Travel
The New York Times Style Magazine
Published in
The New York Times Style Magazine, Tuesday, April 27, 2010
“If anybody said this was Malibu, you’d say they were crazy,” says Richard Hirsh, the millionaire clothier-turned-vintner standing in the vineyards of his Cielo Farms estate.
Hidden in these canyons are not only A-list movie stars like Jennifer Aniston and Mel Gibson but also more than 40 vineyards. (Read More…)
Posted in Food & Wine, Travel
The New York Times
Published in
The New York Times, Friday, April 23, 2010

Kyoto, the former imperial capital of Japan, is a vibrant mash-up, an ancient city electrified by the breathtakingly new. Cruise the futuristic food halls of a department store, gaping at the perfect fruit and glistening sea creatures, before zipping up to the traditional floor, with its kimonos and tea ceremony implements. (Read More…)
Posted in Art & Culture, Food & Wine, Shopping & Objects, Travel
Elle Decor
Published in
Elle Decor, Thursday, April 1, 2010
Japan’s capital is a compelling study in contrasts—sprawling yet full of intimate neighborhoods; ancient yet up-to-the-minute. Here’s how to navigate its riches.
Read excerpted article here
Posted in Architecture & Design, Art & Culture, Food & Wine, Shopping & Objects, Travel
Travel + Leisure
Published in
Travel + Leisure, Tuesday, December 1, 2009
A new Ritz-Carlton and a slew of shops and restaurants are bringing a dose of fresh glamour to this renowned playground.
Surrounded by 18 ski resorts—the densest concentration of slopes anywhere in America—Lake Tahoe is a winter-sports paradise. But despite its abundance of on-mountain thrills, the region has been lacking, somewhat, in off-slope amenities—unless you count the casinos and an all-night bar scene (not to mention attendant bachelor parties) on the lake’s south side. (Read More…)
Posted in Travel
The New York Times
Published in
The New York Times, Sunday, November 29, 2009
The city’s unofficial motto, “Keep Austin Weird,” blares from bumper stickers on BMWs and jalopies alike, on T-shirts worn by joggers along Lady Bird Lake and in the windows of independently owned shops and restaurants. It’s an exhortation for a city that clings (Read More…)
Posted in Art & Culture, Food & Wine, Shopping & Objects, Travel
Travel + Leisure
Published in
Travel + Leisure, Sunday, November 1, 2009
Japan’s ancient capital has one foot in the 14th century and the other firmly rooted in the 21st.
While the megalopolis of Tokyo catapults itself into the future, Kyoto—renowned for its temples, shrines, and vibrant geisha culture—has grown cautiously. Two years ago, the government banned rooftop and flashing ads and put a cap on building height to preserve the centuries-old landscape. Now, a surprisingly modern city is emerging as stylish restaurants, shops, and inns pop up in 19th-century machiya, or wooden merchants’ houses. (Read More…)
Posted in Travel
The Faster Times
Published in
The Faster Times, Sunday, July 5, 2009
At first, I tried to resist the seduction. I felt that there was something shameful, whorish even, in tourists lusting after color, pointing their cameras at a retreating pink sari, or a flash of red turbans. Yet over and over again I swiveled toward the colors, camera in hand, as if magnetized. I was in northwest India for ten days, reporting a story (Read More…)
Posted in Art & Culture, Travel
The New York Times
Published in
The New York Times, Sunday, June 14, 2009
ON $250/DAY
SLEEP Carved out of a 1920s hotel, the new Hotel Vertigo in Nob Hill (940 Sutter Street; 415-885-6800; www.hotelvertigosf.com) recently emerged from a cinematic makeover inspired (Read More…)
Posted in Architecture & Design, Art & Culture, Food & Wine, Shopping & Objects, Travel
The New York Times Style Magazine
Published in
The New York Times Style Magazine, Sunday, May 17, 2009
Indian artisans are breathing new life into old traditions.

If you close your eyes and block out the visual cues — the red ocher 18th-century buildings, the brightly colored bazaars, the monkeys scrambling maniacally over the dusty rooflines — you would still know you were in Jaipur, India. The country’s center of traditional craftsmanship has a distinctive soundtrack (Read More…)
Posted in Art & Culture, Preservation, Selected Articles, Travel
Elle Decor
Published in
Elle Decor, Friday, May 15, 2009
Hip hotels, restaurant and museums are transforming the city of Socrates.
Read excerpted article here.
Posted in Architecture & Design, Art & Culture, Food & Wine, Shopping & Objects, Travel
Town & Country
Published in
Town & Country, Monday, February 9, 2009
Exploring the California Academy of Sciences, the greenest museum on earth.

The California Academy of Sciences, which reopened in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park this past fall, is now in a new building that resembles a high-style space station — all glass and recycled steel and capped with an undulating green roof (Read More…)
Posted in Architecture & Design, Travel
The New York Times
Published in
The New York Times, Sunday, February 8, 2009

THE BASICS The Good Hotel, which opened last November, claims to be the first “hotel with a conscience.” Anthropomorphizing aside, the hotel does have many admirable qualities: low prices (rooms start at $89), eco-friendly touches and a philanthropic streak. (Read More…)
Posted in Travel
The New York Times
Published in
The New York Times, Sunday, January 25, 2009
With its architectural mishmash of storybook English cottages and Swiss Alpine chalets, the small town of Carmel-by-the-Sea in Northern California resembles a Disneyland version of Europe. You half expect a bereted Parisian to saunter out of one of the ridiculously cute (Read More…)
Posted in Food & Wine, Travel
Town & Country
Published in
Town & Country, Thursday, January 1, 2009
Posted in Food & Wine, Preservation, Selected Articles, Travel
Dwell
Published in
Dwell, Monday, October 6, 2008
Today, if you tallied the world’s design capitals, you’d be forgiven for overlooking Honolulu. But when it came to modern architecture in the 1950s and ’60s, all eyes were on Hawaii’s capital city. After World War II and prior to Hawaii’s statehood in 1959, an influx of young modernist architects poured (Read More…)
Posted in Architecture & Design, Profiles & Interviews, Travel
The New York Times Style Magazine
Published in
The New York Times Style Magazine, Monday, October 6, 2008
Could a Northern California backwater become the next Napa?
My first glimpse of Lake County, California, was a flash of silver through the trees. Clear Lake, the second-largest freshwater lake in California, shimmered and rippled in the sharp afternoon sun. Two hours into my drive north from San Francisco, the familiar sights of Napa — winery-lined roads, faux Italianate tasting rooms, chichi shops — had given way (Read More…)
Posted in Food & Wine, Selected Articles, Travel
Travel + Leisure
Published in
Travel + Leisure, Friday, August 1, 2008
As the pace of change quickens in Bhutan, so do efforts to preserve its centuries-old Buddhist art. Jaime Gross heads into the Himalayas to report.
Driving Bhutan’s single highway, a serpentine road hacked precariously into the side of a mountain and perpetually under repair, is an exercise in nerve. It averages 20 curves per mile, and requires honking before every one to warn the overloaded trucks and grazing cows that lurk around each bend. (Read More…)
Posted in Art & Culture, Preservation, Travel
Town & Country Travel
Published in
Town & Country Travel, Tuesday, July 1, 2008
A determined group of midcentury modern devotees is helping this kitschy desert city embrace its future while preserving its past.
“Modern architecture is like a black dress or a trench coat: it’s classic, and you can’t get tired of it,” declares Los Angeles fashion designer Trina Turk. We’re sitting in the living room of her 1936 weekend house in Palm Springs, California, known as the Ship of the Desert (Read More…)
Posted in Architecture & Design, Preservation, Travel
The New York Times
Published in
The New York Times, Sunday, June 22, 2008
THE BASICS The “art hotel” concept has arrived in Australia. The Melbourne-based A Hotels Group, run by an avid art collector, is planning seven art-themed hotels across Australia by 2010. The first, the Storrier, opened in Sydney (Read More…)
Posted in Travel
The New York Times Style Magazine
Published in
The New York Times Style Magazine, Sunday, May 18, 2008
Australia’s answer to the Galapagos Islands makes a giant leap forward.

“People always tell me, ‘Finally I feel like I’m in Australia,’ even if they’ve been in the country for weeks,” Craig Wickham said as we barreled down a red dirt road on Kangaroo Island. Wickham is tall and graceful, with tan skin and a salt-and-pepper buzz cut. He grew up on (Read More…)
Posted in Architecture & Design, Food & Wine, Selected Articles, Travel
My best-laid plans were scrapped the moment I arrived in Oaxaca City. “You want to see the real, authentic Mexico, right?” asked Alejandro Ruiz, one of the city’s most renowned chefs, as he giddily steered his SUV through narrow cobblestoned streets (Read More…)