In Massachusetts, a Rare Midcentury Home Just Listed for $1.9M

Architect Ira Rakatansky designed just six houses in the state, and this one comes with a butterfly roof, a bright-red front door, and a monolithic fireplace.

Architect Ira Rakatansky designed just six houses in Massachusetts, and this one comes with a butterfly roof, a bright-red front door, and a monolithic fireplace.

Location: 58 Hill Street, Lexington, Massachusetts 

Price: $1,850,000

Year Built: 1955

Architect: Ira Rakatansky

Footprint: 3,100 square feet (5 bedrooms, 3 baths)

Lot Size: 0.53 acres

From the Agent: "The house was commissioned by the Dunn family. Friends of theirs, the Starrs, also commissioned architect Ira Rakatansky, to build the house next door. These two are among only about a half dozen homes built in Massachusetts from Rakatansky designs. The Dunn House’s siting, orientation, and carefully placed windows provide privacy and a connection to nature. The formal living spaces on the upper main floor are organized around a sun-filled living room with a sculptural fireplace and two walls of glass. The adjacent dining room opens through a glass door to the screened porch. The primary bedroom suite includes a large bedroom and an en suite bathroom. As drawn in the original plans, the large space is currently divided with open shelves into a sitting/dressing area with a wall of closets and a sleeping area with a tall, east-facing window. Three lower-level bedrooms from the original Ira Rakatansky design are currently used as an office, a guest bedroom, and an extra room for music lessons."

Architect Ira Rakatansky designed just six houses in Massachusetts, and this one comes with a butterfly roof, a bright-red front door, and a monolithic fireplace.

The butterfly roof is a defining feature of the home. 

Photo by Megan Booth

Photo by Megan Booth

Photo by Megan Booth

See the full story on Dwell.com: In Massachusetts, a Rare Midcentury Home Just Listed for $1.9M
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This Tiny Cabin in Spain Is Pretty Impressive for a Student Project

The 215-square-foot structure’s shou sugi ban cladding gives it a shaggy look, and a CLT construction system makes it relatively easy to break down and move.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Lleida, Spain

Architect: Institut d’Arquitectura Avançada de Catalunya (IACC) / @iaacbcn

Footprint: 215 square feet

Builder: IAAC Valldaura Labs

Structural Engineer: Fustes Sebastia

Photographer: Adriá Goula / @adriagoulaphoto

From the Architect: "Forestone Cabin is an experimental wooden dwelling designed and built by the 2025 cohort of IAAC’s Master in Ecological Architecture and Advanced Construction, as part of the Bio for Piri initiative. Led by the Fundació Catalunya La Pedrera and funded by the Biodiversity Foundation with European Next Generation funds, this initiative promotes regenerative forestry and the sustainable use of local timber from Pyrenean forests, specifically in Alinyà (Lleida). Located at MónNatura Sort, in the Pyrenees, the cabin sits on a sloping site just a few steps from the existing hostel, offering temporary accommodation for two people, with a sleeping area, workspace, and bathroom.

 "The cabin’s sculptural form is inspired by the rocky terrain of the Pyrenees. Conceived as a block of stone that appears to have rolled down the mountain and come to rest naturally on the site, its faceted geometry is composed of inclined walls and a sloping roof that respond to programmatic needs, climatic conditions, and solar exposure. The geometry subtly adjusts ceiling heights and spatial proportions to accommodate different uses within a compact footprint, while openings frame views of the surrounding mountains and enable cross-ventilation. Operable wooden shutters ensure complete darkness at night, preventing light pollution and supporting the site’s astronomical activities.

"The exterior facade is made of pine boards with natural edges that have been charred following the yakisugi technique. These boards, cut to size and charred by the students themselves, not only increase the durability of the material but also symbolically evoke fire management and prevention—an essential aspect of regenerative forestry in the Pyrenees, the mountain range that separates Spain and France and whose name, Pyros, comes from Greek and means fire.

"Inside, the cabin becomes a fully integrated wooden space. Custom-made CLT elements—including the bed, built-in furniture, washbasin counter, and seating—were designed and fabricated by the students at Valldaura Labs, reinforcing a hands-on approach in which architecture, structure, and furniture form a single material system.

"The cycles of local materials extend beyond wood. During a nearby annual wool festival, students collaborated with local farmers to collect sheep’s wool, which was later washed, dried, and transformed into felt at Valldaura, with the support of Dutch artist Rian van Dijk. The resulting blankets, rugs, and pillowcases furnish the cabin, integrating local craftsmanship and agricultural by-products into the project. On the same visit, students brought back a stone from the surrounding landscape, which they manually carved using power tools to create a unique washbasin, further consolidating the project’s connection to its geographical and cultural context.

"From the outset, the project was conceived with an emphasis on replicability. Forestone was designed as a prototype demonstrating how small-scale architecture can be built using local timber, regional knowledge, and low-impact construction methods, while inhabiting forest landscapes without altering existing ecosystems. The use of modular CLT elements, dry-assembly techniques, and locally available materials allows the cabin to be adapted, replicated, or dismantled as needed, offering a model of sustainable forest habitation that aligns architectural production with long-term environmental stewardship."

Photo by Adriá Goula

Photo by Adriá Goula

Photo by Adriá Goula

See the full story on Dwell.com: This Tiny Cabin in Spain Is Pretty Impressive for a Student Project
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From the Archive: The 1960s Government Project That Helped Revive French Furniture Design

The Atelier de Recherche et de Création (ARC) fostered a virtual Who’s Who of France’s postwar style by giving designers like Pierre Paulin and Olivier Mourgue financial support paired with complete creative freedom.

Welcome to From the Archive, a look back at stories from Dwell’s past. This story previously appeared in the July/August 2006 issue.

It was 1964, and André Malraux, the French minister of culture, had an idea.

Jean Coural, director of the Mobilier National—the institution that conserves and commissions furniture for some 6o0 public buildings in France and abroad—had just led the nation to a grand prize at the Milan Triennale, where he’d presented strikingly modern design work. In that heady moment, Malraux proposed that Coural create a special workshop that would infuse the Mobilier National’s historic mission with new vitality by bringing in France’s most innovative designers and encouraging them to experiment freely. He also suggested that these creations be made available to furniture companies, which could market them commercially.

Such a workshop, Malraux believed, would reinvigorate both French style and the country’s design industry, which, according to Paris furniture dealer Stephane Danant, had been in the doldrums since the end of World War II. "Mostly, we were importing a lot of Scandinavian and American furniture," he says. "We didn’t have big companies like Herman Miller or Knoll, and there was no policy for export."

So Malraux’s proposal was smart—and not a little audacious. The Mobilier National was begun by Jean-Baptiste Colbert, Louis XIV’s finance minister, and in many ways is about preserving the past. It holds roughly 200,000 furnishings, all meticulously maintained in seven restoration studios and, although available for use by government officials, the exclusive property of the state. The notion of placing this august institution at the service of the avant-garde—and mass-producing the results—was, at the least, counterintuitive.

Yet Malraux was simply updating what Colbert had done, which was to bestow royal patronage on the state’s design houses, thereby increasing their business and establishing France at the center of international style. Coural embraced the idea, and the Atelier de Recherche et de Création (ARC)—the workshop of research and creation—was born.

Photos courtesy Sipa Press / Art Resource, NY / Bernard Annebicque / Corbis Sygma / Collection du Mobilier National

The result, in the words of designer Mattia Bonetti, "is an incredible legacy—not only for France, but for the world." The ARC has completed some 550 commissions across 42 years, furnishing presidential residences, embassies, and ministries, producing projects for lesser official settings, and using design for social benefit. It has encouraged the application of new forms, techniques, and materials—including polyurethane foam, carbon fiber, and industrial glass—to the art of furniture-making. And the atelier has given incomparable creative opportunities to over 1oo designers, architects, and artists—a virtual Who’s Who of postwar French style.

What’s more, the ARC does it the old-fashioned way, producing approximately 12 pieces a year, with a staff of nine craftspeople, in a workshop within the Mobilier National’s Paris compound. "It’s quite traditional," says Erwan Bouroullec, who with his brother Ronan designed furnishings for use at international summits. "Except that you don’t have to think about selling it."

That, of course, is a big exception—especially as it’s combined with unlimited financial support and complete creative carte blanche. "I know it sounds shocking, but the Mobilier National, the only thing they have to do is to spend money," Bonetti says. "You can do all the fantasies and research you want." Even institutional vanity plays its part. "These craftsmen are the best in France," Bouroullec observes. "They have the ego, if they make something new, to find the right way to do it, to spend a long time if they need to." This unique mix of unrestrained innovation and la belle ouvrage—old-fashioned excellence—has been deeply beneficial. "It’s morally and artistically rewarding," Bonetti says. "We are very lucky."

The designers have repaid the favor by shaping the look and life of France. A very partial project list includes the furnishing of embassies in Moscow, Washington, and Berlin and expositions in Osaka and Montreal; designs for the SNCF Corail train; a hospital bed, modular apartments for low-income housing, a prototype prison cell, vitrines for the Louvre, and, most famously, Pierre Paulin’s 1971 Élysée Palace apartment for Georges Pompidou, a trippy fantasia of rooms within rooms furnished with Paulin’s high-style take on the beanbag chair, which the president commissioned by saying, "There is no reason to allow the Italians a monopoly on innovation."

To be sure, the insouciant, revolutionary ARC of the ’6os—wherein designers like Paulin and Olivier Mourgue investigated new materials, production techniques, and modes of living—has passed. "That was the most creative period," Danant says. "It was about creating models for people and industry, not furnishing an embassy’s living room." Later, he believes, "the utopian goal of the atelier was lost"—a point reinforced by Bonetti when he says, of the elegant pieces he designed with Elizabeth Garouste in the ’8os, "Our furniture was meant to represent power." Nor did the industry connection really take hold. Some ARC designs, notably by Paulin, Mourgue, Étienne Fermigier, and Joseph-André Motte, were issued commercially, but—no surprise—they were too costly to produce in quantity. And, says Danant, "The group of people who wanted modern, expensive design was very limited."

But popular taste caught up—and that is due, in some measure, to the influence of the ARC oeuvre. "You can’t go directly from the Mobilier National to Ikea," observes New York furniture dealer Charles Fuller. "It takes two generations before these concepts become viable. But the seed is there, and ultimately new ideas and forms get incorporated into life." Indeed they do: Forty-two years after Milan, French design is once again preeminent, and its influence is comprehensive. Malraux—and Colbert—would be pleased.

Could an ARC happen here? It’s unlikely, given that the arts in the U.S. are largely supported by private money. As for official taste, well, Frank Gehry won’t be lining the Oval Office with titanium anytime soon. Still, one dreams of what an alliance between a home-grown atelier and American industry might produce. After all, observes Danant, "the Mobilier National helped two generations of designers move forward, to do things they wouldn’t have been able to do. And," he adds reasonably, "these are not utopian projects—you can sit on them!"

Photos courtesy Demisch Danant (by Mark Heitoff) / Collection du Mobilier National

The Clay Domes Anchoring This Japanese Home Are Basically a Life-Size Ceramics Project

The owner architects and their parents kiln-fired clay sourced on-site to form the domes, which they use as bedrooms and workspaces.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: Kanagawa, Japan

Architect: AATISMO / @aatismo

Footprint: 1,420 square feet

Builder: Yukari Kensetsu

Structural Engineer: Tectonica

Lighting Design: Daisuki Light

Table Production: Sasaki Research Institute

Plastering: Imajo Sakan

Photographer: Shinya Sato / @shinyasato_hello

From the Architect: "Haniyasu House is a two-family residence designed for our parents, who are ceramic artists, and for ourselves as architects. About 15 years ago, our parents moved to Kamakura in search of an environment where they could fully devote themselves to working with clay. The house is located at the edge of a valley called Yato, surrounded by steep cliffs into which horizontal cave tombs known as yagura are carved—an environment where the presence of the earth is strongly felt. In order to confront and respond to the way this land exists, we took earth, humanity ’s most ancient material, as our central theme and brought the architecture into being.

"As a place suited to all of us, whose lives revolve around making, we envisioned a primordial dwelling—one from a time when living and creating were not yet separated. We stripped away the walls and ceiling of the existing house to form a single large space connected to its surroundings, and added new rooms at its four corners, their forms evoking masses of earth emerging from the ground. Within the added volumes, each person works and sleeps in a cave-like, enclosed space, while gathering in a central, plaza-like area to converse and share meals. We imagined a way of life akin to that of a small settlement.

"The name Haniyasu House derives from a deity in Japanese mythology who governs earth, soil, and pottery; hani is an archaic Japanese word meaning clay. As if offered to this deity, the house seeks to unite with the land through earth as a medium, while transcending the frameworks of land, architecture, and pottery—becoming a vessel in which living and creating can remain inseparable.

"We crushed clay-rich soil from the land, fired it in my father’s kiln, applied glazes, and scorched it with burners—repeating numerous experiments in an attempt to use the colors of the earth itself as a material. In the final process, we bisque-fired discarded clay generated through my father’s making process, layered it over the soil from the site, and then poured a plaster mixed with iron and copper powder—byproducts from a metal workshop—over the exterior walls of the extensions in multiple layers, like glaze, allowing oxidation to produce color through rust."

Photo: Shinya Sato

Photo: Shinya Sato

Photo: Shinya Sato

See the full story on Dwell.com: The Clay Domes Anchoring This Japanese Home Are Basically a Life-Size Ceramics Project
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In Los Angeles, ADU Designers Are Doing "The Electric Slide"

Overhead power lines coursing through the city’s backyards are forcing some to shift plans around, sometimes with out-of-the-box solutions.

Like true love, the practice of architecture doesn’t always run smoothly. But Ben Warwas faced a sizable hitch when designing a backyard house, or ADU, in L.A.’s Mar Vista neighborhood: the power lines overhanging the rear lot line. Since the architectural designer’s clients were committed to converting their garage into a two-story ADU, placing it in proximity to the L.A. Department of Water & Power’s height restrictions, Warwas now had to find a way to work around the lines.

Though overhead power lines pose a challenge to architects and designers around the U.S., they’re especially problematic in L.A., where more ADUs are being built than anyplace else. Since grounding power lines can be prohibitively expensive, and require a coordinated effort between utility providers and neighbors, designers and builders of ADUs across the Southern California city are instead coming up with novel workarounds for lines coursing through backyard airspace.

Often it requires clever positioning of a unit or adjusting the massing in some way—something architect Melissa Shin calls "the electric slide." She encountered her own utility issue on an ADU currently under construction on L.A.’s West Side, a standalone, two-story unit designed to take advantage of California’s reduced rear and side yard setback requirements for new detached ADUs.

Shin Shin designed a 715-square-foot ADU in Westwood that responds architecturally to the overhead power lines. They emphasize the contour of the roof, and are framed by the entry stair. The blue fascia color was chosen to match the sky, creating an illusion of greater distance between the lines and the roof.

Shin Shin designed a 715-square-foot ADU in Westwood that responds architecturally to the overhead power lines. The roof is contoured by the lines, and a stair frames them. The blue fascia color was chosen to match the sky, creating an illusion of greater distance between the lines and the roof.

Photo: Ye Rin Mok

Since there was a power pole at the rear of the property, Shin, the principal at Shin Shin, had to apply for an encroachment permit with the DWP’s Real Estate Services division. After four months she received notice the application had been rejected. "Our first submission was for an ADU set as far back as we could go, but they came back and told us we either had to move it or reduce the height," she says. "At that point, the building was already approved through plan check, so to go back and shave off five feet, you’re basically starting over."

Instead, she just moved it. Since the pole sat on the property itself, Shin ended up with a nine foot, six inch overall setback. "So even though the minimum allowable ADU setback is four feet, which is significantly less than any other type of construction, we couldn’t take advantage of it."

Architect Hunter Knight, founder and principal of Weather Projects, remembers a far simpler process before the current ADU building boom. "Four or five years ago, a DWP clearance for building near electrical lines wasn’t required. But with ADUs being so close to lot lines, people would start construction, and they’d call DWP and say they needed a meter spot [where the utility company verifies where you can install your new or upgraded electric service panel]. And DWP might come out and say, ‘Your building’s too close to the power lines. It’s a safety issue.’ And you’d say, ‘Whoops, we didn’t know.’ And they’d say, ‘You were supposed to contact us.’ And we’d say, ‘We were? We went through the whole Building & Safety plan check—we thought we were good.’ So they made it a clearance in Building & Safety."

Though there are only two ways to bring power from utility infrastructure to an ADU—overhead or underground—homeowners connecting power to an ADU via an electric service drop from the pole still have to underground the line between the unit and the primary residence. But Knight warns that if the overhead connection for the drop is too far from the transformer, the solution is costly, in terms of both money and time. "And if the overhead line is routed over a habitable area, you have to pay for DWP to engineer that, and you pay for the underground routing from the pole," he says. "That’s where things get really expensive. That almost got triggered for an ADU I designed in Cypress Park, but in the end, the DWP decided they didn’t need to underground the line after all."

An ADU by architect Hunter Knight sits adjacent to high-voltage lines in L.A.'s Cypress Park neighborhood. The L.A. Department of Water & Power nearly required him to pay to bury the line from the pole, but in the end he was able to get a secure electrical drop to the unit. "They'll tell you to keep construction away from power poles, but they don’t talk about soft walls or retaining walls,

An ADU by architect Hunter Knight sits adjacent to high-voltage lines in L.A.’s Cypress Park neighborhood. The L.A. Department of Water & Power nearly required him to pay to bury the line from the pole, but in the end he was able to get a secure electrical drop to the unit. "They’ll tell you to keep construction away from power poles, but they don’t talk about soft walls or retaining walls," he says. "And if you already have these things planned and they’re an integral part of your design, you either have to modify your design or move their elements. Moving a power pole is a lot of money."

Photo: Emanuel Hahn

To avoid having to reduce his clients' ADU in Mar Vista to one story to avoid its proximity to the power lines behind the property, architectural designer Ben Warwas reworked the plan by creating a large deck at the rear and a deep overhang above the front door. "In the end, all these potential problems are opportunities for more interesting design,

To avoid having to reduce his clients’ ADU in Mar Vista to one story to avoid its proximity to the power lines behind the property, architectural designer Ben Warwas reworked the plan by creating a large deck at the rear and a deep overhang above the front door. "In the end, all these potential problems are opportunities for more interesting design," he says.

Photo: Taiyo Watanabe

See the full story on Dwell.com: In Los Angeles, ADU Designers Are Doing "The Electric Slide"
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It Took a Major Tune-Up to Turn Two Garages Into a £2.3M London Home

Arya Douge overhauled the Notting Hill property with a sculptural staircase, crisp interiors, and a pair of bedroom suites.

Arya Douge overhauled two Notting Hill garages with a sculptural staircase, crisp interiors, and a pair of bedroom suites.

Location: Colville Mews, Notting Hill, London, United Kingdom

Price: £2,250,000 (approximately $2,978,831 USD)

Year Built: Mid-1800s

Renovation Date: 2026

Renovation Architect: Arya Douge

Footprint: 1,327 square feet (2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths)

From the Agent: "A pair of garages have been entirely reimagined by architects Arya Douge, who opened up the footprint to create an extraordinary sense of volume. Inside, the house is organized around a dramatic double-height living volume, with a sculptural central staircase rising through the space and linking the two levels. Bedrooms sit more quietly to the rear, with fluted internal glazing allowing borrowed light from the main living volume while maintaining privacy. The palette is calm and considered: earthy Paint & Paper Library tones paired with darker joinery and antique bronze metalwork for depth. Functionality is also seamlessly integrated. Custom storage, a plant room, and a downstairs cloakroom ensure the aesthetic remains uncluttered."

The street facing facade's multi-paned windows face south, drawing in ample natural light light.

The street-facing multipaned windows are oriented south, drawing in ample natural light. 

Photo courtesy of Domus Nova

Photo courtesy of Domus Nova

Far from its original state, the site would have originally been a coachhouse and stables for the properties at Colville Terrace to the north.

The site originally held a coachhouse and stables for the properties at Colville Terrace to the north.

Photo courtesy of Domus Nova

See the full story on Dwell.com: It Took a Major Tune-Up to Turn Two Garages Into a £2.3M London Home
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You Enter This Brazil Retreat Through Its Mountain Bike Workshop

An empty nester couple cared less about having space to host than a home that would support their hobbies.

Houses We Love: Every day we feature a remarkable space submitted by our community of architects, designers, builders, and homeowners. Have one to share? Post it here.

Project Details:

Location: São Paulo, Brazil

Architect: Estúdio HAA! / @estudiohaarquitetura

Footprint: 11,636 square feet

Structural Engineer: Miqueletto Engenharia

Landscape Design: Jair Pinheiro Paisagismo

Lighting Design: LabLuz

Photographer: Pedro Kok / @kokpedro

From the Architect: "This project began with long conversations with the clients: a middle-aged couple whose children have grown and left home. They weren’t looking for a typical countryside house designed to host groups of guests. Instead, they asked for a true refuge—a place designed around their own habits, rituals, and pleasures. Not a house built for special occasions, but a home that supports the everyday moments that matter most to them.

"Weekends at Refúgio Mirzé start early with mountain bike rides through the mountainous region, one of the reasons the couple chose this particular plot of land. Afternoons are spent opening a cold beer, cooking a late lunch, and simply being present: watching the sunset from the porch, listening to the sounds of the forest, reading a book, or falling asleep to the sounds of the Atlantic rainforest.

"The first space one encounters in the house is not a traditional living room, but a fully equipped bike workshop. Every square foot of this home was intentionally designed for daily use, with no excess and no underutilized rooms. We carefully studied the psychological scale of comfort for the couple, ensuring the home would never feel empty, nor cramped, but always intimate and just right.

"The landscape itself—lush, vibrant, and ever-changing—is the home’s most powerful element. On one side, tall Atlantic forest trees filter dappled light into the interior; on the other, a dense and humid forest envelops the house in its natural sounds.

"The facade features a ventilated system made of black slate panels and ebonized reforested wood, which, combined with double-insulated glazing, provides thermal stability and ensures indoor comfort throughout the seasons."

Photo: Pedro Kok

Photo: Pedro Kok

Photo: Pedro Kok

See the full story on Dwell.com: You Enter This Brazil Retreat Through Its Mountain Bike Workshop