To undo the flagrant flamboyancy inside a waterfront vacation house in Lake Mirage that Los Angeles–based interior designer Megan Dufresne purchased midpandemic, she adopted a mighty battle cry: “If it’s not a ‘no,’ then it’s a ‘hell yes.’ ”
Desert dwellings are a bit of a family legacy — she grew up visiting her grandparents in Rancho Mirage Racquet Club, where her father currently owns a home — so Dufresne was unfazed at the notion of taking on the 1980s Spanish-style weekender’s “John Gotti meets Liberace aesthetic,” as she calls it. Even so, she was aghast at such passé pomp: an onslaught of smoky mirrors, gold trim, lavender walls, and floor tiles with an off-putting fleshy-pink tone. It’s hard to think of such “inspired” scenery as a blank slate, but as Dufresne says, “Nothing couldn’t be undone, and everything — anything — was possible.”
Acquiring a vacation property in the Coachella Valley often begets decorative experimentation, partly because the at-times monotonous expanse of the desert demands it. For Dufresne, her Rancho Mirage getaway was a testing ground for bold ideas. She envisioned a showroom of taste and creativity where prospective clients could witness decorative marvels converging into a thoroughly modern, measurably feminine, desert-coded tableau that only whispers of the region’s midcentury heritage.
“I wanted people to see what out-of-the-box thinking looks like,” Dufresne says. “I took a chance on my house to show them what can be done if they take a chance on theirs.”
A vintage Warren Platner dining set provides the home’s signature “Palm Springs minute.”
DUFRESNE’S TOP 3
1. Set the stage. Dufresne’s favorite nook in the house is a recessed niche at the front door with floating oak shelves that display objects and art, giving a preview of the style to come. “This kind of ‘house summary’ piques curiosity and draws people in,” she says.
2. Repurpose, then personalize. In the kitchen, Dufresne worked with the existing cabinets, which saves time and money. “Not everything has to be ripped out, and not all cabinets have to be soft-close,” she says. “Especially in vacation properties that aren’t used daily.”
3. Take a “Palm Springs minute.” Even though Dufresne’s home isn’t overtly midcentury in style, the breakfast area — appointed with a vintage Warren Platner dining set below a gilded raffia pendant lamp — provides context for the region’s design heritage.







