Now he sees his future here. “This is a property I can totally see turning into that beautiful home where I can have my children grow up,” he says of the impressive spread, which consists of a main house (with a room designed as a barbershop), a guesthouse, a full gym with an outdoor basketball court and another building he uses as an office.
Larsen and Talbert

The house needed a serious design refresh when he purchased it. “SinceThat ’70s Showwas about to end, I figured I should live somewhere that didn’t remind me of work,” he jokes about the decades-old decor. “It was important I update the salmon-colored carpets.”

After an 18-month-long renovation (he converted the four bedrooms to two, with walk-in closets), he decorated with a mix of masculine leather furnishings.
“This was completely designed for me to take tons of naps,” he says of his living room, which includes a leather sectional from Restoration Hardware and a projector for movie nights.
Larsen & Talbert


There are also unusual custom pieces—like a coffee table made from a boat propeller—and sentimental art. Photos of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz, two personal heroes, watch over the bar, which Norris relocated from an old cantina in El Paso, Texas. Decorative skulls are also scattered around the home. “Their energy represents a type of protection,” says Valderrama.

“I spend a lot of time at home, so I wanted every room to be so me,” says Valderrama. His kitchen, for example, has a wine fridge, a hibachi grill and a coffee station — a new obsession for the actor.
Living with his two dogs, Lucy and Marrok, he couldn’t feel more content. “As long as you have appreciation for the bare minimum, everything else is a gift,” he says. “Everything else is a blessing. Everything else is a win.”
source: people.com