Kim Kardashian’s $60 million estate in Hidden Hills, Calif., is like no other — and it includes a primary bathroom fit for an ultra-minimalistic queen.
Though she has not revealed the exact square footage of her bedroom’s en suite bathroom, it’s quite expansive and contains large- and small-scale features seemingly plucked right out of the future.
For starters, the light switches “are just three little buttons,” the reality star-turned-billionaire mogul once explained to her hundreds of millions of social media followers. “And they go on, dim and off.”
The vertical, stand-alone buttons are not enclosed by a typical box in order to keep the aesthetic “really cool” and “more visually appealing.”
Additionally, the buttons operate a light box that expands the entire length and width of the ceiling.
But even if one chooses to enter the neutral-toned bathroom and not hit the switch, one of the enormous walls is made up of floor-to-ceiling windows that face a large patio and let in plenty of natural sunlight.
As for the patio, that’s not typical either. It’s lined with lush foliage that Kardashian switches out depending on the season.
In the hotter months, it’s a tropical forest; in the fall, it’s an array of tall wheat and fresh lavender; and for the holidays, it’s a massive lineup of Christmas trees decorated with white string lights.
Meanwhile, the unusual bathtub “fits all of [her] kids“: daughters North and Chicago and sons Saint and Psalm, whom she shares with her ex-husband Kanye West.
The tub itself is concrete-colored and square-shaped with sharp, angular corners and sleek lines, seemingly made of actual concrete or some kind of stone.
The shower is unique, too, as it takes up the entire length of another wall. In keeping with the simplicity of the rest of the room, various shower heads are spaced out and enclosed in a giant glass case.
Over on the other wall, though not attached to the wall, is a lengthy and mystifying sink with no basin. West, along with designer Axel Vervoordt and architect Claudio Silvestrin, created the distinctive handwashing station after eight different prototypes.
Despite appearing to be completely flat, the sinks (there are multiple faucets) feature a slight slope so water can drain into a tiny slit.
“You can put it on as high pressure as you want, and no backsplash will come up,” Kardashian marveled.
Like the bathtub, the sink station is also rectangular shaped and the color of concrete.