Budget Breakdown: It’s Hard to Tell This South Phoenix Home Was Once a Convenience Store

The shelves were still fully stocked when Amy Williams purchased the property and turned it into a refined, loft-like home for $450K.

They used to be places where you might grab a Coke or a quart of milk. But in some residential pockets of North America, corner stores that have sat vacant are turning out to be prime real estate not for proprietors but for homeowners disillusioned by prohibitively expensive housing markets. This story and two others—one in Victoria, B.C., and another in the San Francisco Bay Area—share how clever owners applied pluck and perseverance to turn disused mom-and-pops into dream homes that, dollar for dollar, beat out anything they could have found doomscrolling on Zillow.

Where most people saw a closed, sagging corner store in a Central Phoenix neighborhood, interior designer Amy Williams saw a diamond in the rough—old brick walls, exposed ceiling trusses, and the kind of layered history the HGTV crowd could only dream of. "I fell in love with the idea of turning it into my home," says Amy.

Designer Amy Williams transformed a former convenience store in Central Phoenix into a place for her, partner Elias Proce, and dog Sumo to call home, with details like floating shoji-screen cabinets that double as the ideal shelf for the couple’s collection of pottery.

Designer Amy Williams transformed a former convenience store in Central Phoenix into a place for her, partner Elias Proce, and dog Sumo to call home, with details like floating shoji-screen cabinets that double as the ideal shelf for the couple’s collection of pottery.

Photos (left to right): Don Newlen; Jesse Rieser

The 1925 building was originally The Palmdale market and was run by a succession of owners over the years. It had been closed for about six months when Amy purchased it, but everything was eerily intact, including refrigerators full of light beer and soft drinks and shelves lined with boxes of candy bars and snacks. A two-bedroom apartment that still had tenants sat behind the store, with a locked door connecting them.

The Bok teak dining set from Ethnicraft is paired with vintage Gastone Rinaldi steel-and-suede chairs.

Bok dining chairs in teak are paired with vintage ones by Gastone Rinaldi in steel and suede.

Photo: Jesse Rieser

The antique coat hooks were sourced from Etsy. A pottery collection comprised of Pre-Columbian and Kenyan pieces sits atop the shoji screen cabinets. The vintage desk lamp is by Veneta Lumi.

Antique coat hooks were sourced from Etsy. The vintage desk lamp is by Veneta Lumi.

Photo: Jesse Rieser

See the full story on Dwell.com: Budget Breakdown: It’s Hard to Tell This South Phoenix Home Was Once a Convenience Store
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Redwood Walls Meet Terrazzo Floors in This $575K Wisconsin Midcentury

The split-level 1954 home still has many of its original finishes—plus an updated kitchen, bathroom, and powder room.

The split-level 1954 home still has many of its original finishes—plus an updated kitchen, bathroom, and powder room.

Location: 4338 Upland Drive, Madison, Wisconsin

Price: $575,000

Year Built: 1954

Renovation Date: 2026

Renovation Designer: Anthony Fenning, Fenning Construction

Footprint: 1,735 square feet (3 bedrooms, 1.5 baths)

Lot Size: 0.22 Acres

From the Agent: "4338 Upland Drive is a period-correct, midcentury-modern home in Madison’s Sunset Village. Clerestory bands  catch the light and drag it across original redwood walls. The house has three bedrooms, 1.5 baths, and a 1,700-square-foot, split-level plan that feels exactly as considered as it was when it was built. The home has been thoughtfully updated—new hardwood floors, a redesigned powder room, a refreshed kitchen with period-appropriate proportions—without compromising what makes it significant. It’s nestled on a wooded lot just blocks from Hilldale, and minutes from UW and University Hospital. Some homes are renovated; this one was restored."

The terrazzo flooring at the home’s entry is original.

The terrazzo flooring at the home’s entry is original.

Photo by Shanna Wolf of S. Photography

Photo by Shanna Wolf of S. Photography

With a lofted second floor, the floor-to-ceiling windows in the living room are double height.

The double-height living room has west- and south-facing floor-to-ceiling windows.

Photo by Shanna Wolf of S. Photography

See the full story on Dwell.com: Redwood Walls Meet Terrazzo Floors in This $575K Wisconsin Midcentury
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Wake Up to Quintessential Central Park Views in This $4.3M Co-op

The building was designed by Sylvan Bien in 1950.

860 Fifth Avenue, 6K in New York, New York, is currently listed at $4,300,000 by Carol Staab at Sotheby’s International Realty - East Side Manhattan Brokerage.

Designed by Sylvan Bien in 1950, 860 Fifth Avenue is a premier white-glove cooperative with full-time doorman, elevator operators, porter, live-in resident manager, fitness room, bike room, central laundry, and an on-site garage with discounted shareholder rates.

Expansive Central Park views unfolds with an open public-room layout ideal for modern entertaining with classic Fifth Avenue scale. A proper foyer opens into a grand L-shaped living room that anchors the residence, flowing seamlessly into both the formal dining room and entrance foyer.

Western exposures deliver beautiful afternoon light over Central Park, while eastern exposures bring bright morning light, creating a luminous home from sunrise through late day. The home’s two-bedroom-wing layout creates exceptional privacy between the primary suite and guest accommodations—a configuration that is rare and is especially prized in Fifth Avenue co-ops. 

The windowed kitchen is designed for daily living and entertaining, featuring white lacquer cabinetry, granite countertops, a Miele cooktop and wall oven, a Sub-Zero refrigerator, a Miele microwave, two wine refrigerators, and a butler’s pantry. A breakfast area is marked by  warm terracotta flooring. Off the kitchen is separate laundry room with a full washer, dryer, and sink. A service entrance in the kitchen adds great convenience. 

The primary suite occupies its own private wing with two exposures: direct Central Park views and northward vistas up Fifth Avenue. The suite is anchored by a three-way mirrored dressing area and generously sized fitted walk-in closet, with four additional closet and a marble bath with a double vanity, soaking tub, and separate glass-enclosed shower. 

The secondary wing includes two spacious bedrooms, each with its own en suite marble bath. One guest room faces Central Park, the other enjoys bright morning light from the east and built-ins. 

For a truly turkey move-in, the curated furnishings may be purchased separately. Pets (subject to board approval), pied-à-terre ownership, co-purchasing, and secondary residence use is permitted. 

Listing Details  

Bedrooms: 3  

Baths: 3 full  

Year Built: 1949 

Square Feet: 2,900

Courtesy of Sotheby's International Realty - East Side Manhattan Brokerage

Courtesy of Sotheby's International Realty - East Side Manhattan Brokerage

Courtesy of Sotheby's International Realty - East Side Manhattan Brokerage

See the full story on Dwell.com: Wake Up to Quintessential Central Park Views in This $4.3M Co-op
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At Least 45 Custom Pieces Finish This Polish Apartment Building Turned Home

Wiercinski-Studio fashioned everything from an oak dining table to countertops and sinks made from locally sourced Strzegom granite.

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: Poznan, Poland

Architect: Wiercinski-Studio / @wiercinskistudio

Footprint: 3,200 square feet

Photographer: Oni Studio / @onistories

From the Architect: "Located in Poznań’s historic Grunwald district, an area renowned for its prewar villa architecture, P81 House is a meticulous restoration of a 1932 residence. What began as an interior commission evolved into a holistic transformation encompassing the building’s facade, custom landscaping, and furniture design. The defining moment of the renovation occurred when the owners stripped away layers of old plaster to reveal the original brickwork. This raw and honest aesthetic set the tone for the entire project, allowing the villa to be restored with profound respect for its historic fabric through the preservation of cornices, sills, and the installation of new windows that replicate the original classical divisions.

"The most significant architectural intervention is found at the garden entrance, where the staircase volume was reimagined using corrugated aluminum sheeting. This introduces a contemporary and reflective texture to the masonry mass, creating an unexpected skin that reacts dynamically to the weather by mirroring the changing colors of the surroundings. The garden itself was conceived as a wild sanctuary featuring native perennials and meadows. It is punctuated by custom designed galvanized steel elements including lanterns, a graphic square-patterned gate, and rainwater collection tanks.

"The interior philosophy was guided by the owners’ desire to preserve the building’s soul while integrating local craftsmanship. The ground floor was opened up by removing a central wall and replacing it with a substantial exposed steel beam. The studio designed a neon installation that stitches the gap where the wall once stood, accompanied by a custom plant island. To maintain a functional flow, a secondary kitchen was tucked into the former pantry, allowing the main open-plan area to remain a clean and social hub.

"The project features 45 custom pieces designed by Adam Wierciński, rooted in the use of raw steel, solid oak, and reinforced glass. A massive oak dining table features legs echoing the hourglass shape of the home’s restored staircase balusters, while a circular steel kitchen island is softened by a suspended linen fabric that subtly defines the zone. While the market offers countless imported stones, the studio opted for local Strzegom granite. This choice, typically not associated with domestic luxury, was used for countertops, custom washbasins, and entire bathroom surfaces to celebrate regional Polish resources.

"The traces of the home’s history remain visible throughout as original wooden floors and door frames were kept, and concrete infills in the flooring mark where old walls once stood, revealing the building’s previous life as a multi-apartment villa."

Photo by Oni Studio

Photo by Oni Studio

Photo by Oni Studio

See the full story on Dwell.com: At Least 45 Custom Pieces Finish This Polish Apartment Building Turned Home

For $1.6M, You Can Score a Loft in a San Diego Soap Factory

Original brickwork, tall banks of windows, and big wooden beams can be found throughout the sunny flat.

Original brickwork, tall banks of windows, and big wooden beams can be found throughout this sunny flat in San Diego’s Citrus / Pacific Soap Factory building.

Location: 500 West Harbor, Residence 1601, San Diego, California

Price: $1,600,000

Year Built: 1921

Architect: William Wheeler

Renovation Date: 1993

Renovation Architect: Milford Wayne Donaldson

Footprint: 1,492 square feet (2 bedrooms, 2 baths)

From the Agent: "Built in 1921, the Citrus / Pacific Soap Factory Building was designed by local San Diego architect William Wheeler. In 1993, architect Milford Wayne Donaldson completed CityFront Terrace, which integrated a contemporary brick condominium building with the historic factory, making it one of the largest brick buildings on the West Coast. Loft residence 1601 is in the original, historically designated Soap Factory building, and is part of the Mills Act. The primary bedroom offers a spacious walk-in closet and a large bathroom with a separate bath and shower. This is an extremely rare offering in Downtown San Diego: a chance to live in a historic building full of character and charm, while having direct access to modern amenities and a true urban lifestyle."

Beneath the home's vaulted ceilings, are the original factory's wood beams and brick accents.

The building’s original wood beams and brick walls are exposed throughout the interior.

Photo by Ollie Paterson

Photo by Ollie Paterson

Photo by Ollie Paterson

See the full story on Dwell.com: For $1.6M, You Can Score a Loft in a San Diego Soap Factory
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These Urban Planning Influencers Want to Help You Understand Cities

They’ve grown social media followings with their "infotainment"-style posts breaking down topics related to the built environment. "To me," one creator says, "that’s inherently lifestyle content."

Welcome to #TradesTok, an interview series where design-related content creators share what goes into building their online and IRL businesses.

"This shit is dope as fuck," Vignesh Swaminathan says to his front-facing camera from a nondescript office in his work attire (gray suit jacket, tie, suspenders) in a TikTok clip that amassed more than 171,000 likes. The "dope-as-fuck shit" he’s describing is the process of pipe relining, a trenchless method used to repair damaged pipes without excavation. "Next time you need to lay down the pipe," he says, "try to make sure you line up your pipe, so you don’t tear up that asphalt."

The 35-year-old, San Jose–based urban planner at engineering, planning, and design consulting firm Kimley-Horn has been posting irreverent TikToks like this under the handle @MrBarricade since 2020, explaining everything from the creation of bike-friendly on-street trails to how the Black Panthers advocated for more crosswalks in Oakland. His unconventional approach to demystifying urban planning topics has helped him gain 1.6 million followers (at the time of writing). He frequently weaves together platform staples like choreography (while showing off a new bike lane), viral music (connecting urban drainage to Swedish hip-hop group Drain Gang), and stitching alongside explainers about "straight fire" pedestrian efforts and critiques of harmful bike infrastructure. "No one was really talking about roadway infrastructure projects online when I started," Swaminathan says. "Now people are interested in it. The newer generation is very interested in their built environment and they want to be more involved."

Swaminathan is one of many content creators from a corner of social media (sometimes called CitiesTok or Urbanism TikTok) who post "infotainment"-style videos about topics related to housing, transportation, and city planning that help people better understand how the built environments around them work. Hashtags like #urbanism (1.3 million entries on Instagram) and #urbandesign (22,900 on TikTok) are populated with posts from urban planning professionals and enthusiasts alike. The domain is as diverse as cities themselves: Some creators like psychologist and urbanist @dr.tpanova and safe-streets advocate @pedestriandignity post informational clips connecting things like crosswalks and shaded spaces with safety and autonomy, while others like @traingirlsummer dedicate their feeds to fanning out over infrastructure (in her case, mass transit). The creators’ content varies but have overlapping themes ranging from walkability to the importance of third places.

Detroit-based transportation planner Brittany Simmons thinks that Urbanism TikTok’s expanding reach is fostering a digital YIMBYism that makes people want to learn more about the discipline. Simmons is known for her "day in the life of an urban planner" videos that let viewers peek into what a career in this domain actually looks like. She’s been posting under @signedbritt on TikTok since 2021, since expanding to Instagram and Substack. "I try to make urban planning not only accessible but also interesting, to help people see the connections between a very technical field to their everyday lives," says the 29-year-old, whose Instagram bio reads "a professional city girl (literally)." Her lifestyle-esque videos breaking down what she does as an urban planner are in good company in this niche of TikTok. "Largely it’s people’s curiosity of something that feels familiar, because everyone knows what it is, they just might not know that it’s called urban planning," she says.

This is part of Urbanism TikTok’s success. "If you explain ‘third place’ to someone who lives in Italy, they might be like, ‘Yes, I know it…it’s down the street,’" says 31-year-old landscape architect Paul Stout, known to his hundreds of thousands of TikTok followers as @TalkingCities. "For Americans, it’s a bit different. They’re like, ‘Oh, I don’t have that.’ That makes it a bit more sticky on social media." Ideally for many of these creators, their urban planning content will pique viewers’ interests enough to attend local city planning or engage in material change beyond the comments section. "I believe community and coalition-building wins," says Jon Jon Wesolowski, aka "The Happy Urbanist," a content creator and public speaker with almost half a million followers across TikTok, Instagram, and Substack. (The Chattanooga-based 37-year-old, who has no formal training in urban planning, describes himself as an armchair urbanist similar to Jane Jacobs or William Holly Whyte.)

We talked to Swaminathan, Simmons, Stout, and Wesolowski about how they became urban planning influencers and what keeps them going. Our conversations have been edited and condensed for clarity. 

Brittany Simmons

@signedbritt, 82.9K followers on TikTok and 67.4K followers on Instagram

On starting her TikTok account

I was living in New York, I just moved there, and I got a TikTok. My For You Page was a bunch of people exploring their city, what they like to do, where they like to go…helping me become better acquainted with where I was living. When I started creating, I was like, Clearly this is what this platform is for: sharing your favorite restaurants and coffee shops. One day, I posted about my day which, naturally, was spent at work. That did significantly better than my [post about a] little coffee shop. People asked questions like, "What is this?" and "How did you end up in that?" and it just kind of snowballed from there.

On her profession as social media content

When I describe to people what urban planning is, I describe it as the relationship people have with their environment. To me, that’s inherently lifestyle content. I mostly am doing what I do for my job and my life: I go to work…I also come home and post about what I did at work, the things that I’m learning. I post about the public meetings I’m preparing for and I’ll talk about the analyses I’m working on. But it’s rarely ever, "Here’s the problem. Let me explain and define the problem. Here’s the solution I propose."

In my nine-to-five, so much of it is about getting people interested in the problem enough to want to be a part of the solution. Historically, planning has gone wrong when it has cut the public off from decision-making processes. If I can get them to stay for this post for 10 seconds, I can probably get them to care. These are things people care about, like housing and transit. They impact our lives every day. If you make it a little interesting and put it in front of them, they’ll watch.

My clients are municipalities, like the City of Detroit. They’re not looking to hire someone based on social media presence. But a number of think tanks and nonprofits who dabble in the planning and community development space have reached out to me to make stuff for them.

On her content-creation process

Some videos I feel really excited about and will record myself talking, and 10 minutes later, there’s a video on the internet. That’s not the norm for me. There’s easy, which is what I described, and medium—which is most of my stuff: "Here’s a clip from my day and I’m going to talk to you about something related." And then there’s the other side, where it takes a lot of research and time and editing and scripting. Those are more neighborhood history–type videos. It depends on what I have the capacity for. 

On her comments section

It’s such a mix of "My bus stop sucks. I didn’t know I could fix this," or "I’ve never heard of this. I didn’t know it was a career," or "I’m gonna transition from being a teacher to urban planning. How do I do that?" It’s a wide spectrum. Maybe they don’t want to do it for work but they want to volunteer—what can I do in my neighborhood that my neighbors will recognize and feel the differences of? It’s generally pretty positive.

On having an online following

I get recognized a lot. The people I’ve met in person appreciate my content, which is always nice. I’ve been recognized out of town too, in New Orleans, in L.A., in New York. In Detroit in general, there’s a lot of advocacy around public transit in particular. There’s a genuine interest around urban planning topics, inherently. 

Jon Jon Wesolowski

@jonjon.jpeg, 299.4K followers on TikTok and 136K followers on Instagram

On starting his TikTok account

My neurodivergent, ADHD brain felt the TikTok algorithm right away: an aesthetic feed on Instagram wasn’t for me and the patience of longform video on YouTube wasn’t [either]. When I got introduced to TikTok, it didn’t take long before I started putting videos out there. At first, it was for the tech company I worked for. They didn’t want to do TikTok. I was like, "I’m going to show that content about your software could do well here." I gained a bit of a following, they decided to create their own TikTok. Since I wasn’t doing that anymore, I wanted to talk about cities. 

Architecture and city planning  are things that I’ve been obsessed with for most of my life. I thought I was going to be an architect in high school and in college I was introduced to the idea of urban design and city planning. Even though life didn’t go that way, I wanted to see if I could find other people who are interested in talking about this online.

On gaining a following

When I moved back to Tennessee [in 2020], I was looking at my city through fresh eyes and began to realize how much of the built environment is felt but not articulated. That’s my main goal: How can I explain things that I know people are feeling and see if they can relate to them? Now, a few years later, I have more than 298,000 followers on TikTok. I had no idea that would happen. I want the F-250-driving soccer mom to join the conversation and understand the value of bike lanes, even if she would never use [one]. That’s the approach I’m taking. I chose the branding "The Happy Urbanist" to keep myself from getting too negative. I still talk about negative aspects, but the overarching feeling I wanted to give is one of optimism and positivity about what the built environment can do. 

On his most viral video

My most viral post is [of me] walking to a community pool in my neighborhood. It’s a walkable distance but we rarely walk there. I thought, I’m going to walk there, record all the things I encounter, and see how it goes. I filmed it as I went and posted it and it got 10 million views. It was picked up by BuzzFeed. It was the most affirming thing. I’ve had a couple of videos get one or two million views. I got one with five million views on Instagram, but this was by far the largest and a reminder that people are feeling these feelings even if they can’t put words to them. 

On his content being inherently political

One hundred percent, it’s political. I live in a deeply red state and the complexities of my city are a little maroon, a little bit purple, but the language of left coast progressives isn’t going to move the needle here. When I talk about housing, I don’t use a lot of YIMBY language: I use a lot more property rights language. I think the built environment is the hardware of culture: if community is a software, you can’t get an update unless you have the right hardware. If you get this right…resistance, mutual aid, all of that is facilitated by what is happening in the built world. 

On the next breakout idea in urban planning

Incremental development, the idea that we should empower people to develop on the smallest possible scale in communities. The obstacles to incremental development go across party lines. If you wanted to turn your house into a duplex, there’s this liberty, property rights argument, and then there’s this progressive, affordable housing right that can also be argued. Incremental developers exist right now as the pirates of the world of architecture: they’re building things that skirt the lines of legality, not in a safety way, but in the arbitrary, "You’re not allowed to have this (even though there’s a historical example across the street from you)" kind of way. All my favorite people are getting in a little bit of trouble and breaking stereotypes. I hope it catches on.

On how he finds ideas for content

My videos come from shower arguments, when you lose an argument and go in the shower and continue the argument until you win. Those are my posts. I’m essentially getting an idea that someone misunderstood online or in a conversation that didn’t go well and I’m working it out in my head until it goes well. I’m always looking for the perfect analogy and, once it hits me, it’s almost like giving birth to an idea. When we talk about the actual video itself, I like to have a concept I can either bring everyone on board with or that everyone understands, which I then connect to a new idea or a new way of seeing the world.

Vignesh Swaminathan

@MrBarricade, 1.6M followers on TikTok and 30.2K on Instagram

On starting his TikTok

I never really used social media before. I downloaded TikTok out of interest in what was on the app. I was experimenting with how the algorithm worked, using different sounds and following trends. About three months in, in maybe February 2021, I grew a following a little bit, which I didn’t really realize was real. I thought, Let me start posting about my work and what I’m doing. I was running a business, doing roadway projects that I felt were important for people to learn about. A lot of my work is teaching the community. I host community outreach meetings. We get a very small turnout compared to the amount of people who were viewing my videos online. I felt that I could combine both and share what I’m doing as a great way to access people where they’re at.

On his handle

It was a name given to me at my first engineer job out of school. I was hired by the City of San Jose to manage downtown street events and festivals. If there’s a big concert at the convention center, how do we shut down the streets to get more left turns in or out? If there’s a marathon, how do we shut down the streets? I worked a lot of traffic control and grew that position to where I ran that whole operation. People started calling me Mr. Barricade because, not only do I have a kind of a complicated name, but I was the guy that you needed for a block party or when the president came to town. I was the person who did that coordination. When I got into social media, it kind of made sense. It was a name that stuck. 

On balancing content creation and his full-time work

I work for a large company now, so my approach is a little different. When I was on my own, I could talk maybe a bit more ill about a certain city’s projects or another consultant’s projects, that that’s not the way I would do it and I would do it this way. I’d have council members and city staff reach out to me and say, "You made a video about this thing. How can we get you to take it down and work with us to make a better project?" I was able to get a lot of traction and make a lot of change. Now, I have to be a bit more cautious. At a larger firm, I focus on larger projects that I can talk about and want to put out there…about toll roads and how congestion pricing works. I want to talk about transit in the Bay Area. I think there’s a lot more I can talk about, but it’s definitely going to be a little more focused on transportation and the roadway.

On reactions to his content

One time I spoke on a panel and this lady called me out for using profanity. It was a bit of a shock, but the way I answered was that I’m reaching out to a larger audience who don’t typically come to these meetings. The people that typically come are retired or are able to take time to come. We’re trying to reach a younger, different type of audience, bringing these people into this conversation. I’ve interviewed rappers about their neighborhoods where they have lyrics about how horrible their road is and how it’s flooded. These are perspectives that you wouldn’t hear if you have the regular community outreach we typically do. I see a lot of value in how I communicate things and I think that’s where we’re headed as a society: Going to people where they’re at versus saying, "Hey, the meeting was over there. You didn’t see it."

Paul Stout

@TalkingCities on TikTok and @paulwillstout on Instagram (322.5K and 174K followers respectively)

On starting his TikTok

It was the pandemic. I had just finished my undergrad and I was applying to grad school for a master's degree in urban planning. When you apply to programs like that, they have a whole list of books you need to read at first. I was basically locked in my room, reading books all day, and I thought, "This is just the most fascinating stuff I’ve ever read." I decided to try to put some online and it basically spiraled from there.

Learning a lot of this stuff gave words to things I had experienced. My undergrad degree was actually in history, but I got super interested in urban planning when I did a study abroad program in Salzburg, Austria. It was my first time living in a city where I could bike and walk everywhere. Growing up in Los Angeles, I was in a relatively walkable part, but you’re still functionally driving. The ability to ride my bike places, to go see friends, I was just enthralled. Reading those books put language to the experience I’d had. I figured this was an experience many other people have probably had as well.

On gaining a following

I have two followings: One began from a critique of suburbanization in 2021. Then I think I gained 80,000 [followers] in the past three weeks because I started making content again after a hiatus while I was in grad school. I also made an Instagram page which went from zero to 93,000 in 10 days. It speaks to the desire for this information.  

On his most viral post

In my early era, I had one about Lancaster Boulevard and a revitalization project in California where they took what people in the industry would call a "stroad"—a mash-up between a street and a road—and turned it into something almost rambla-style. It’s actually spectacular. It speaks to the thing that there are a lot of young people out there broadly dissatisfied with the status quo of American cities and seeing transformations is super refreshing. Recently, the biggest one was [about the] prospect-refuge theory, which I didn’t expect to blow up how it did.

On balancing content creation with his landscape architecture work

It’s difficult to balance the two. Content creators who can pump it out are doing it full-time, like the urbanist creator Not Just Bikes on YouTube. It’s why my older TikTok content has low production value. Fortunately, right now, I’m job hunting so I have a lot of time to make content, which works as a portfolio in and of itself. I can manage one quality video a week with full-time work, but that’s about it.

Top images courtesy of subjects

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The New Design Critics Next Door

The Forest Is the Living Room at This Concrete Paraguay Retreat

A sprawling roof extending over indoor/outdoor spaces has cutouts that make space for mature trees.

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: San Bernardino, Paraguay

Architect: Equipo de Arquitectura / @equipodearquitectura

Footprint: 2,800 square feet

Landscape Design: Viviana Pozzoli

Structural Engineer: Felipe Ramírez

Photographer: Federico Cairoli / @federicocairoli

From the Architect: "A Forest in the House proposes an alternative approach to harmonizing the built form with its natural surroundings. Rather than treating existing trees as obstacles, the project embraces them as fundamental guides that shape the spatial program. The trees delineate the relationship between occupied spaces and voids, freeing the structure from conventional grid systems and establishing a dynamic rhythm that reflects the patterns of nature. This nonorthogonal disposition of the pillars contributes to the structure’s lateral stability. The solid volumes are constructed using compressed earth blocks, reinforcing the project’s commitment to a material dialogue with the landscape.

"Vertical structural elements are carefully arranged among the trees. By aligning themselves so as not to interfere with the roots, they recede visually and integrate into the background, blending with the natural logic of the surrounding trunks. This conscious integration generates a dialogue in which artifice and nature speak the same language.

"The spatial composition unfolds across two distinct horizontal planes. The primary plane, the floor, rises subtly, allowing tree roots to evolve freely over time. In parallel, the secondary plane, the ceiling, replicates this geometry to form a terrace that invites occupants to enjoy panoramic views of the treetops.

"Ultimately, the project imagines a future in which the boundaries between architecture and nature dissolve: a future in which the built environment is as organic as its natural context. This vision not only proposes a different spatial solution, but also offers a reminder of the potential for coexistence and balance. Thus, in unison, all the elements of the house compose a big band that, depending on the season or time of day, plays the music that best accompanies the experience."

Photo: Federico Cairoli

Photo: Federico Cairoli

Photo: Federico Cairoli

See the full story on Dwell.com: The Forest Is the Living Room at This Concrete Paraguay Retreat