Kelly Marshall
In 2021, Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe, one of the most decorated power couples in sports, found themselves in pursuit of a new kind of ornamentation: the interior design of their first home purchased together. For the former WNBA guard and the reigning U.S. Women’s National Team champion, the winning tip came from Rapinoe’s stylist, Karla Welch, who put her on to ELLE DECOR A-List designer Mark Grattan.
Rapinoe slid humbly into Grattan’s Instagram DMs: “My fiancée and I just got a place in SoHo and need HALP!” The place in question was a 1,650-square-foot, two-bedroom pied-à-terre with high ceilings, sweeping views onto the city, and a rooftop terrace to boot. “New York is a really special place to both of us,” Rapinoe says. “Sue is from here. It feels like the place where we fell in love—it feels like home in so many ways.” Grattan was charmed by the soccer star’s effusion of emojis. “I typically let people sweat a little bit,” he says. This time, he responded the same day.
Kelly Marshall
Grattan knew he’d need “HALP!” with the project, his first residential design commission outside his own Mexico City home. (That apartment, in a Luis Barragán–designed building, was on ELLE DECOR’s April 2021 cover.) To that end, he brought on friend and frequent collaborator Chloe Pollack-Robbins, of Curious Yellow Design, to manage the job and keep things progressing on an admittedly compressed timeline. “I’m more of a storyteller,” Grattan says. “Chloe understands my glitches, my triggers, my mess. It was very easy to go into this with her.”
Sue Bird and Megan Rapinoe
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
Sue Bird (left) and Megan Rapinoe in the dining room of their modern pied-à-terre, which was designed by Mark Grattan, in Manhattan’s SoHo neighborhood. The wallcovering is by Élitis, and the artwork is by Xavier Kelley. Bird’s top by Bode; pants, Lemaire; shoes, Nike x Comme des Garçons. Rapinoe’s top by Harago; pants, Balenciaga; shoes, Maison Margiela.
Living Room
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
The sofa, which is upholstered in a linen by Dedar and leather by Milton Sokol, the cocktail table, and the mirror are all custom by Mark Grattan. The rug is by Hechizoo Textiles.
Kitchen
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
The countertops, backsplash, and custom island are in Brazilian quartzite. The barstools are by Mario Bellini for Cassina, and the Rombini tiles in Glossy Brun are by Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec for Mutina. The fittings are by Kohler.
Interior Designer
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
Mark Grattan in the living room.
Guest Room
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
In the guest room–cum–office, the sofa is by Flemming Busk in a Dedar fabric. The rug is from R & Company, and the vessel is by Nur Ceramics.
Powder Room
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
The wallcovering is by Élitis, the custom sink is in red travertine, the fittings are by Studio Piet Boon for Cocoon, and the vintage mirror is from Fenestella.
Stairwell
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
The stairwell to the roof terrace is painted in Benjamin Moore’s Whisper Violet. The cowhide stool is vintage, and the artwork is by Xavier Kelley.
Primary Bedroom
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
The bed, bedding, nightstand, and mirror are custom. The rug is by Fabrica, the oak armchair is from R & Company, and the walls are painted in Antique Jade by Benjamin Moore.
Primary Bathroom
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
The bathroom’s walls are covered in glass tiles by Sicis. The showerheads are by Studio Piet Boon for Cocoon, and the vintage chair is by F.A. Porsche for Ycami.
The Designer and Homeowners
Photo credit: Kelly Marshall
Designer Mark Grattan (left) with Megan Rapinoe (center) and Sue Bird in the living room of the couple’s home in New York City.
Rapinoe and Bird were traveling constantly throughout the process, primarily living at their home in Seattle. When they were present, they recognized the strong teamwork at hand. “Athletes and artists aren’t that different,” Bird says. “There is a process. And you can’t skip steps, you just can’t.”
The biggest undertaking was the open-plan kitchen, which Pollack-Robbins, while looking for utensils for takeout during a meeting early on, noticed was missing functional drawers. By the time the Brazilian quartzite was installed—a variation called Crystal Tiffany used for the countertops, backsplash, and a custom-built island—even the drawer pulls were bespoke.
A deep emerald statement ceiling makes the living area feel organically grand, like living under a spectacular leaf. An illuminated lilac, like the underside of a sunlit petal, was Grattan’s unexpected choice for the home’s transitional areas, the hallway to the private quarters and the stairwell leading up to the roof. Rapinoe was initially wary, but the palette, while hard to grasp in theory, is beautiful in execution. “I wanted to try a moment where it doesn’t work on paper,” Grattan says. “It works only in real life.”
Kelly Marshall
The project also allowed the designer the space, both literally and figuratively, to test new production methods. He successfully fabricated and installed a freestanding bent mirror behind the living room’s custom sectional sofa, a feat he’d been attempting for years. He also pulled in new processes from his work with Solange Knowles’s creative firm Saint Heron, collaborating with the artist Quincy Ellis of Brooklyn-based Fracture Studio to develop a resin material for the base of the triangular-glass-topped dining table, offset by an orange velvet banquette with leather piping.
The minty monochrome primary bedroom features wall-to-wall carpeting of which the bespoke bed seems a piece, rendered in velvet and chrome and dressed in a bedspread made from fabric remnants of Grattan’s upholstered stool collection for the gallerist Cristina Grajales. Built-in nightstands and another instance of mirrored wall offer discreet functionality and a sense of grandeur at scale. The en suite bathroom is a peaceful dual-showerhead sanctuary inspired by Grattan’s recent travels in São Paulo, swathed in aqua-tinted Sicis mosaic tiles with floor-to-ceiling aluminum shades dressing the windows.
Kelly Marshall
This apartment provides a homecoming for the couple in another important way: Bird retired from the WNBA in 2022, and Rapinoe announced in July that this year’s Women’s World Cup would be her last. Grattan’s work sets the stage for this exciting new chapter in their lives. “Whenever I think about retirement and the future, I think about our friends and family sitting on the couch, sharing joy with each other,” Rapinoe says.
Bird echoes the sentiment, nodding to their one nonnegotiable—to install a television in the living room where they can gather and watch live sports. For two of the world’s greatest athletes, Grattan was game.
Hearst Owned
This story originally appeared in the September 2023 issue of ELLE DECOR. SUBSCRIBE
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