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    Home Tour

    Industrial restaurant style gives this Dallas home some funky flavor

    Kathleen McCleary, Houzz
    Jul 18, 2017 | 9:17 am
    Houzz Dallas house
    The homeowners plan to install a drop-down movie screen over the red doors on the guest house, so they can sit in the fire pit area and watch movies outdoors.
    Photo by Charles Davis Smith

    When a local restaurateur approached architect Laura Baggett and told her that he wanted a house “with the same flavor” as his restaurants, she was hooked.

    “He didn’t want a big house,” Baggett says, “but he wanted to explore how to make it different and funky.”

    The project, in Dallas’ Knox Street neighborhood, involved tearing down an older house on the property that hadn’t been lived in for several years and then building something new on the long, skinny lot.

    Houzz at a glance:
    Who lives here: A couple who own several local restaurants
    Location: Dallas
    Size: Main house, 1,845 square feet (171 square meters), including finished basement; one bedroom, 1.5 bathrooms. Guesthouse, 440 square feet (40.9 square meters); one bedroom, one bathroom
    Architect: Laura Baggett of Domiteaux + Baggett Architects

    Baggett designed a steel column and steel trellis structure that includes a swing. “It’s like a traditional front porch, yet it’s not,” she says.

    The exterior brick is reclaimed brick purchased locally. The construction of the house, by Robert Hopson Construction Group, also includes steel trusses, wood siding, and more brick on the interior.

    Siding 101: The Top 9 Materials to Use

    The cutouts flanking the painted wood door allow light to flood into the living room beyond.

    The clients wanted a wood-burning fireplace, so Baggett’s brother, a metal fabricator, created the steel fireplace hood. The writing on the hood is notes from the metal shop — details about the project and the homeowners. “We liked the way it looked, so we just left it,” Baggett says.

    The powder room is on the other side of the aquarium, just inside the front door. To the left of the aquarium is a secret door that opens to a staircase leading to the basement. When the door is closed, it’s invisible. It opens with the turn of a film reel attached to the door.

    One objective: to have the house open up to the backyard and create a “sort of beer garden,” Baggett says. The detached guest suite at the far end of the yard helps make the home feel as if it uses the entire property. Two giant garage doors open the living area to the backyard. They fold up, not roll up, which gave the architects more flexibility in where to install interior lighting.

    The cocktail sign was a find by the homeowners, who wanted “an industrial-looking bar,” Baggett says.

    The bar itself is made of warehouse shelves that Baggett found and “beat up to look old.” The wheel-and-pulley contraption at the left end of the bar is a working dumbwaiter. “The client found it and said, ‘I want this in my house,’” Baggett says. “So we had to get it working.” The dumbwaiter goes down to the basement “man cave.”

    The kitchen island is reclaimed wood from a local shop. The sink is stainless steel; cabinets are gray plastic laminate with a high-gloss finish. “We wanted something a little different than normal, and it felt like the right material to use there,” Baggett says.

    The basement, which is 468 square feet, is a “media room, card-playing room, hangout, fun space,” Baggett says. The walls and floor are concrete, and are the actual structural surfaces of the basement. The ceiling is reclaimed wood that the homeowner found.

    Unique Media Room Basement Ideas

    A window well behind the red velvet curtains allows some light in and provides an egress window out. A film projector on the ceiling plays movies on the opposite wall, and a karaoke stage in the corner offers more opportunity for entertainment. The builder made the wine rack at the client’s request; the client also commissioned the velvet paintings.

    A small space connecting the two rectangles of the main house is an office and retreat.

    The master bathroom includes penny tile, brick, steel trusses, and reclaimed wood. The homeowners wanted no drywall anywhere in the house, so all the walls are brick or wood siding, and most of the wood is reclaimed.

    Landscape architect Shane Garthoff of Garthoff Design designed and installed the backyard features. The windmill was another find by the homeowners that they wanted to incorporate into their new home.

    Porch Swings to Fun Up Your Home

    The homeowners plan to install a drop-down movie screen over the red doors on the guest house, so they can sit in the fire pit area with friends and watch movies outdoors in the summer.

    Baggett’s biggest challenge: the rotating brick pizza oven on the far left side of the kitchen and dining room. The homeowners wanted to be able to start the fire with the oven facing outside, so heat from the oven wouldn’t blast the house in the summer, but then wanted the oven to rotate into the kitchen once the fire was going for easy access. The flue also rotates.

    The homeowners plan to install a drop-down movie screen over the red doors on the guest house, so they can sit in the fire pit area and watch movies outdoors.

    Houzz Dallas house
    Photo by Charles Davis Smith
    The homeowners plan to install a drop-down movie screen over the red doors on the guest house, so they can sit in the fire pit area and watch movies outdoors.
    houzz
    news/home-design
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    Welcome Home

    Romantic gardens and nostalgic spaces top summer's hottest home trends

    Amber Heckler
    May 27, 2026 | 10:00 am
    European garden romanticism, Houzz summer home design trends 2026
    Photo courtesy of CLC Landscape Design
    Romantic English cottage vibes are a major theme for summer 2026.

    This summer, homeowners and home designers are dreaming up warm and inviting spaces for gatherings inspired by eco-friendly design choices, cozy outdoor spaces inspired by European courtyards, and nostalgic home entertainment areas.

    That's according to the 2026 Houzz Emerging Summer Trends Report, which identified upcoming home design trends based on year-over-year search interest from the website's community of home professionals, homeowners, and design enthusiasts.

    The report revealed homeowners are increasingly seeking to make their homes "feel personal and purposeful" through warm color palettes, "sensory-rich environments," and dedicated entertainment spaces.

    These are the top design trends for summer 2026:

    Curves and soft geometry
    Rounded furniture forms and arches were top design predictions last year, and that trend is carrying on into the upcoming season. Design enthusiasts shunning "rigid lines" in their homes are leaning toward "fluid-like" materials such as scalloped tile, wave tile, or arched range hoods and pantry doors. Additionally, sharp corners are becoming dull as more homeowners search for rounded kitchen islands and curved peninsulas.

    "Homeowners are also embracing sculptural elements like 'curved staircase,' which saw a 66 percent increase in searches," the report said. "These graceful forms bring a sense of movement, softness and visual comfort to interiors."

    Textured surfaces
    Houzz said "high sensory experiences" are top-of-mind for most homeowners, which can be achieved by switching and adapting traditionally flat surfaces to "rich, touchable dimensions."

    Searches for textures like sandstone, linen wallpaper, and seagrass wallpaper have skyrocketed since 2025, which the report says is a clear signal that homeowners are being drawn toward walls that "beg to be touched."

    Tactile textures, Houzz summer home design trends 2026 Homeowners are saying no to flat walls and bringing back textured finishes.Photo courtesy of Vision Interiors

    "The ancient art of 'Venetian plaster' is also making a strong comeback, with searches up 94 percent, offering depth and luminosity that paint simply can’t replicate," Houzz said. Underfoot, 'terracotta flooring' (with searches up 55 percent) is bringing warmth and earthiness to kitchens, entryways and beyond."

    Another way to incorporate textured surfaces during a kitchen renovation, for example, is by picking a natural stone slab for countertops and backsplashes. Houzz says quartzite and marble are the top choices for countertops, and ceramic tile leads as the most popular backsplash material.

    DIY-ers are also on the hunt for affordable ways to achieve the "tactile textured" look through limewash interior paint schemes, and decorative wall paneling like wainscotting.

    Warm and earthy tones
    The craze for warm colors to make a home feel "grounding and timeless" is still in full swing for the summer. Search interest for "rust colors," and "chocolate brown," are trending upwards among designers, and soft warm neutrals like "mushroom color," "sage," "taupe," and various off-white tones have had homeowners in a chokehold since 2024.

    "Together, these colors create layered interiors that feel calming yet sophisticated, offering an inviting alternative to cooler minimalist palettes," Houzz said.

    Nostalgia-inducing entertainment rooms
    Remember the game rooms and home theater rooms from our childhood? Houzz says the days of "analog entertainment, connection, and old-fashioned fun" are about to see a modern renaissance.

    "Searches for 'Mahjong room' skyrocketed nearly 20x, while searches also climbed for 'card room' (up 129 percent), 'board game room' (up 45 percent) and 'poker room' (up 38 percent), pointing to a renewed love of tabletop gaming and convivial gathering," the report said.

    Interest in home libraries, speakeasies, and playrooms for children are also on the rise for individuals who want to invest in dedicated "spaces for slow, screen-free enjoyment," but it's also possible that homeowners are creating their own entertainment spaces because costs for recreational activities and dining out are increasingly expensive.

    Wellness retreats at home
    Reducing the cost of going out also extends to the spa and the gym, where turning a home into a wellness sanctuary is not just a concept, but "an active design priority," according to Houzz. More homeowners are turning their spare spaces or garages into home gyms, spas, sensory rooms, or yoga rooms with an emphasis on "calming" and "biophilic design" details. Homeowners undertaking bathroom renovations are also investing in "private retreat-worthy bathrooms and wet rooms" to create their own luxurious wellness experiences at home.

    Eco-friendly design choices
    More homeowners are additionally prioritizing sustainable design features like solar energy solutions, low-voltage lighting, and repurposed or recycled materials such as glass countertops or bamboo flooring.

    "Outdoor sustainability solutions are also gaining traction, with 'permeable patio' searches up 137 percent and 'native landscape' up 59 percent," the report said. "Searches for 'sustainable' rose 42 percent, while 'passive house' increased 37 percent, reflecting growing interest in energy-efficient and environmentally responsible living."

    Eco-friendly design choices, Houzz summer home design trends 2026 Solar panels and reclaimed wood are some of the hottest design choices for homeowners this summer.Photo courtesy of Rodwin Architecture + Skycastle Construction

    European garden romanticism, Houzz summer home design trends 2026

    Photo courtesy of CLC Landscape Design

    Romantic English cottage vibes are a major theme for summer 2026.

    Compact outdoor areas inspired by European gardens
    Outdoor gardens were one of the top home design predictions of 2026, and homeowners are going all in on maximizing their outdoor patios, front yards, and backyards into "functional retreats for entertaining, gardening and relaxation."

    As far as design aesthetics, homeowners are inspired by "European garden" themes that romanticize French and Italian courtyards or English cottage patios. These dreamy styles are embodied by cobblestoned plazas, sun drenched terraces, walls of lush greenery, and wandering gardens.

    "Together, these trends paint a picture of homeowners longing for outdoor spaces that feel storied, lush and transportive — a little European escape right at home," Houzz said.

    Texas homeowners need no reminder of how punishing the summer heat can be, so these lush green garden ideas may need to pivot to a drought-resistant version that favors low water landscaping practices.

    home designhome design trendshouzzreports
    news/home-design
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