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Tag: Austin architecture

  • A Quintet Of Gated Homes Near Austin Is An Architectural Standout

    A Quintet Of Gated Homes Near Austin Is An Architectural Standout

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    A gated complex of five architecturally noteworthy homes is rising on a five-and-a-half acre site just west of Austin, Texas. Located in upscale West Lake Hills, the five-bedroom homes are priced from $12.5 to $18 million with living spaces from about 6,700 to nearly 10,000 square feet.

    Described as a “private collective,” the five glass-rich contemporary residences, each set on an approximate one-acre lot, are arranged so that the homes feel “like they belong together,” say project designers. Each home’s orientation, sightlines, landscaping and partitions are positioned so that the structures look as if they interact—or even riff off each other—without sacrificing privacy.

    The complex presents a rare and thoughtful synergy for what could be just another homogeneous gated community.

    “There’s really nothing like this in Austin,” says Francisco Uzcategui, founder of Houston-based Unicus, a residential design-build firm spearheading the project. “It’s rare to be able to design a group of homes in five subdivided lots.”

    Five, as Uzcategui modestly calls the project, broke ground in late 2021. The first home will be complete in November and the second in December. Another will be finished in April 2024 and the final two finished by early 2025. Eric Moreland of Moreland Properties holds the listing.

    A 6-foot-tall travertine wall bisected by a gate borders the front of the development. Just beyond, the homes are positioned in a U around a broad tree-lined avenue. Entries, courtyards, gardens and views from rooms are oriented, some in juxtaposition to each other, to provide balance and symmetry. From overhead, the development resembles five giant puzzle pieces that form a cohesive whole.

    “We’re not building these houses to just maximize the beauty and value of each individual home, but to augment the collective five as a whole,” Uzcategui says. All of the dwellings have pools, gyms and either three- or four-car garages. Two of the homes have walk-in wine rooms, and the others include wine storage.

    The homes were designed by architect David Curiel, founder of Curiel Arquitectos, launched in 2011. The firm, with offices in Mexico City and Texas, is staffed with 40-plus architects, engineers and interior and furniture designers, among others.

    Curiel points to houses No. 1 and 2, which face each other to the left of the gate. “We’ve placed a garden and patios in between, so we’re creating green spaces to control the views,” he says. “We use stone walls, and greenery covering stucco walls throughout the project, which help blend the lines between the houses.”

    House No. 2 presents a modernist assemblage of shapes clad in limestone from Mexico. The creamy white to slightly gray facade is accented by overhangs, their undersides faced with stucco applied with a brown adobe finish, a process that integrates the color into the material. The robust brown can read as nearly black in low light. Reddish tones emerge in brighter light.

    That interplay of materials and colors, intersected by clerestories and walls of windows, yields a look that is studied but calming. The structure is banked by a terraced landscape leading to the entry.

    “Some of the home’s inspiration came from viewing Los Angeles’ older houses,” says Curiel of the 9,010-square-foot residence. “So the home has more of a midcentury kind of vibe.”

    Curiel says many homeowners are never able to truly appreciate their homes from the inside because of the outward-facing architecture. Instead, Curiel turns his houses in upon themselves.

    “We accomplish this through layering and the layout, the orientation of the rooms,” he says. “So if you’re standing in the dining room, you see your covered patio, the landscape, your pool, your side of the house. You get to appreciate the stone that you picked, the color.”

    Skillful placement of glass walls, often used in hallways, also allows owners to view their property’s expanse. “You get the light coming through both sides, and you feel the hugeness of the lot.” Curiel says. “I think many designers envision the walls first and then put windows into them. My strategy is to create glass walls from the start.”

    At 8,275 square feet, House No. 3 has facing wings that embrace an expansive courtyard. The space is anchored by an oak tree that’s about 130 years old, its canopy reaching 40 feet. A pool is just beyond.

    The U-shaped courtyard “allows you to enjoy your own house from different points within the house,” Uzcategui says. The courtyard was designed around the existing heritage tree, which was moved 10 feet for better placement.

    “Moving the tree took us about six months and cost $189,000,” Uzcategui says. “We’ve also planted more than 35 mature oaks brought from offsite to create these beautiful reference points throughout the property.” The oaks are 14 to 20 years old and are 25 to 30 feet tall, helping to increase privacy.

    Marble imported from Mexico covers the facade of No. 3 with both honed and acid-wash finishes. The two textures add additional appeal and interest to the home, which will be complete in December. “And we invite that same material inside on some of the walls, so it feels like the outdoors is flowing into the interior,” Uzcategui adds. “That provides a lot of warmth.”

    No. 3 has a stately look with its extensive use of marble, but its interiors feel relaxed and even homey, partly accomplished with a warm cream and tan palette. Floors and kitchen cabinetry are Bardolino gray oak, a saw-cut wood with a vintage look.

    House No. 4, slated for completion in November, is clad with limestone sourced from the Austin area. “When we started digging, we discovered the soil was a very heavy, strong limestone,” Uzcategui says. “So we’ve used that as inspiration for the home’s facade.”

    An extensive overhang that stretches across the front of the 7,961-square-foot house helps to deflect the Texas heat. That structure also accentuates an eye-catching 24-by-10-foot brass entry door topped by a smaller overhang.

    Along one side of the home is a dramatic two-story structure clad in stucco with a deep brown adobe finish. The ultra-modern wing is lined with expansive windows and looks incongruous in contrast to the rest of the house. Uzcategui describes the volume as “museographic,” an architectural intervention that happily intrudes, veering off the main building’s stone facade.

    House No.1, which has been sold and will be complete in April 2024, is the smallest of the five at 6,682 square feet. House No. 5, an L-shaped structure clad in dark Italian brick, is the largest at 9,870 square feet. “It was the most fun to design, partly because it has the most glass walls,” Curiel says. The home includes a cabana and a green “eco” roof, which has sweeping views of the Texas Hill Country.

    Five is six miles west of downtown Austin and is a 12-minute drive from the 4,000-acre Barton Creek Habitat Preserve, which has numerous hiking trails. The complex is within the Eanes Independent School District, which was recently ranked the 10th best school district in the nation.

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  • Austin-Adjacent Home Reflects A Love Of Light, Geometry And Horizon-Busting Views

    Austin-Adjacent Home Reflects A Love Of Light, Geometry And Horizon-Busting Views

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    Deep in the heart of Texas, a newly finished residence suffused with boreal light and featuring miles of unobstructed Texas Hill Country views has swaggered onto the Lone Star State market.

    Located 25 miles west of Austin, the 4,100-square foot home is sited near Dripping Springs––in 2014 named the state’s first International Dark Sky Community. An evening stroll around the home’s nearly two acres––graced with oak, Ashe juniper, Mexican buckeye, madrone and other vegetation––proves that in Texas, the stars at night are indeed big and bright.

    The three-bedroom, three-bathroom home’s linear structure is oriented east and west affording views of a 700-acre conservation ranch. That land’s strictly limited development rights yield boundless Hill Country panoramas: rolling limestone hills blanketed with native vegetation.

    “There will never be high-density development out here,” says Tom Griffith, who with his wife, Dana Griffith, purchased the then-incomplete home in 2016, finishing what the original owner began in 2014. He also cites the surrounding ranch developments that are either covered by a conservation easement or will be limited to 20- to 40-acre parcels.

    A 40-foot pool fronts the $3.25 million retreat beneath an extensive shade pavilion that echoes the main house. Five apertures executed in square and rectangle shapes punctuate the structure’s roofline, revealing a cobalt sky during the day and those big bright stars at night.

    “We’re great fans of James Turrell, so those are an homage to him,” explains Griffith. “You lie in the pool and look up––it’s absolutely gorgeous. The sunlight reflects off the water and dances on the ceiling and surfaces. Just beautiful.”

    Among other works, “Light and Space” artist Turrell is known for his nearly 90 Skyspaces, chambers with ceiling apertures that open to the sky. A Skyspace termed The Color Inside is permanently installed near the Griffith residence at The University of Texas at Austin.

    Adjacent to the pavilion are six totemic sculptures: 10-foot tall railroad frogs cast in manganese steel anchored upright. When not repurposed as striking figures, the devices enable train wheels to switch tracks.

    The property’s cantilevered roof and some exterior walls are clad in seam metal baked with off-white Kynar, a resin that drastically reduces energy consumption. “It’s got a high albedo so it reflects considerable heat,” explains Webber + Studio founder David Webber who mastered the design and most recent build. Albedo is the measurement of light reflected off an object after striking it without any absorption.

    The roofing choice and the home’s optimally sited shade structure are critical given the region’s long, hot summers and short mild winters. American Fiber Cement mantles some of the exterior, completing the fire-resistant build.

    The home’s exceptional linearity is apparent upon entering. To the right are the primary suite and an office. To the left, the kitchen, living and dining rooms, two guest bedrooms and an addition to the original build.

    That sequential room lineup lends the home “reflexivity,” Griffith says. “There are little moments where you can sit in one part of the house and see another part; it’s a wonderful experience, a way to truly appreciate the lines of the house.”

    Augmenting that visual experience are the rooms’ floor-to-ceiling glass walls that lightly frame the horizon-busting views. Five sliders by Western Window Systems allow access to 4,000 square feet of deck and patio areas built of Trex or stained concrete.

    The couple, who are selling to be near their daughter in Colorado, treasure the outdoor living areas. “You hear silence, birds and wind rustling in the trees. That’s it,” Griffith says. “We start the morning with a cup of coffee on the north porch. When a storm gathers in the distance, it’s absolutely gorgeous.”

    The home’s floors are polished concrete. Cabinetry and paneling are of white oak that warms the rooms––along with the living room’s vintage-style white Malm fireplace. The walls are painted an elegant neutral gray: Benjamin Moore’s Stone. The color, along with the oak surfaces, assists in absorbing the pervading Northern light.

    Quartzite is used on working surfaces. The metamorphic rock covers a poolside cabinet station, which is plumbed and wired. It’s also used on a kitchen inset wall, on countertops and covers a black and white kitchen island. The couple, both retired geologists, favor the material for its durability, acid resistance and veining that’s similar to marble.

    All kitchen appliances are by Miele except for two built-in Liebherr refrigerator-freezer units.

    The primary suite has a corner wall window, opening the bedroom to the vast Hill Country’s northeast horizon. Both the primary and guest bath walls are finished in an elegant gray plaster.

    A recent addition leads away from the guest bedrooms. A sitting area with an adjacent terrace is sided by a wet bar with a refrigerator, sink and icemaker. Stairs behind the bar descend to a 900-square-foot conditioned garage and storage. There’s also a two-car carport and additional surface parking.

    A slatted wood divider is positioned behind the wet bar and stairs. It delineates a larger room, which the Griffiths call their music room. The room harbors a built-in ceiling projection screen and Sony projector, which convey with the home along with a quadratic residue diffuser that banks one wall. “I’m kind of a sound nerd,” explains Griffith, adding that other items in his cutting-edge sound system are available for separate purchase.

    Exterior unfinished aluminum louvers cover some of the home’s light-drenched wall windows, helping to pare heat and maximize privacy while affording generous views. Over time, the metal will develop a grayish-white patina. The design is echoed in the pavilion and other areas, helping to establish a cohesive look.

    There’s also a roof solar array, and Haiku ceiling fans are installed throughout the home.

    Edging the main living areas, a cantilevered north-facing rear deck is fronted by a shallow tray holding crushed granite and limestone. Proceeding down steps, the backyard is lined with low limestone walls. “We brought it in ourselves––120 tons, my wife and I are pretty good on a Bobcat,” Griffith says. “It was a labor of love.” The area is anchored with a fire pit and chairs.

    A 30,000-gallon rainwater catchment system screened by trees is located on the opposite side of the property.

    “There’s limited water in this region––there’s the aquifer, which is somewhat stressed,” Griffith explains. “So, we get all of our household and pool water from the sky. It falls on the roof, goes through a series of pipes into a rainwater bank and then it’s pumped through a filtration system.” The system includes particulate and activated charcoal filters as well as ultraviolet (UV) light sterilization.

    “It’s the best water I’ve ever tasted,” says Griffith. “We’ve never gone below one-third full in the tank, even during severe drought.”

    Drilled in 2017, a 586-foot well is employed for landscape irrigation, and six hydrants are distributed throughout the property.

    The well was one of numerous enhancements that the Griffiths added to the property. In 2014, the property’s original owner hired Webber to design the house and a builder to realize it but the structure was left incomplete. After purchasing the home in 2016, the Griffiths hired Webber and collaborated with his team to greatly refine and add to the residence. Webber also acted as the builder, finishing the home in early 2022.

    The Griffiths’ home is 10 miles from both Dripping Springs and Bee Cave, the latter a larger town preferred by the couple for shopping excursions. Hamilton Pool is a few minutes’ drive away––“widely recognized as the greatest swimming hole on Earth,” Griffith says. A dramatic rock grotto beneath limestone outcroppings is set with a 50-foot waterfall.

    The couple often entertains guests at a few dozen craft breweries and six wineries within 10 miles of their home. The area also excels in outdoor recreation: 2,427-acre Reimer’s Ranch Park is less than four miles away, and the 5,212-acre Pedernales Falls State Park is about 17 miles from the residence.

    Ed Hughey of Moreland Properties holds the listing.


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    R. Daniel Foster, Contributor

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