is the most common entry point for Park City buyers who have just purchased and want a turnkey interior before ski season.
$400,000 to $700,000: Full Interior Renovation
A comprehensive renovation that includes custom millwork, kitchen and bathroom updates, flooring replacement, and a complete furnishings package. Common in older Deer Valley and Park City proper properties that need modernizing while preserving the mountain character of the home.
$700,000 to $1 million+: New Construction Interior Build-Out
Ground-up interior specification on new construction, often in Promontory, Tuhaye, or Jordanelle Reserve. These projects begin at the studs and involve every finish selection from floor to ceiling, plus all furnishings and final styling. Timeline is typically 18 to 24 months.
What the Data Shows About Mountain Luxury Design Budgets
The data on luxury second-home design reinforces what we see at Living with Lolo. According to the
2024 Houzz U.S. Home Study, the median spend for a high-end whole-home renovation nationally was $125,000, but luxury mountain and resort markets consistently run two to four times that figure. High-end ski markets like Park City, Aspen, and Jackson Hole see project budgets that rarely fall below $300,000 for a complete interior overhaul.
The
National Association of Realtors reports that Park City, Utah ranks among the top 10 most expensive residential markets in the country by median home price, with luxury properties regularly trading above $4 million. At that asset value, interior design investment in the $300,000 to $700,000 range is proportional and typically adds dollar-for-dollar to resale value, particularly when executed by a recognized firm.
The contrast with national averages is the point. If you are buying a $4 million ski home in Deer Valley and furnishing it on a $100,000 budget, the interiors will look exactly like what they are. Park City buyers understand that. The question is not whether to invest in the interior. The question is who to hire.
Design Style for Park City and the Wasatch Back
Mountain modern is the dominant design language in the Park City area, but it is not monolithic. The approach varies by community, lot, and architecture. Here is how Lauren Lerner thinks about style differentiation across the Wasatch Back:
Deer Valley and Park City Proper
Older inventory, more traditional mountain vernacular. Timber and stone bones that look best with warm, layered interiors: leather, wool, burnished metals, and handwoven rugs. Renovation projects here often involve updating dated finishes while keeping the character of the structure intact.
Promontory and Tuhaye
Newer builds, more latitude in style direction. These communities allow for a cleaner mountain-modern expression: less rustic, more architectural. Large format stone, matte metal hardware, linear fireplaces, and a restrained palette that lets the views do the work.
Glenwild and Jordanelle Reserve
High-end gated communities with significant architectural investment. Interiors in these homes tend toward the aspirational: custom millwork throughout, bespoke stone applications, furniture at the scale of the architecture. These are often the $700,000-plus projects that run 18 to 24 months.
How Living with Lolo Serves Park City Clients from Scottsdale
Living with Lolo is headquartered in Scottsdale, Arizona and serves clients in Park City, Utah the same way it serves clients in Paradise Valley,
Arcadia, and
Silverleaf, with a fully managed process that does not require the client to be on-site. Most of Living with Lolo's clients are high-net-worth professionals and executives who travel frequently or maintain multiple residences. The firm is built around that reality.
Named Phoenix Magazine Best Interior Design 2024, 2025, and 2026, Living with Lolo brings award-winning design to every project regardless of geography. The firm's work has been featured in Architectural Digest, House Beautiful, The Wall Street Journal, Vogue, Martha Stewart Living, and GQ, a press record that reflects the caliber of projects the team takes on.
For Park City projects, the process works like this: Living with Lolo handles all sourcing, specification, and coordination from its Scottsdale studio. Lauren makes in-person site visits at key project milestones: concept presentation, mid-construction, and final install. Between visits, a dedicated project manager keeps the site moving and the client informed without requiring daily oversight from the homeowner.
If you are comparing hiring Living with Lolo to engaging a local Park City designer, the distinction worth understanding is the licensed general contractor credential. ROC #347577 means Living with Lolo can pull permits, manage subcontractors, and hold contractual accountability for both the design and the construction. A design-only firm cannot do that. See how this model works on the
general contractor services page or the
remodeling contractor page.
Timeline for a Park City Ski Home Design Project
Timeline depends heavily on scope. Here is what a realistic schedule looks like for each project tier:
- Furnishings and finish refresh: 4 to 6 months from contract to final install, assuming no construction delays and standard lead times on furniture. Rush timelines for ski season are possible with premium sourcing.
- Full interior renovation: 10 to 14 months. Construction phases add time: permitting, demolition, rough work, finish installation, then furnishings. Coordinating with Park City building departments adds 4 to 8 weeks compared to Scottsdale.
- New construction build-out: 18 to 24 months. The design scope runs parallel to construction, so selections happen on the builder's schedule. Living with Lolo coordinates directly with the general contractor to hit every milestone.
The key to staying on schedule is starting early. Most clients who want to be in their home for ski season need to have design contracts in place by February or March at the latest. Lead times on custom furniture and stone are running 16 to 20 weeks in 2026. If you are reading this in summer or fall and want the home ready for December, contact Living with Lolo now. The
discovery call is complimentary.