Santa Ynez is stitched together by storied vineyards and old-money estates—but few arrive with architectural lineage quite like Seven Oaks Ranch.
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It started, as many good things do, with a tea party.
In the late 19th century, garden designer Gertrude Jekyll met Edwin Lutyens, a precocious architect of just 20 years old.
Their chance meeting at the party in England’s Surrey hills sparked a creative partnership that would define the English Arts and Crafts movement. She painted with plants. He built with symmetry. Together, they became one of England’s most prolific design duos.
Set across a hundred acres, Seven Oaks lives many lives. Part wine country retreat, part equestrian compound, part California wellness hideaway.
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More than a century later—and half a world away—their legacy has taken root in the rolling hills of California’s Santa Ynez Valley.
Set on 103 acres, Seven Oaks Ranch is both homage and reinvention. On one hand, it channels the spirit of a proper English country estate: layered gardens, timbered facades, leaded glass and interiors thick with antiques. On the other? It’s all easy breezy California. Gym, pool and sunlight beaming in every chance it gets.
Yet this is no period replica. It’s a property more than 20 years in the making, completed with interiors by AD100 designer Jane Hallworth.
Lutyens’ design brings the hallmarks of the English countryside, recalibrated for California sunshine.
Courtesy of Village PropertiesA Cozy Bolthole 20 Years In The Making
The ranch’s original owners were such fans of Jekyll and Lutyens that they flew to England to study their work landscapes and architecture firsthand. Then they tapped a Dutch landscaper fluent in the pair’s language of hedgerows and horticultural order. Thousands of trees and plants were planted in the early 2000s.
The house, however, proved trickier. No local builders quite met the brief. So the owner—a real estate professional—trained two subcontractors himself. Brick by brick, beam by beam, the home came to life. Slowly.
In Santa Ynez, thick hand-hewn beams are part of the local vernacular. Here, they are spoken at full volume.
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Then came a change of heart. And a creative young couple stepped in with a vision of their own. They enlisted Hallworth, whose client roster includes A-list actors Kirsten Dunst and Jesse Plemons, to help finish their “cozy bolthole.”
The result? “Robert Plant met Edwin Lutyens,” as Hallworth writes on her social media.
Old-World Bones With A Rebellious Streak
Inside, scale and story compete for your attention. Imported European oak floors—some more than 100 years old—run beneath hand-hewn beams. Five fireplaces suggest cozy winter nights, even if the weather insists otherwise. A Hallworth-designed custom light fixture made of antique metallic ribbon in the shape of a beehive glints above a low-slung sculptural sofa. Aubusson tapestries from France depict scenes from ancient Rome because… why not?
The kitchen’s inky palette is a deliberate pull inward. Unexpectedly intimate for a house that otherwise loves its scale.
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The kitchen embraces the English ‘unfitted’ look: freestanding cabinetry and deliberate asymmetry. Elsewhere, six bedrooms and eight bathrooms follow suit: plush, tactile, layered.
Many of the furnishings are available to purchase for the full turnkey experience. A shortcut to taste, should one need it.
Beyond The Manor
This being Santa Barbara, horses were a foregone conclusion. The custom four-stall stable features Dutch doors, pine interiors and hand-forged ironwork. An all-weather arena means year-round riding. A turreted stone structure houses the estate manager’s quarters, as one does.
Hedges stitch the grounds into secret corridors that arrive at a stone equestrian center. More Provence than Pacific.
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But it’s the gardens that really steal the show. Rosa rugosa hedges and 12-foot hornbeam walls carve out secret garden rooms. A vine-laced pergola stages alfresco dinners. Orchards produce apples, pears and stone fruit. There’s even a potting room in the pool house, which also doubles as a gym. We are in Southern California, after all.
At the edge of the property, a zero-edge pool clad in volcanic lava stone from Hawaii mirrors the Santa Ynez mountains. Cattle roam the meadows beyond. You float, and probably forget what day it is.
The pool’s simplicity mirrors a natural basin, as pleasing to watch as to slip into.
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The setting is just as considered. Happy Canyon is known for its Bordeaux varietals and magnesium-rich soil, and Seven Oaks sits squarely within it. The property is also enrolled in the Williamson Act, which translates to potential tax perks for agricultural use, such as farming, livestock grazing and crop production.
While Seven Oaks’s owners haven’t ventured into winemaking, the groundwork is there for ambitious oenophiles. Some 30 acres are already in use for feed-hay cultivation. One could go from zero to hobby vineyard with relative ease.
At $15.5 million, the estate sits at the sharp end of Santa Ynez pricing.
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Or perhaps not? “There’s beauty in simply preserving the land as it is,” says broker Carey Kendall of Village Properties. For those craving a glass of Pinot, there are more than 200 vineyards within reach.
Despite the sense of seclusion, Seven Oaks is just 30 minutes from downtown Santa Barbara. Private air access is close by. And yet, once inside the second gate, everything feels distant.
As Kendall says, “It’s the kind of place where you ask yourself, ‘Where am I?’”
The listing for 5200 Armour Ranch Road is held by the Riskin Group and Carey Kendall of Village Properties. Village Properties is a member of Forbes Global Properties, an invitation-only network of top-tier brokerages worldwide and the exclusive real estate partner of Forbes.