Inside Barbra Streisand’s multi-million-dollar dream home: This is where she lives
by ghetto.1 ·
For Barbra, designing a dream home is as fulfilling as working on a movie. “You have something to really to show for it afterward,” she says.

Besides the main house, which Barbra moved into within three days, she needed to start her dream home from stratch. “There was nothing here when we started,” she says. “We built the streams because I think water is a very soothing element. Now I’m surrounded by it on three sides.”

Outside the barn, there’s a small fish pond. Even the colors of the fish were chosen with purpose. “Since the houses are barn red, trimmed with black-and-white, the fish, of course, have to be black-and-white, right?” she says with a smile.


Barbra says she considered building a professional recording studio in the barn, but she didn’t think she’d use it. “[I] record in Grandma’s house—we call it—which has nothing professional about it,” she says. “It doesn’t even have double-glazed windows on the ocean, and yet it works.”

Among the shops is a Louis XV–esque antique clothing store. The shop showcases some of Barbra’s most opulent and ornate garments, like a black lace cape and an Irene Sharaff gown constructed with green chiffon over pink silk. Barbra wore this gown when she sang the song “People” in Funny Girl.


When designing a living space, Barbra tends to stick to one or two colors per room, which she feels is less distracting. “I don’t respond to too many colors, too many prints,” she says. “Then, I don’t hear the conversation as easily.”
A portion of the proceeds from Barbra’s book, My Passion for Design, benefits women’s cardiovascular research. Barbra will match the contributions of others, dollar for dollar up to $5 million. Find out more about the Barbra Streisand Women’s Cardiovascular Research and Education Program at Cedars Sinai Medical Center.