Douglas Newby Insights - Page 29
Katy Trail Kitchen

A kitchen might almost seem superfluous in a house next to the Katy Trail that leads to many of the best chef-owned restaurants in Dallas. A Max Levy kitchen and breakfast room framed by the nature of the Katy Trail does entice one to stay home. This Northern Heights modern home built in 2012 adds to the collection of architecturally significant homes in Northern Heights.
#Max Levy #NorthernHeights #DallasNeighborhood, #CityNeighborhood #CityHouse #Kitchen #BreakfastRoom #Modern #Architect #Architecture #Design #Modern #Contemporary #Dallas
Lifted Living Spaces

Architect Max Levy designed a linear progression of rooms to give each one views of trees and dense foliage. Proceeding through the floor plan culminates in a screen porch on the second floor. The open and screen porches found in many of Max Levy designed homes, I often think of as the Holy Grail of Max Levy architecture.
#LivingSpaces #KatyTrail #MaxLevy #Architect #NorthernHeights #ModernHome #CityHouse #Architecture #DallasNeighborhood #Contemporary #Modern #Design #InteriorDesign #Dallas
#PathToTrinityGroves
Trail House

Swaddled by the Katy Trail foliage on one side and an allée of trees on the other side, Max Levy designed this home in 2012 to be immersed in urban nature. Lifting the principal living spaces to the second floor allows the homeowner to look over the trail with a view filtered by the treetops. Northern Heights is the first neighborhood where architects designed award-winning attached single family modern homes. This Max Levy designed single family modern home solidifies the architectural importance and modernity of Northern Heights.
#MaxLevy #CityHouse #KatyTrail #Dallas #NorthernHeights #Architect #Architecture #DallasNeighborhood #Contemporary #Modern #Design #architecturallysignificant #modernhome #pathtotrinitygroves
Rooftop Prairie

Architect Max Levy has always been fascinated and attracted to the endless open spaces of the Texas prairie. This penthouse is in such an interesting location. It is right in the heart of a vibrant urban neighborhood of restaurants, bars, galleries, offices, and apartments, but just far enough from the dense cluster of downtown high-rises to create a visual plateau that extends from the extraordinarily deep and wide terraces of The Centrum. The rooftop is planted with prairie grasses which further creates the illusion of endless uninterrupted space looking into the horizon.
#TexasPrairie #PrairieGrass #MaxLevy #ModernHighRise #Penthouse #Terrace #Downtown #TheCentrumDallas #DallasNeighborhood #Contemporary #Modern #Architect #Architecture #Dallas #modernhome #skyline
Translucent Partitions

Translucent partitions is another way architect Max Levy diffuses and directs light. In this downtown Dallas penthouse, Max has deployed translucent partitions throughout the penthouse, creating definition and privacy for specific rooms and spaces while maintaining the open floor plan and light-filled residence.
#Translucent #TranslucentPartitions #Modern #Contemporary #Design #MaxLevy #Penthouse #Downtown #Dallas #TheCentrumDallas #Architect #Architecture
Connecting Sky

Max Levy connected the sky with an arced blue plaster ceiling of this Dallas penthouse. Max Levy also in 2010 connected a tired building from the 1980’s, often ignored, to the imagination of those in Dallas. The merits and desirability of the building with its massive terraces and balconies was rediscovered when the penthouse of The Centrum became an architecturally significant residence surrounded by a vibrant downtown neighborhood.
#TheCentrumDallas #MaxLevy #Penthouse #ModernHome #ContemporaryResidence #Design #Interior #ModernInterior #Downtown #DowntownDallas #Architect #Architecture #DallasNeighborhood #Dallas
Little Mexico 1960’s Water Source

Priscilla Escobedo, archivist at the Dallas library, presented at the Legacies Dallas History Conference in the Hall of State, a talk on how water was delivered first by mule-drawn water wagons and then by water trucks to Little Mexico well into the 1960s. This was not just drinking water—this was water for all household needs as there was no indoor plumbing. Even those with backyard wells risked being contaminated by the outhouses next to them. Priscilla Escobedo has done incredible research on these neighborhoods where little published information exists except for Sanborn fire maps showing water sources from creeks in Dallas. She was very cute when she said to an audience predominantly born in the 1940s and 1950s that she did not know how many of the audience might have been born by the 1960s but the 1960s was not that long ago. She made the point we had put a man on the moon by the 1960s when Little Mexico and parts of West Dallas had no piped-in municipal water.
#LittleMexico #WestDallas #Dallas #History #HistoryConference #LegaciesDallas #PriscillaEscobedo #DallasPublicLibrary #FairPark #HallOfState #City #WaterTrucks #WaterWagons #1960s
Materials Reflect Nature

materials inside the house reflecting the materials on the exterior of the home and nature, along with continuing the sleek horizontal lines inside the home suggests the architecture of Max Levy. Max Levy designed the renovation and extension of the home in 2005.
#InteriorDesign #MaxLevy #Architect #Architecture #Modern #1950s #Renovation #MidCentury #MidCenturyModern #Dallas #DallasNeighborhood #Kitchen #Wrightian #dallas
Cantilever Over Creek

Creek lot. Decks were cantilevered over the creek to draw in nature and project the home into nature.
#Cantilever #Deck #Creek #MaxLevy #Architect #Architecture #Landscape #ModernHome #Design #Dallas #DallasNeighborhood
Wrightian Concept Max Accentuation

Interest continues to grow in the northwest Dallas 1950’s neighborhoods. Architect Max Levy contributed to this surge in renovation and new modern homes in this neighborhood when he renovated and extended this vaguely Wrightian styled home originally built in 1955. For an older neighborhood to gain traction, with a new audience of homeowners, it is important that renovation and new construction makes a positive impact on the neighborhood. Max Levy did that in two ways with this home. Aesthetically, the home, unlike the homes around it, is still a good neighbor with its surrounding homes. The home also conveys architectural significance, a home of importance creating confidence in the neighborhood. Max Levy accentuated and enhanced the Wrightian concept of the home to become a Max Levy designed home.
#Modern #MaxLevy #Renovation #1950s #MidCentury #MidCenturyModern #Wrightian #ModernHome #Architect #Architecture #Dallas #CityHouse #DallasNeighborhood

