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    Home on the Range

    Dallas artist's ranch retreat paints a designer picture

    John Hill, Houzz
    Mar 28, 2017 | 3:02 pm
    Granbury house feature
    The project is separated into three enclosed areas.
    Photo by NIMMO American Studio For Progressive Architecture, Houzz

    When Dallas artist Melissa Auberty was younger, she dreamed of building a house on part of her family's ranch in nearby Granbury. Architect Joshua Nimmo helped Auberty realize her dream years later, finding inspiration for the home and studio in vernacular architecture, as well as an unexpected discovery.

    Because the young Auberty had cherished the southern views from a spot about a half-mile from the ranch's main entrance, Nimmo decided to tuck the house into the north side of a big clearing, opening up the views to the south. He also split the home into multiple parts.

    According to Nimmo, "The modules of the residence/studio mimic the segmentation of the vertebrae of a spine: main suite, plus breezeway, plus studio, plus fire pit, plus guest cabana." These spaces move from left to right (west to east) on the plan, with the studio having the most indoor square footage.

    A closer view of the south side of the house, which totals 2,570 square feet, reveals some of the defining characteristics of the design: the gable forms, the corrugated siding/roofing, the generous glazing, and the "cuts" — one open and one roofed over. It appears vernacular in form, yet contemporary in execution, something Nimmo confirms: "We started by considering the fundamentals of a barn: simple form, usually linear, repetitious, gable, local/humble materials, etc." His team balanced this with an innovative, sustainable approach to the architecture, inside and out.

    According to Nimmo, all of the materials were local, and some of the stone was extracted from the site.

    The view of the guest cabana illustrates the simple form of the architecture and the simple detailing of the corrugated metal, something Nimmo explored elsewhere. He chose the material because of the way it reflects heat, because it's made from recycled steel (which can be recycled in the future), and because "it has an amazing sheen at sunset," he says.

    In that same photo, you can also see how Auberty uses the house as a setting for her art; one of her paintings is framed by the window.

    Paintings to Make Your Studio a Gallery

    The fire pit is easily one of the most important places in the house, no doubt relative to the historical importance of fire. Open to the sky and the southern vista, the space is lined with stone walls on both the studio and guest cabana sides. Steps on the north and the south ends lead from the sloping landscape to the plinth upon which the buildings sit, elevating the importance of this movement. The space is also well-scaled for various purposes: creating art, eating, sitting around the fire.

    Get More Out of Your Outdoor Space With Fire Pits

    Following the vertebrae analogy, the project is separated into three enclosed areas: main suite, studio, and guest cabana. But why? The answer is in what lies in the middle: the studio. By removing the main suite and guest cabana from the studio via two open spaces (not just walls), the fumes inherent with painting do not affect those living spaces. Further, the cutting of the project into three volumes also allows Auberty to zone the heating and cooling, turning it off entirely or making one space warmer or cooler.

    Sliding doors on both sides of the breezeway allow Auberty to unify the studio and the master suite, creating a flexible interior space.

    See More Inspirational Guesthouses

    The painting studio receives plenty of sunlight through generous glazing, and plenty of ventilation through the sliding doors on both the north and south sides. Both of these concerns are important for a studio, but too much sunlight in Texas can be, well, too much. So Nimmo put some sunshades above the transom windows.

    Partitioning the spaces for various uses into different volumes also results in interior partitions that demarcate spaces but stop short of the exterior walls, maximizing the infiltration of natural light. Privacy and access that would have been needed with one volume happens via the exterior walls and open spaces.

    The project is separated into three enclosed areas.

    Granbury house feature
      
    Photo by NIMMO American Studio For Progressive Architecture, Houzz
    The project is separated into three enclosed areas.
    houzz
    news/home-design

    Toy News

    Japanese collector toy store to open at Firewheel center in Garland

    Teresa Gubbins
    Jun 11, 2025 | 12:25 pm
    Gashapon store
    Gashapon
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    A new store for people who like to collect small plastic objects is coming to Garland. It's called Gashapon Bandai Official Shop, and it's opening in June at Firewheel Town Center, where it will sell "capsule toys" — miniature plastic toys packaged in clear plastic capsules.

    Gashapon is a type of vending machine that dispenses capsule toys. The concept is popular in Japan, with machines found in train stations, arcades, convenience stores, and other locations. (The name "Gashapon" is derived from the sounds of turning the handle ("gasha") and the capsule dropping ("pon").)

    The toys inside Gashapon capsules can be characters from cultural realms like manga, video games, or Japanese anime franchises. Or they can be coasters, or food miniatures, or charms you attach to your purse or notebook, or little animal figures, or little whimsical animal figures, or little statues, or an assortment of little plastic hats, or a quartet of tiny jewelry stands in pastel colors (buy them all!).

    The machines take tokens which cost $2 to $2.50 each; most toys "cost" 2 to 4 tokens each.

    The idea of capsule toys — coin-operated vending machines — actually originated in the U.S. in 1907 along with bubble-gum machines. Japan embraced it in the 1960s, and the Gashapon chain was launched in Japan in 1977.

    The first U.S. Gashapon Bandai Official Shop opened in Los Angeles' Little Tokyo district in February 2023.

    The entire thing is driven by collector frenzy. The toys are produced in limited quantities, and in sets, which encourages customers to acquire every member of the set.

    Customers do not know what they will get until they turn the vending machine handle — not unlike slot machines. Like gambling. Or as Gashapon says more delicately, "The element of surprise brings excitement during the purchase and gets everyone hooked!" … furthering the frenzy even further.

    Garland will make the fifth location in Texas; following Hurst, which opened in May; Grapevine Mills Mall and Houston, which opened in 2024; and Mitsuwa Marketplace in Plano which opened in 2023 (There's also a kiosk at Grapevine Mills Mall.)

    openingsshoppingkids
    news/home-design
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