I think it’s pretty obvious that he would not approve of the tear down of his historic house in Lakewood. Especially since the owners had applied for historic status when they bought it; and I think we all are aware of Mr. Marcus‘ level of taste and quality. The owner’s reason? Make it more energy efficient. I’m sorry, that just doesn’t work for me - tear something precious down to build again? Not exactly green thinking. I’m reminded of the tear down of the stone and slate masterpiece at the corner of Rheims and Armstrong that had been last year. When Susan Palma went up to the demo contractor and asked what in the heck they were doing, he said, “The inside was bad.” She brought herself up to her full 5′3″ height and said, “Excuse me. The inside was not bad, I did it.”
I love beautiful houses, I especially love beautiful Dallas houses - and, there are a multitude that you’ll see in the September issue of DHome. So, when my dear friend (and competitor) Rob Brinkley writes a book about beautiful houses in Dallas, I have to crow about it. It is being published by the distinguished Assouline press, and is due out in October. Look for local editors at Paper City to host lots of fetes in honor of this one, the grand opening is scheduled at Neiman Marcus on October 21. Rob, does this get me an automatic invitation? Remember, I knew you when….
All the rose quartz Sherle Wagner and a completely pink marble commode on this great piece narrated by Ebby Halliday herself!
I have this fun new ditty on the DallasDirt blog you are just going to love…
For the September issue of DHome, we are taking on the monumental task of picking the 10, or maybe 20 most beautiful houses in Dallas. Please help us! We want old, new, classic, modern, whatever just hits you when you drive by on the street. And if you have a great one - tell us why.
This beautiful eco-luxurious kitchen could be yours - in the most convenient location in Highland Park. You can have it all - walk to restaurants and grocery stores and put the kids in HP schools. Do I sound like a realtor? No, just really sad that I’m selling my house and leaving the most beautiful kitchen ever. I never planned to be unfaithful - I was perfectly content with my current housing relationship. Then, I went in an open house while visiting my Dad in () North Dallas. I fell in love with a very contemporary split level 1970s house on a small residential lake. Wouldn’t have been a problem, except I called my husband, and he fell in love, too. It was fated…now we have two houses, one too many. So, back to my original premise - this kitchen could be yours.
As promised, I went to Bungalows yesterday. To translate Alabama to Texas…Bungalows is: 1 part McCallister Collection (McKinney), 1 part Junkadoodle (Dallas), and 1 part Hoodiewear (Richardson). The result is all Southern Hospitality… This picture does not/cannot capture the magic of this little boutique. It’s fun in for summer, anytime, really…
Partners Terry Woodard and Rick Kuzmyak recently expanded Bungalows to another new sunny location in the Wharf (Canal Street @ Beach Express). They LOVE Dallas, but that is only part of the story…jump for the deets.
Greetings, once again from the sugar sand beaches of the Florida/Alabama coast.
Every once in a while, I find a treasure. Duh is just such a place.
The brainchild of Quinn Stinson (Baylor University ‘88) and Jim Rigsby (who has no known ties to DFW, but is just as cute as a button), Duh is haven for the usually design starved greater Pensacola metropolitan area. Duh has had its finger on the pulse of every design trend to roll out… I’ve been a Duh fanatic for at least 9 years.
I was so inspired by the latest issue of D Home , I set out to find the best outdoor living spaces in my neighborhood. It took all my strength to keep from diving into summer… (more…)
If you would like for D Home to consider your project for publication, please bring your portfolio or casual snapshots to tomorrow’s Portfolio Day at Lights Fantastic. It’s from 11 am to 3pm.
We would love to see your work!
RSVP to brooke.moskovitz@dmagazine.com
Parade of Homes
May 17 - June 8, 2008
10 a.m. - 8 p.m.
Wednesday - Sunday (Closed Monday and Tuesday, with the exception of Memorial Day)
The 2008 Spring Parade of Homes™ presented by the Home Builders Association of Greater Dallas will take place May 17 through June 8 at Tucker Hill in McKinney. The multi-week, open house event will feature homes inspired by historic architecture and pre-war neighborhoods from Southern Land Company Homebuilding, Darling Homes, and Flagstone Custom Homes. The annual event benefits the Make-A-Wish Foundation of North Texas® and HomeAid/Home Builders Care.
Tickets are $12 at the door. Discount tickets are available online at www.paradeofhomesdallas.com and area Tom Thumb locations.
While I was out this afternoon scouting Josy Cooner’s amazing new house in Forrest Hills (just a splash away from White Rock Lake), Peggy was back at the office, furiously working the phones with George Nash, trying to schedule a shoot this month of his east Texas farm. Turns out Nash was lunching at that very moment with Gonzalo Bueno in somewhere in Mexico. And, probably at that very moment, Josy Cooner was showing me the beautiful brushed stainless steel doors and other muy bueno details that Gonzalo had built for her house, which we are shooting later this summer. I just love that about Dallas.
These days we are preoccupied with creating a comfortable house. Two Japanese architects created one that is uncomfortable, even miserable, on purpose. Why? It’s a life or death situation.
While out scouting last week, Clif Ellman and I were knocked out by this staircase at Hermitage Antiques. It’s practically a house in itself with a closet, and built in clock and a Harry Potter cubby hole. Of course, we had to hear the whole story. It was from the Chateau Hermitage originally built by the Duke Emmanuel of Croy in 1748, and completed by his son in 1789 as it stands today - over 110 rooms on four floors and “as many windows as there are days in a year.” It was sold to a private individual in 1924, pieces were auctioned in 2001. It’s not officially for sale, unless you happen to find the owner on a good day - couldn’t you picture this in a grand Dallas home? Go exploring on Slocum Street some day, there are a lot of treasures to find.
Don’t miss the Park Cities Historical and Preservation Society home tour this weekend. It may be crummy weather, but when else can you: wander through a new home at 3507 Crescent that truly complements the area; enjoy a 1915 bungalow at 3511 Lindenwood; visit a 1926 Tudor being restored according to the original blueprints at 4209 Arcady; walk through an original Hal Thomson at 4329 Livingston; or, my personal favorite, enjoy the salon like living room at 4340 Versailles, where I intend to spend many deep thinking evenings (possibly involving Malbec wine) with my friend Christine Allison.
Yesterday was busy. After the presentation at Walter Lee Culp, I went to One Arts Plaza to see the models that my friends at Scott+Cooner did. Of course, they are flawless. But, what can you expect with architecture by Lionel Morrison, furniture from Scott+Cooner, art from Marty Walker and Holly Johnson, and rugs from Odegard? Both models had grand terraces big enough for dining tables and seating areas - just one problem. The noise from 75 made it hard to carry on a conversation. Oh well, I guess you could always pretend it was the sound of the ocean, or, as Laura suggested, have cocktails at 4 am.
Eric Prokesh and David Astudillo snapped this picture of the Foreign Correspondents’ Club in Phnom Penh, housed inside a wonderful old French colonial building.
[The port at Hong Kong]
Sorry, Eric, I was supposed to be keeping up with these and posted Cambodia before Hong Kong. I was never very good at geography. Anyway, it’s a gorgeous port, isn’t it?
Angkor Wat, a Hindu monastery in Angkor, Cambodia.
Photo by Eric Prokesh and David Astudillo. (more…)

Dallas designer Eric Prokesh is traveling in Asia, and I’m posting his diaries as they arrive.
A Garden of Ruins-Ta Prohm, in Angkor, Cambodia
When they excavated the area, the French decided to leave this one complex in its natural state. Romantic and evocative, it is something of a fake, its apparent decay requiring careful attention to preserve the remaining structures and keep back jungle vegetation except for the largest sponge trees whose roots and tendrils engulf roofs and walls.
Photo credits: David Astudillo & Eric Prokesh
Pampered poochies, celebs, outrageous costumes (I call this DIFFA for Dogs) and the absolutelt adorably funny Paul J. Williams… be there….
Those familiar with the Godbey Lecture Series know its discussions–Encounters with Medieval Spain; Poetry of John Keats; and Russia at the Crossroads–can make you the darling of any cocktail party. Their twelfth annual spring tour of homes, benefiting the fund for faculty excellence at SMU, offers more useful info. The April 3 tour features the work of Lawrence Speck of Page Southerland Page, Lionel Morrison of Morrison Seifert Murphy, and Gary Cunningham of Cunningham Architects. The Dallas residences are quite lookers, as this Speck house (not spec house) shows. He redesigned this Turtle Creek-side home, originally by the late great Bud Oglesby. $150, a small price to pay for a Dallas Architecture 101 course. Register by calling 214-768-2532.
The homes here are painted stucco and I’m told the painters mix the pigment on the spot, no chips from the Home Depot. Miraculously, they come back in a year and can match the paint perfectly — it’s an art. My visit here has made me re-consider building to the lot line. In SMA, homes are built to the lot line. You enter the door and walk into a glorious courtyard and garden in the middle of the home. This floorplan was devised centuries ago during the gold and silver rush for security so wagons loaded with commodities could pull in and be locked up for the night behind the front door and gates. I’d LOVE to have my backyard in the middle of my house!
Dallas decorator Eric Prokesh is traveling throughout Asia for the next couple of weeks, and I asked him to send photos and diary entries along his journey. These first photos were taken in Tokyo and show beautifully dramatic contrasts, don’t you think? His posts explain the photos, and are so evocative. Be sure to read them all. I’ll be posting Hong Kong later in the week, then Cambodia. Click on the jump to read Eric’s diary from Tokyo. (more…)
On our usual lunch/grocery shopping run to Central Market last Sunday, my husband and I found a nice surprise—chefs were cooking up delicious shrimp and corn on the cob under an outdoor tent. Plus, a jazzy band (with a super-talented harmonica guy) was providing entertainment under the patio awning. Sent me straight to Louisiana. Maybe it’s the spring weather, but it seems like everyone’s bringing on the jazz—360 architecture, a new firm, is hosting its open house from 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. today at 2001 North Lamar, Ste. 400 (in the West End), with drinks, nibbles, an art exhibit by Patrick Lewis, and jazz guitarist Kevin Curtis. Gotta love it.