Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gardens. Show all posts

Novelist Sandra Brown's Gardens


Arlington resident Sandra Brown's lush gardens. Photo by Dan Piassick

Nature, She Wrote. . . In early evenings when there’s still enough sunlight filtering through the leafy canopy overhead, novelist Sandra Brown wanders into the garden with legal tablet and pen. “In the stages when I’m plotting out a story and playing ‘what if’, I’ll sit out there for inspiration,” says Sandra, whose gardens and home comprise four woodland acres in north central Arlington, about 30 minutes west of Dallas. 


Photo by Dan Piassick

Behind large gates and shrouded from the street by a thicket of elms and oaks, the property is both manicured and wild, a hidden oasis in an area best known for strip malls, the Ball Park at Arlington, and the Dallas Cowboys Stadium. “It’s such a shock to people who’ve never been here before,” she says.



Photo by Dan Piassick

A creek cuts through the back property, and in spring the landscape is peppered with white flowering dogwood, purple-hued eastern redbud trees, pink ruffle and snowball azaleas. The flora is reminiscent of the damp Piney Woods near Tyler, where Sandra and husband Michael, a video producer, lived for five years. In summer, the magnolias bloom and the beds sprout with shade-loving caladiums, hostas, and lush tassel and holly ferns. “I grew to love that east Texas look, so I have tried to replicate it here,” says Sandra, who grew up in Fort Worth.


Photo by Dan Piassick

Photo by Dan Piassick

Texas and the south are frequent settings for the more than 70 books she’s written (60 have made it onto the New York Times Best Seller List). She’s in the midst of finishing Low Pressure, a thriller due out in September about a tornado that hits Austin on Memorial Day, covering up a murder that took place only minutes earlier. While most of her work is done at an office she keeps in Arlington, Sandra often writes at home on the weekends inside a second floor study, which affords views of the creek and a small bridge below. “One day I saw a ‘swoosh’ out the window, and it was a huge heron, perched by the creek. He stayed for a few days,” she remembers.



Photo by Dan Piassick

Photo by Dan Piassick


Photos by Dan Piassick


Water and the woodsy terrain are an alluring habitat for armadillos, raccoons, opossum, rabbits, owls, and red tail hawks, which have been seen on the property. Once, Michael came face to face with a bobcat in the driveway after an early morning bike ride.
The Browns bought the large two-story estate in 2004 and spent a year renovating it. “We loved the bones of the house, but we did a lot of rearranging inside,” including opening up rooms to take advantage of massive windows overlooking the Pennsylvania blue stone terraces, says Sandra. “When you walk in the front door, you can see straight out the to the back. It’s like walking into the garden the minute you come inside.”

Photo by Dan Piassick


The already extensive terrace was expanded by another third, and they added a large stone fireplace, which enables them to entertain outside year round. “We’ve had dinner parties at Christmas, and we’ll go outside with a bag of marshmallows and roast them for dessert. On New Year’s day we had a family gathering by the fireplace. It was just perfect,” she says. A seating area perched high on the upper terrace is ideal for informal lunches when her son and daughter visit with their four children. “We can watch the kids play on the other side of the bridge from there.”  

The gardens, which had already been established by Naud Burnett & Parnters when the Browns purchased the house, only needed a little sprucing up. Ornamental trees were added, including Japanese yews, pistachios, and Japanese maples -- one of Sandra’s favorites. Drought and insects have taken a toll on some of the larger, older trees. “Any time we’ve lost a tree, I’ve had it replaced with lace bark elm. It’s fast growing, heat resistant, drought tolerant, and grows into gorgeous shade trees with bark that curls up like lace.”


Photos by Dan Piassick


A profuse understory of flowering shrubs like sweetly-scented cheeswood, Chinese loropetalum with its deep pink petals, and white-blooming wax leaf lugustrum help give the gardens density. But it’s the vast emerald carpet of ground covers that that are the real stars, providing manicured elegance and texture, including English ivy, dwarf and standard mondo grasses, creeping verigated vinca with its tiny blue flowers, and the hardy liriope, or monkey grass, which produces purple blooms like water hyacinth. Harsh summers, ongoing drought, and periodic ice storms are a challenge for sustaining the garden. A new water system recycles water from the creek into a small koi pond, and helps with circulation and conservation.

Novelist Sandra Brown and golden retriever, Chase. Photo by Dan Piassick


“Maintenance is a huge issue that takes a lot of effort,” says Sandra. “Some years the tulips are pathetic looking if the soil wasn’t as cold as it should be during winter. Other times, the azalea blooms freeze before they open. So many things depend on the weather and the rain.”  Unlike the books she pens where the action is entirely under her control, gardens are dynamic and unpredictable. “You can do your best, but at the end of the day, mother nature is in charge.”


A version of my story also appears in the April issue of Modern Luxury Interiors Texas.

Amazing Bodron + Fruit Designed Home on Tour

Limestone, copper, mahogany, steel, and glass make up 
this house designed by Bodron + Fruit

Tour de Force . . . Here's your chance to step inside one of the best examples of new construction in Texas, designed by Svend Fruit of Bodron + Fruit. It's a bit of a mystery. Secluded on wooded acreage in the Bluffview neighborhood of Dallas, the owners are highly private. No one will say who they are, and as far as I know, this is the only photograph of the house ever taken. (Here's a hint: they have a dedicated library with an extensive book collection). 


On May 15 you'll get a chance to tour the house as a part of the Dallas Architecture Forum's 365 Modern Living Home Reception Series. Fruit and his design partner Mil Bodron, who worked on the interior design with Cindy Hughes of Collections Rare, Inc., will give a brief talk.


$75 per person, including tour and a cocktail reception. 6-8 pm. Go here to purchase tickets.


Svend Fruit


Best in Dallas Interior Design and Architecture

This White Rock Lake area house has a room
devoted solely to bird watching.
Photo by shoot2sell

Best Of . . . the start of a new year is alway a good time for reflection. This post is all about some of my favorite houses, interiors, and architecture from the blog. Done by Dallas interior designers, Dallas architects, and sometimes the homeowners themselves, these images remind me why I love covering design and why I keep it local. We've got some of the best talent anywhere in the country, don't you think?

Above: One room, one purpose. David and Kim Hurt love wildlife, and devoted this amazing glass room to pursuing the great outdoors from the comfort of their vintage Womb chairs, no less.

To read the full story, go here.






Derek and Christine Wilson aren't afraid to let their toddlers
have free access to their art-packed rooms.

Unbelievably, Derek and Christine Wilson, whose living room is pictured above, live in their art-filled house in Highland Park with two very small children. (Room by Dallas interior designer Brant McFarlain).

To read the full story, go here.





This living room was designed around vintage
Pucci fabric. Photo by Kevin Dotolo

Designing a room around a single inspiration is hardly a new thing, but when the muse is a yard of pink and green vintage Pucci fabric, it makes you want to know more. (Room by Dallas interior designer Beth Dotolo).

To read the full story, go here.







I bet you think this room is about pattern and geometry.
Photo by Kevin Dotolo

It's really about symmetry. You could cut this living room down the middle and it would almost be a mirror reflection. I love the fact that the designer, Beth Dotolo, uses symmetry to balance the room's pattern and shapes. The house belongs to 20-something Lauren Chapman, who is Bradley Agather's best friend (her living room is above).

To read the full story, go here.







The ventilated hood is hand-painted on paper to resemble
crocodile skin. Photo by AMWZ Photography

Dallas artist Annie Omar of Dallas Faux created this stunning ventilated hood for a kitchen designed by Dallas interior designer Tiffany McKinzie. This is one of my favorite kitchens ever -- the faux patent leather croc hood is so unexpected and takes a restrained, beautiful kitchen to a whole new level.

To read the full story, go here.






Dean Martin sat here.

That fact alone is enough for me to swoon. Art gallery owner Kristy Stubbs' bought these glamorous chairs from Dean Martin's house in Palm Springs.

To read the full story, go here.






To hell with strict modernism.

In this showhouse living room, Dallas interior designer John Bobbitt mixed a handful of unlikely subjects, including a 70s Axle Vervoordt sofa, an antique Persian rug, a 17th century Italian mirror, and a coffee table made from antique clockworks. The whole thing is set off by the room's original 18th century Chinese wallpaper. And, it's set inside one of the most famous modern houses in Texas.

To read the full story, go here.





An inspired collaboration.


Interior designer Laura Kirar is from NYC, but the gorgeous room divider she commissioned for the entry of this penthouse at the W Residences here was created by Dallas artist Amanda Weil, who took a photo of a tumbleweed, blew it up really big, then developed it on semi-translucent film which she transferred to glass. I love it when big name, out-of-town designers collaborate with local artisans, but I love it even more when an artist can take a Texas cliché like a tumbleweed and make it relevant and modern.

To read the full story, go here.






A stellar collection of top Dallas-area design talent
worked on this showhouse.

The colorful room pictured above is by Dallas interior designers Kathy Adcock-Smith and Linda Fritschy, but dozens of top local talent participated in last year's City Living Tour, which benefitted the Dallas Symphony Orchestra League. I love showhouses because they're a great way to see great work by designers who are under-the-radar. Magazines and blogs tend to cover the same people over and over, so it's nice when new names get recognition. Some of the interior designers whose work I wasn't familiar with included Catherine Dolen of Catherine Dolen & Associates, April Warner of Lauck Group, and Amy Thomasson of Cadwallader Design. They all created beautiful rooms and I promise you'll be hearing more from them.

To see all the beautiful rooms inside the City Living Tour, go here.




Peace Prize.

Eleven years ago, the great architect Philip Johnson designed the Interfaith Peace Chapel in the Oak Lawn area of Dallas. There was a lot of angst and in-fighting before it ever got built. People got fired. The coffers dried up. In the midst of it all Johnson died. It was the loudest and least peaceful idea of place of worship you could imagine. Then the thing finally got built, thanks to many good souls including Dallas architect Gary Cunningham, and when it opened late last year, it was a masterpiece.

To read the full story, go here.







A 30s era house in Ft. Worth, restored to its Colonial grandeur

Winterthur is a mecca for anyone interested in classic American architecture, and there's only one man licensed in this country to reproduce the hundreds of years of architectural elements represented there -- Brent Hull of Brent Hull Companies -- and he happens to live in Fort Worth. Brent Hull does historic millwork, homebuilding, and consulting in Dallas, Fort Worth and across the country. Owners of the house above hired Hull to renovate their 30s era home with hand-carved millwork from Winterthur, and it's a beautiful example of our American architectural heritage.

To read about the house, go here.






To give is to receive.
Photo by Dave Shafer.

When Dallas interior designer Lisa Robison's husband asked her what she wanted for her birthday, she said seed money to start a non-profit. Dwell with Dignity was born, and in a short amount of time, it's become one of the most talked about charitable organizations in the country. The Dwell House, shown above, is where all the good sprouts.

To read the full story, go here.





A bedroom with a tranquil view.

Perennials founder and Dallas interior designer Ann Sutherland just launched her own design firm, Square Foot Studio. Designers often use their own homes as incubators for ideas, and you can see Sutherland's design style in her own home in Dallas. I love the peaceful courtyard view from the bedroom, and the cheeky John Dickinson footed table.

To see more of Ann Sutherland's house, go here.






At first glance, you might miss the chicken
perched on Lisa Brown's shoulder.
Photo by Justin Clemmons

I get more comments from this story than almost any I've done. Dallas art dealer Lisa Brown and her family keep exotic chickens in the backyard of her stylish Greenway Parks house, and it's part of an art-and-animal filled lifestyle that I call Farmhouse Chic.

To read more of the story, go here.



Traditional, done timeless.
Photo by Dan Piassick

It's not sweet. It's not heavy-handed. A man could sleep in this room and not wake up with nightmares. It's everything a classic bedroom ought to be, I think. The gray/blue monochromatic color scheme mixed with dark woods keep the florals in check. The drapery adds a layer of softness, and the gilt tieback is glamorous. Dallas interior designer Pam Kelly did this room.

To see more of her beautiful rooms, go here.





I love the fact that there's a Dallas design firm that specializes
in interior design for high rises.

There are big challenges in designing rooms so high up in the air. For one, they tend to float away visually unless you ground them with the proper color flooring and rugs. They may have sweeping windows and views, but high rise apartments tend to be small. Dallas interior designers Vicki Crew and Susan Smith at Urban Interiors specialize in helping people downsize from sprawling Dallas houses into glam new aeries. I love that.

See more of their work here.






Modern art and gilt Louis chairs make me happy

Love everything that Dallas interior designer Laura Lee Clark puts her hands on. These chairs could go in a modern space and look more like sculpture than seating.

To read more about Laura Lee Clark's rooms, go here.





Effortlessly eclectic

Dallas interior designer Louise Kemp's house in Preston Hollow mixes good modern art and furniture with an array of naturalistic elements (the plaster unicorn is 19th century), and antique French chairs (the one at far left is recovered in a cubist needlepoint made by Kemp's mother, Dallas designer Mary Cassidy). The house was renovated by Dallas architect Ron Wommack.

You should really see the rest of it here.





So very un-Dallas.

This smashing Preston Hollow house by the great architect Edward Durrell Stone has changed hands many times since it was built in the mid-50s, and who knows how it survived the wrecking ball. Dallas architect Russell Buchanan, who won an award from the National Trust for Historic Preservation for his work restoring it, tracked down Stone's long-forgotten papers and blueprints. Dallas interior designer David Cadwallader did the interiors. It's one of the best houses in Dallas, no question.

To read the full story, go here.





Got architecture?

If your apartment lacks interior architecture, create your own. That's what Dallas furniture designers Arthur Johnson and Scott Hill of Square One Furniture did in their mid-century highrise. The fireplace is completely portable, but beautiful with its faux shagreen surround. A pair of over-sized floor lamps balance the room. Scott has a degree in architecture from UT and it shows! Sometimes scale and proportion are all that matter.

To read the more of the story, go here.





If you think this house is amazing, wait till you see the backyard.

The Vogel family has lived in this modern house since the 50s when Donald Vogel built it. It's on the grounds of the Valley House Gallery, one of the oldest art galleries in the country, and the family turned their spectacular backyard, which consists of many acres, into a public sculpture garden. It's hidden away and little-known, but it's without a doubt one of the most spectacular places in Dallas.

To see the gardens the Vogels call their backyard, go here.





Hollywood Glam started here.

A room designed by Dallas interior designer Jan Showers is instantly identifiable, and I love that about her work. Showers was among the very first in the country to begin using French 40s and 50s furniture and Venetian glass in her interiors. Now, it's everywhere, but Showers seems to always do it better than anyone. I love the James Mont-style Asian coffee table, the French blue lamps, and the modern art in this room. Those pillows remind me of Josef Albers op art paintings, and they've sort of become one of Showers' signature looks.

To read more about Jan Showers, go here.





This house was designed around a 1960s jazz tune

This has to be the coolest house in Dallas. The client, a jazz lover, gave Dallas architect Cliff Welch a CD with a little-known jazz tune from the 60s as inspiration to design his new house. I love the fact that Welch took it seriously, listening to the song for months and dissecting the tune note by note. He interpreted the song's structure into the house's design, and even pulled colors and the feel of the furnishings from classic jazz album covers.

To read the rest of the amazing story and hear the song that inspired the house, go here.





Remarkably, people live here.

Philip Johnson designed this dazzling house in Preston Hollow decades ago, but Dallas architect Svend Fruit and Dallas interior designer Mil Bodron of Bodron + Fruit made it sublime with their restrained renovation. Who needs furniture when you have an art collection like this?

To read the full story, go here.


Spectacular New Public Gardens in Dallas


Newly opened gardens at University of Texas Dallas

Lush Hour ... In May, I attended a symposium at the Nasher Sculpture Center organized by director Jeremy Strick and UTD's Richard Brettell, who had gathered some of the key players in global gardening, all of whom are designing public gardens in Dallas. In varying sages of completion, these gardens are being constructed by some of the country's most prestigious landscape architects and are breathing life and soul into the city's changing skyline.



Gardens at UTD

Peter Walker, whose West coast-based landscape design firm created the gardens at the Nasher Sculpture Center, just unveiled a $30 million garden project at UTD, funded almost entirely by philanthropist Margaret McDermott. "There's no equivalent of the Pritzker Prize in landscape design so not as much attention is paid," Walker said during the symposium. "But we’ve got the best landscape architects in the world in this room today, and they're all working on gardens in Dallas.”



Gardens at UTD

UTD Provost Hobson Wildenthal was the force behind the idea to landscape the school, where bland concrete buildings and vast expanse of parking lots resembled “an abandoned Walmart, as one national magazine put it,” Wildenthal told me over the phone.


The new gardens encompass 800,000 square feet planted with 5,000 trees and shrubs, many of them native; a mall groomed in St. Augustine grass; six pools, including a circular one that pumps a continuous column of fog; and four human-scale chessboards.





Coming Soon ...

During the next two years, least four other major gardens will be complete, including gardens at the Crow Collection of Asian Art, which will open to the public in October (unfortunately I don't have any renderings yet of this one). Designed by master gardener and Japanese gardens expert John Powell of Weatherford Gardens, the Crow gardens will include a new collection of Asian antiquities and contemporary Asian sculptures.

"The idea is to take an extremely dated landscape around the building and make it a better background for the new sculptures," says Powell, who's creating a series of small gardens that will wrap around the museum. "They will take the visitor on a journey, almost like a Japanese stroll garden. There will be tight corridors with detail and open areas," and include a dry landscape garden with gravel; a modern, monochromatic garden with a ground cover of juniper, Japanese black pines, and stone slabs; there will also be woodland settings with Japanese maples and a wall of black bamboo. "These gardens are designed to be an escape from the noise and the dirt of the city," he says.




Gardens at the Perot Museum of Nature & Science are due to open in early 2013. The 14-story, cube-shaped building, under construction now, is designed to float over a landscaped base, which is being designed by Dallas landscape architect Coy Talley.

There will also be an acre of rolling roofscape comprised of rocks and native drought-resistant grasses from the Texas prairies, and different landscaped areas that depict abstract cross-sections of Texas including East-Texas inspired forests with large canopies of trees. The gardens will be watered from a rainwater collection system that will capture run-off from the roof and parking lot to fill two 25,000 gallon cisterns.



Check out the museum's webcam to see the building in progress.







The George W. Bush Presidential Center, which is under construction now and will open sometime in 2013, is situated on 23 acres on the western edge of SMU and will include a 15-acre urban park designed by Michael Van Valkenburg, who is professor of landscape architecture at Harvard's Graduate School of Design. (Van Valkenburg also designed Deedie and Rusty Rose's gardens for their Antoine Predock-designed contemporary estate on Turtle Creek.)






The Bush gardens will be a mix of cultivated and wild, with grasses from Texas's native blackland prairies, seasonal wildflowers planted in a sheltered meadow, savannah and woodland clearings designed to provide habitat for butterflies, birds, and other wildlife.

There will also be a grove of canopy trees indigenous to North Texas, including cedar elm, pecans, blackjack oaks, and courtyards planted with prairie phlox, mealy blue sage, American beautyberry, Southern magnolia, and Mexican plum. Hedges of native Yaupon holly, native to Texas, will produce berries essential for sustaining native animals such as bluebirds and armadillos.




Land south of the library will be a recreation of a prairie, with a floodplain forest, wildflower meadow, and native Texas grasses. A storm-water management system will collect and reuse runoff.

There will also be a cultivated rose garden, designed with the same proportions, solar orientation, and formal organization as the White House Rose Garden. A large water garden will have water lilies, irises, and sedges.






The Park over Woodall Rogers

Under construction now, The Park is a 5.2-acre wedge of land spanning across Woodall Rogers Freeway between Pearl and St. Paul streets. The $80 million project is intended to draw pedestrians from the nearby Arts District and Uptown neighborhood into its promenade of gardens, gathering spaces and performance venues.

Slated to be finished in the spring of 2012, the ambitious project is being led by Houston-and West Coast-based landscape architect James Burnett, who is overseeing a massive team that includes lighting and water designers, engineers, and restaurant designers.


The park will include a promenade of pond cypress trees, a botanical garden, a children's garden, a dog park, a 7,800 square foot lawn, several oak groves, a restaurant, an outdoor performance hall, and an interactive fountain inspired by the shape of a calla lily.




The Park over Woodall Rogers

Wondering how a park of this scope can possibly be constructed over a highway? Here's a FAQ page that explains it all.

Note: a version of my story originally appears in the July 2011 issue of Dallas Modern Luxury magazine on page 66.