From the Agent:"Designed with striking geometric forms and elegant curves, this home is one-of-a-kind. Spanning 2,752 square feet, the custom residence—complete with three to four bedrooms, three full baths, one half bath, three living areas, a dedicated office space, and a rooftop terrace—offers a flexible and thoughtfully designed floor plan ideal for both entertaining and everyday living. Multiple heritage pecan trees provide a tall, shaded canopy. Set on a quiet, no-pass-through street in the sought-after Holly District, the property is bordered by two city-owned pocket parks and is just steps away from the Lady Bird Lake hike and bike trail. Walk to some of Austin’s best restaurants and bars and enjoy the perfect balance of city convenience and peaceful living."
Douglas fir ceilings contrast with the polished concrete floors.
Bustler is proud to continue as a media sponsor of the World Architecture Festival—returning this November with a milestone debut in the United States. Taking place at the Miami Beach Convention Center from November 12–14, WAF 2025 invites architects, …
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A collective parenting experiment challenges the traditional nuclear household, Galveston’s short-term rental boom goes bust, adobe home building makes a comeback as wildfires rage—and more.
Airbnb CEO Brian Chesky is spending hundreds of millions to turn the home rental giant into a lifestyle "everything app": you can still book a stay—but also fitness classes, food experiences, skincare appointments, and much more. (Wired)
After spending millions on a failed ballot initiative, tech-backed developer California Forever is now working with two small cities in Solano County to annex land, potentially moving forward with plans for a controversial megacity without voter approval. (Fast Company)
As wildfires consume homes across the American West, adobe home building is seeing something of a revival—and not just in the U.S. Here’s how devotees of the ancient, fireproof construction style from California to Germany are sharing their resources and knowledge. (Dwell)
Students at an adobe workshop in New Mexico work together to trowel mud across a brick before placing another one, which will be leveled to the height of the yellow string.
Photo by Barb Odell
When they realized they’d likely spend more time with their friends in adolescence and early adulthood than the rest of their lives combined, a couple reimagined how to raise kids—with their best friends. Here’s what their experiment says about collective parenting and how it challenges the limits of traditional nuclear households. (The Atlantic)
The short-term rental gold rush in Galveston, Texas, is crashing as vacation home owners—lured by pandemic-era Airbnb hype—rush to sell amid soaring insurance costs, rising taxes, and too few tourists to fill an excess of listings. (Newsweek)
Top image courtesy of Patrick T. Fallon/Getty Images
Ceramicist Amanda Rivera’s first interiors project turned out to be her family’s own home, a Spanish Mediterranean–style now brimming with her touch.
When Amanda Rivera first saw the 1930s Spanish Mediterranean–style house that would become her family home, she was awestruck. "My jaw was dropped the whole time we toured it," she recalls of her and husband Luke’s first visit to the home, in Austin’s Travis Heights neighborhood. "A lot of the original details were preserved, like beautiful vaulted ceilings, arched doorways, and latches on the doors."
In Austin, ceramicist Amanda Rivera helped redesign elements of her family’s 1930s Spanish Mediterranean–style home. She crafted many of the interior elements herself, including the kitchen’s tile backsplash.
Then when Amanda found out the home had an artist studio, she was sold. A ceramicist, Amanda leads Mother of God Ceramics with her artistic partner Diana Welch; she had been working out of a studio on the Austin’s east side for years. "The studio wasn’t part of the real estate listing, so it was a really nice surprise," says Amanda.
Amanda has a home studio, where she creates both artistic and functional ceramics including vessels, lamps, and side tables with her artistic partner, Diana Welch, as Mother of God Ceramics.
She and Luke lived in the house for a few years before deciding to renovate its cramped kitchen and a too-small bathroom upstairs. Working with local architect Murray Legge, Amanda added handcrafted details that complement what she loved about the home in the first place. "Amanda has a great design sense, which we noticed immediately," says Legge. "She has a really interesting approach in her ceramics—a play between the primitive and the refined. Those qualities were also reflected in the house itself."
Here, Amanda shares how she collaborated with Legge on a renovation brimming with her artistic eye.
With the renovation, Amanda and architect Murray Legge were inspired by the home’s original historic details, including the scalloped wood tracing the stairs and the color of the tilework around the fireplace.
Despite being in their 80s and 90s, many of the trailblazing architect’s clients never gave up on the dream.
As a part of our 25th-anniversary celebration, we’re republishing formative magazine stories from before our website launched. This story previously appeared in Dwell’s November 2006 issue.
In West Lafayette, Indiana, John Christian is preparing to give 83 kindergartners a tour of his house, in which triangles appear in one unusual detail after another. In Canton, Ohio, Jeanne Spielman Rubin is sewing new slipcovers for the banquette in her hexagonal living room. Christian and Rubin, both 89, have never met, but there’s a good chance they would hit it off. Both seem far younger than their years, both pride themselves on their resourcefulness, and both—not coincidentally—live in homes designed for them by Frank Lloyd Wright.
According to Lisa Dewey-Mattia of the Frank Lloyd Wright Building Conservancy in Chicago, there may be as many as two dozen original Wright clients still living in the houses they commissioned, most of them in the 1950s. Many of the owners are idealists whose houses give them a sense of purpose after most of their contemporaries have moved to retirement homes—or beyond.
The 1950s is remembered as a decade of standardization—the era in which industrial techniques and social conformity gave rise to millions of identical houses. Everyone, the official history of the period goes, wanted a square house on a square lot.
Yet in the 1950s Wright completed more than 90 houses, most of them for young couples who were determined to express their individuality. They weren’t wealthy, some had to scrape together every last nickel to raise their cantilevered roofs. Christian says it took Wright five years to deliver the plans for his house, and that was fine, because he and his wife didn’t have the money to build it. When they did break ground, they had to forgo some aspects of Wright’s design—including a copper fascia (which the couple, keeping their promise to Wright, finally erected in the 1990s).
One thing the clients had in common was that they wanted houses that fit how they lived—not how society thought they should live. In Tallahassee, Florida, Clifton Lewis wanted small bedrooms and a large communal space where her family could gather to discuss the important issues of the day. Christian, a professor of nuclear biology at Purdue University, requested a living room where he could entertain up to 50 students at a time. Wright gave him a kind of amphitheater, with stairs on both sides of the room, plus long banquettes and interlocking stools. In Pleasantville, New York, Roland and Ronny Reisley were attracted to the notion of living cooperatively at Usonia, a Wright-designed community where land was held in common and decisions were made jointly.
The owners, for the most part, aren’t rich now, despite inhabiting important works of art. Rubin says she has to choose between keeping her house in pristine condition and providing music lessons for her six great-grandchildren. And Lewis is still hoping to get the money together to build the terraces that Wright designed as an important element of her semicircular dwelling.
Photos by Pedro E. Guerrero (left), Fred A. Bernstein (center), and Zubin Shroff (right)
So what if Lewis is already close to 90? Wright was in his 8os when he designed the house. (He died at 91, in 1959, at the end of an astonishingly productive decade.)
Longevity seems to go with the territory, perhaps because carrying on Wright’s dreams—and their own—gives the owners a raison d’être.
"It’s been a miracle for us," says Bill Tracy, who, with his wife, Elizabeth, owns a Wright house near Seattle. The Tracys (she’s 93; he’s 83) say they still maintain the house themselves. Which is no surprise: In the 1950s, they spent a year pouring 10,000-plus bricks before construction could begin. "We were young and strong, and it would have cost us too much to have them made," Bill explains. Rubin, who does her own upholstering, says she believes in self-reliance. "I must have read Swiss Family Robinson at an impressionable age," she declares, referring to the story of resourceful castaways.
All of Wright’s clients brought idealism and energy to the task of figuring out where they would live. "As young marrieds, we talked about what we wanted out of life, and part of it was a home that reflected who we were," states Christian. Rubin recalls being told by a local architect that the right style for her house in Ohio was French provincial—and knowing there had to be something better. Then she saw an article in the Cleveland Plain Dealer about a Wright house in Oberlin, Ohio, and contacted the owners, who invited her to visit. The owners of the house in Oberlin "were gracious to me," says Rubin, "and I try to follow that tradition." She proved it a few weeks ago by giving a stranger, who arrived unannounced, a tour. It concluded with a discussion of Froebel blocks, the toys that Wright said influenced him as a child; Rubin has written the leading book on Froebel—and chided the visitor for not starting his children on the mind-expanding toys at birth. Like many Wright clients, she has become a Wright disciple.
Roland Reisley, a physicist, and his wife, Ronny, a psychologist, were New Yorkers looking for a place to start a family when they heard about the cooperative community being designed by Wright. After Wright laid out the town (with its unique round lots), other architects designed most of the houses. But the Reisleys went directly to the master. Roland and Ronny (who died this past spring) raised three children in the house, without changing a thing—their goal was to ensure that future generations could see the building just as Wright envisioned it. They’d also like people to see Wright as they envision him. "There’s a prevailing notion that Wright was a genius, but difficult to work with," Roland says. "We didn’t find that at all, and neither did the other Wright owners we’ve talked to."
Christian talks about his luck in getting Wright to design his house: He happened to call the architect’s studio, he says, when Wright himself was answering the phone. Over the next five years, Christian and his wife met with the architect at both Taliesins, in Wisconsin and Arizona. At one meeting Wright told them the house would be named Samara, and if they didn’t know what it meant, they should look it up.
Photos by Roland Reisley (left) and Zubin Shroff (right)
As it turns out, a samara is a winged seed pod. Wright used the abstracted form of the samara all over the house. When school groups come through, Christian shows them an actual samara, and then asks them to identify the places where Wright employed its shape, however subtly. Last year, Christian escorted some 2,500 people through the house. Says the retired professor, "I’m more of a teacher now than ever."
Preparing for the future, Christian has enlisted 30 volunteers to help him maintain the house, wrangle the school groups, and raise money for future operations. In the early 1990s, he formed a nonprofit foundation, which will eventually take over the ownership of Samara. "I wanted to start the foundation while I was still young, so I could make sure that it worked," he explains wryly.
Rubin has kept her house in good condition, but she could use the 30 volunteers. The house’s unusual details, including wooden soffits cut into geometric shapes, mean that repairs tend to be costly. "I’m hanging on by my teeth, and my teeth aren’t that good," she jokes. "But I couldn’t imagine living anyplace else." Two other Wright houses (whose owners hired Wright after seeing the Rubins’) still stand in the neighborhood, but their original owners are gone.
The Wright owner who faces the biggest hurdles may be Clifton Lewis, a freethinker who was born into one of Tallahassee’s most prominent families. In the 1940s, she met Wright at a world federalism conference—they were both believers in international government—and she persuaded him to design a house for her young family. Not long after, Lewis became one of the leaders of the Civil Rights Movement in Tallahassee. Her activism led some white customers to abandon her husband’s bank, plunging the once-wealthy family into genteel poverty. The Wright house, still not finished at the time, suffered along with them.
"My mother and father had a certain amount of money and ran out of money at the point when the interior was completed," says Ben, one of the Lewises’ four children.
These days, the masonry on the outside of the house is crumbling, and the roof is propped up with two-by-fours. Then, too, the lack of storage space has led to an almost comical solution: Lewis has strung up clothes lines across the double-height living room. The mess was reported in a story in a Florida newspaper, which Ben says was "heartbreaking" because his mother had sold a beloved beach house, her only other remaining asset, to raise the money for a roof repair.
"She’d like help with the house, but only with no strings attached," explains Ben. Lewis hopes that when the house is finished, she can move to a new building across the street, and turn the house into a place where people, inspired by great architecture, will talk about making the world a better place.
If that sounds far-fetched, so was the idea of hiring the great Wright in the first place. As her daughter Byrd Lewis Mashburn declares, "The house is what she lives for."
A $50 million rehabilitation of a development in Little Tokyo centers on its dated community space, now a convivial ryokan-inspired hub for residents.
History is repeating itself at the Little Tokyo Towers, a nonprofit affordable senior apartment building in Downtown Los Angeles. The project has its origins in the 1970s, when the Little Tokyo neighborhood endured significant redevelopment due to the expansion of the nearby Civic Center and local street widening projects. Meanwhile, many seniors, who were often first-generation immigrants, lived in decaying hotels slated for demolition. Because of the displacement underway and the poor quality of housing for seniors, a group of local charitable organizations—the Japanese American Citizens League, the Southern California Gardeners Federation, the Southern California Christian Federation, and the Los Angeles Buddhist Church Federation—banded together to create a place so their elders could remain in the neighborhood, and the development was born.
OWIU designed custom oak furniture for the new common spaces of Little Tokyo Towers to make them more welcoming for residents.
Photo by Justin Chung, courtesy OWIU
The towers are responding with a $50 million rehabilitation, including seismic retrofits, new elevators, energy-efficiency upgrades, a cool roof, renovations to the 301 apartments on-site, and a complete overhaul of the 7,000-square-foot ground-floor communal spaces. These renovations extend the cultural preservation work at the heart of the development. "It is very important to the board to make sure that this building is around in perpetuity," says Lisa Arakaki, a member of the Little Tokyo Towers board.
Initially, the building’s communal spaces—which include the cafeteria for Little Tokyo Senior Nutrition Services, a nonprofit that serves low-cost meals to seniors, a ping-pong room, a craft area, a music room, a library, and a computer room—weren’t part of the rehabilitation project. However, the board thought that the building should represent its history and context more visibly, find a way to coax residents out of their rooms, and make them feel more at home throughout the space. So the 7,000-square-foot communal spaces on the ground floor became an important focus.
The designers looked to Japanese ryokans for inspiration. New shoji screens divide the spaces.
Photo by Justin Chung, courtesy OWIU
To design them, Lisa enlisted the firm OWIU, whose offices are not far from the towers. After firm founders Joel Wong and Amanda Gunawan came to the building, they felt a neighborly sense of duty to take on the renovation. "We felt very drawn to helping them and a community aspect played a part," Wong says.
Senior living facilities usually skew institutional, and Wong and Gunawan wanted to extend warmth instead, looking to the community within the building, many of whom are Japanese American, and the surrounding neighborhood for inspiration. Keeping with the theme of hospitality, OWIU referenced Japanese ryokan—small, traditional inns found in the countryside—in its design for the space. With oak carpentry, shoji screens, and dark quartz counters, the rooms are almost spa-like.
A monument honoring the founding organizations of Little Tokyo Towers, seen at the
groundbreaking ceremony on February 2, 1975.
Photo by Toyo Miyatake, courtesy Little Tokyo Towers
For a couple returning to the city, Dunham Robinson designed a bespoke built-in that adds depth and dimension to their new apartment.
Welcome to How They Pulled It Off, where we take a close look at one particularly challenging aspect of a home design and get the nitty-gritty details about how it became a reality.
When the New Jersey suburbs have been your home for over two decades, a return to New York City can bring many things: excitement, anticipation, and—when it comes to navigating the city’s housing stock—nerves. Having left the city in the early 2000s to raise their three sons, a pair of now-empty nesters entrusted design and engineering studio Dunham Robinson to renovate their newly purchased 1,210-square-foot apartment on Manhattan’s Upper West Side.
Dunham Robinson transformed a couple's new apartment with a warm entry sequence defined by an oak storage piece in the foyer.
Photo by Nicholas Venezia
Rather than one pendant light, a smattering of little globe lights expand above the dining table. This way, the couple can have a small table-for-two or comfortably host a group without being focused under one centered pendant light.
Photo by Nicholas Venezia
Before they could truly call it home, the apartment needed a few key updates: smarter, additional storage; a refreshed aesthetic; and improved circulation. It had to feel like a family home with spaces to socialize and relax. "It’s kind of a semi-empty nest," says architect and founding partner Rachel Robinson, because the couple still wanted to host their three boys when they came home from college and elsewhere.
A wood shelf is the perfect spot to place a pair of keys.