If you’ve been following Travis Scott on Instagram lately, you’ve probably seen more than just Astroworld aesthetics and Jordan collabs. The guy’s been dropping casual glimpses of his Los Angeles pad, and let’s just say, it’s not your typical celeb mansion flex. We’re talking a design-forward sanctuary that feels more like a museum of modern living than a rapper’s crash pad. It’s the kind of place that doesn’t just impress, it invites curiosity. Every corner feels intentional, every detail part of a bigger story.
In homes like this, Edra furniture doesn’t just show up by accident; it’s the kind of choice that signals a deep dive into design culture, not just an assistant picking things out of a catalog. Nestled somewhere in the sun-drenched hills above Brentwood, where views of the Pacific meet old-money architecture, Travis’s home makes a clear statement: this is someone who understands space, detail, and the art of the vibe.
The Living Room: Inside the Dope Vibe
Let’s start in the living room or what we’ll call the “tone-setter” of the house. First thing you clock? Those soft, sculptural poufs that instantly soften the sharp lines of the architecture. They look like those Gelly Poufs by Henge. Overhead, floating like they’re from a sci-fi art gallery, are lights that look suspiciously like the Light Ring Horizontal Polygonal Suspension Lamp. If you’ve never seen one IRL, imagine metal halos frozen mid-air, giving the room an ambient glow that’s somehow both cold and warm. Add in what looks like Sophie Lite Chairs by Poliform, tucked near an open-plan kitchen area, and you’ve got a room that balances high-end with lived-in cool. After all, the layout isn’t loud: there’s no Rococo drama here.
The Bar Area: High-End but Low-Key
Move over to the bar area and the vibe shifts. Those barstools? They’re dead ringers for the Radice Stool by Mattiazzi, minimal but with that perfect contrast between industrial and organic. Think warm wood meeting cool metal in a way that just works. Lighting is everything in a bar, and Travis (or more likely, his interior architect) nailed it. The lamps appear to be the Tape Light Pendant Lamps. These fixtures stretch light like molten lines across space, making the area feel intimate without being dark. It’s the kind of setup that says, “let’s have one more drink and talk about something real.”
The Cinema Room: Designed for Escapism
Now to the spot that probably gets the most use after tour season: the home cinema. And trust, this isn’t your average “TV on the wall” situation. The recliners? Almost definitely the Home Cinema Pillow Armchairs by Poltrona Frau. These are serious pieces: buttery leather, wide arms, adjustable backs, designed more for movie marathons than music video shoots.
Poolside: To Chill Like a Boss
Back outside, where L.A. earns its rep for eternal summer, Travis’s pool area doesn’t disappoint. This isn’t some plastic resort lookalike. Lined up beside the water are loungers that look like the Tressé Outdoor Sunbeds by Talenti. The arrangement isn’t crowded. There’s space between the loungers, a quiet reminder that the luxury here is as much about breathing room as it is about brand name.
Can Your Home Pull Off This Travis-Level Mood?
Travis Scott’s house is a design moodboard, not because it’s full of obvious luxury, but because every element seems with a specific intention. If you’re looking to bring a bit of that energy into your own place, whether it’s a loft in downtown LA or a rental with character in Highland Park, here’s the move: stop thinking in terms of furniture sets and start thinking in terms of atmosphere. And hey, maybe you can’t drop Edra Standard money on a sofa right now. No problem. Hunt for one piece, a light fixture, a stool, a rug, that feels like it belongs in a Travis-level moodboard. Let it anchor the room, then build around it.