Douglas Newby Insights - Page 43
Chicago Origin City of Dallas

The origin of Dallas is the original trading post of John Neely Bryan and Sarah Cockrell who took over the town and was the early developer. But Chicago was responsible for much of the booming population. While Houston grew from people in the Deep South moving west, Dallas grew from people migrating from the Midwest and New York. Much of the vibrancy, design, and ambition of Chicago was passed to Dallas. Herbert M. Green from Illinois designed Neiman Marcus and Temple Emanu El. Also early 1900s Prairie Style architecture came directly from Chicago. Frank Lloyd Wright’s associate, Charles Erwin Barglebaugh of Chicago designed 5002 Swiss Avenue in 1913. Some 40 years later Wright designed the Kalita Humphreys Theater in 1955 and on Rockbrook his largest residence in 1958. In the 1970s, 20% of SMU students came from the Chicago area and Governor Clements said that the talented people Dallas wanted were coming primarily from Chicago. When Dallas was booming in the 1980s, the owner of the largest home-building firm, David Fox, was from Chicago as was the Texas Republican Party Chairman. In the 1990s, several of the Dallas City Councilpersons were from the Chicago area. Chicago, like St. Louis and Detroit before it, had been the most successful city in the country. As Chicago declined, Dallas has boomed with several thousand people leaving Chicago for Dallas every few months. Nevertheless, the earnest ambition of these Midwesterners has melded well with the openness and vision of Dallas. Even our most influential Texas architects, David Williams and O’Neil Ford, said they wanted to do in Texas what Frank Lloyd Wright had done in the Midwest. They combined the Modernism of Europe with the indigenous qualities of Texas just as Frank Lloyd Wright merged the Modernism of Europe with the indigenous qualities of the Midwest. Pictured above bridge house and decades of architecture seen along the Chicago River.
#Chicago River #Chicago #ChicagoArchitecture #Bridgehouse #Dallas #PrairieStyle #Origin #aia #dallas #history #city #preservation #frankloydwright #skyscraper architect #bridgehouse #city #cityscape #architecturephotography #19thcentury #modern
Green – my favorite color for a city

I always love a city when I see green. In Dallas I love the tree-shaded neighborhoods, residential boulevards with allées of trees, tree-lined trails and bike paths, the Klyde Warren deck park connecting the City to the neighborhoods, the Dallas Arboretum and forest found at White Rock Lake, the city parks and the Trinity River Park. Cities are associated with skyscrapers, density, and crowded streets. Most do have that, but my first thoughts of a city are the parks and greenspace. New York is known for so much, but Central Park is what comes to my mind first. On my first trip to London I was most surprised and delighted by the parks: Green Park, Hyde Park, Regent’s Park, and small parks on what seems like every corner. Chicago is a city that I visited skyscrapers as a child. My father took me to the top of the Prudential Building which looked down on the Chicago Board of Trade Building which my father visited the observation floor of with his father. Then some years later I went to the top of the Hancock Building and the Sears Building as they became the tallest in Chicago. But what did we look at when we felt like we were at the top of the world? We looked at Lake Michigan and Grant Park. Driving into the city or walking through the parks linking the museums, Chicago for me will always be associated with parks. Dallas has increased its attention to trails, forests and parks. At some point, maybe one’s first impression of Dallas will be its parks. Visitors to Dallas do go away talking about the parks and trees in Highland Park. They are also surprised on how green the neighborhoods are close to downtown. Revitalized neighborhoods, reclaimed houses, and autonomous transportation will provide affordable housing. Protecting the single family neighborhoods from added density like the two-story secondary house/granny flat overlay the City Manager is proposing that would eliminate towering trees in the backyards of single family homes is the most important step to keeping Dallas green. #green #park #centralpark #trees #dallas #landscape #JoySpotting #architect #skyscraper #architecturephotography #neighborhood #nyc #architecture #horizon #art
Architect Vision of 30th Century City

The City Dreams exhibition at the MoMA in New York City projects what a city might look like after 1000 years of city planners calling for more density, efficient living, and condensed spaces. The vision of Bodys Isek Kingelez, a 20th century architect, artist, and engineer, implies artificial intelligence but his design was created 20 years ago before there was any sense of the inevitability and immediacy of autonomous transportation that should cultivate the continuous human desire for less density and more humane spaces. In two MoMA galleries, very large scale models of cities showed complicated structures and public spaces and a void of natural gardens. Gone was any sense that a city could evolve one house at a time or would include the time-honored characteristics of homes that make us happy. He solved this problem by bombarding future inhabitants with whimsical structures, curved shapes, waved surfaces, undulating floors, and bright colors. These are elements that @IngridFetellLee discusses in her recent TED talk on “Joy” where she beautifully explains how these joyful elements relate to the primal and neural need for abundance, safety, and joy. #JoySpotting. In the same way that Kingelez imposes joy in a manufactured city that could reek of despair, Ingrid Fetell Lee advocates joyful structures for the most vulnerable in our society, those in nursing homes, hospitals, homeless shelters, and housing projects. Instead of us seeking joy, which Ingrid Fetell Lee encourages in our drive for life, Bodys Isek Kengelez’ 30th century city would mainline joy to its inhabitants.
https://www.ted.com/talks/ingrid_fetell_lee_where_joy_hides_and_how_to_find_it
#MoMA, #museumofmodernart #CityDreams #ModernArt #Art #Sculpture #ModernSculpture #Architecture #Architect #Artist #ModernArchitecture #ModernArchitect #Design #CityPlanning #City #Cityscape #NYC #CityPhotography #ArchitecturalPhotography #aestheticsofjoy #Dream #NewYork #NewYorkCity #TED #TEDTalks #BodysIsekKingelez #AIA #Color #Shape @aestheticsofjoy
Conversation with an Architect

I love conversations with an architect because it really gives me a chance to link the inspiration for a project with the experience and approach of the architect, the design process, and the collaboration with the client that results in a successful home, or in this case a clubhouse, a home away from home. This conversation with the talented architect, Mark Finlay @MPFArchitects, was particularly exciting because it was the official launch of his book, Country Houses: The Architecture of Mark P. Finlay, which was held at the @Trinity ForestGC clubhouse that he designed. This beautiful and informative book articulates the work of an architect that trained with the firm of modernist Eero Saarinen and has worked extensively with the classic architectural expressions of New England. Beautiful proportions become the starting and ending point for these homes. This conversation and book signing was further enhanced by the participation of Tina Anastasia, interior designer of his firm; Jonas Woods, the lead developer of the Trinity Forest Golf Club; Ron Spears and other participants and members of the club. What seems like bold design moves and nuance decisions are rooted in core beliefs, a specific vision, and ultimate respect for the land, and in this case the land and the link style golf course. The flatness of the land is celebrated by the course designers, Coore and Crenshaw. The endless views to the inner edge of the 6000-acre forest is celebrated by architect Mark Finlay by the broad elevated terraces shaded by the deep overhangs at the clubhouse which serves as a perfect grandstand for PGA tournaments or club play. Mark Finlay designed the clubhouse to focus on the members and views of the course in every room including even the locker rooms.
#architect #architecture #conversation #trinityforestgolfclub #golfclub #booksigning #interiordesign #modern #interior #moderndesign #moderndecor #home #grandstand #bar #golf #dallas #trinityforest #trinityriver #flatland #development #prairiestyle #windows #views
Best Table Best Site

I enjoy looking for the best site in a great neighborhood, and in sort of the same way enjoy determining the best site in a restaurant. Maybe this is just because I am a real estate broker and can’t help myself. I know one will enjoy a good neighborhood wherever the home is. Restaurants are the same. Still some sites are better than others. My favorite table at the Polo Bar is not in the center of the room or the most visible. It is the corner table of a side alcove. Some like the center table of a room just as they like their home to be visible from a prominent street. My preference at this restaurant is the curved corner of an alcove that is discreetly placed providing privacy and a full view of the restaurant. I am able to see the full depth and width of the room, who is coming and going, and even a clear view of guests as they descend the stairs into the entry hall across the room. The table, still at the 50-yard line of the restaurant, places waiters, assistant waiters, staff, and managers never more than few steps away as they traverse the room. While I am almost always able to be seated at this table, I am really not disappointed on the occasion when I am bumped. It means the proprietor of the Polo Bar is having dinner that night. Being moved to another table just validates my keen assessment of the best sites, besides I know Ralph Lauren and his guests will enjoy his meal sitting at “my table” well actually his table. #realestate #site #location #table #besttable #architecture #interiordesign #interior #design #view #polobar #design #restaurant #newyork #newyorkfashion #celebrity #neighborhood #newyorkfood #ralphlauren #diningroom #nightlife #best
Torn Down Vacant Lot – 10 years!

The greatest architectural travesty is when an architecturally significant home gets torn down before the owner is ready to build a new home. This home designed by Fooshee and Cheek, also the architects that designed Highland Park Village, was torn down approximately ten years ago. It has had different owners since and has been on and off the market. The original home was in beautiful shape and fit the Highland Park setback restrictions perfectly. In the subsequent ten years that owners and potential owners have struggled with how to build a large home here, there have been many buyers that this original home would have been perfect for. This is such a good example of a home that would have sold in the last ten years for more than what they are trying to sell the land for if this delightful home was still standing. Houses are always in jeopardy of being torn down, but they should never be torn down before there is an architectural design and building permit in place to construct a new home. Prematurely tearing down a home is economically disadvantageous to the owner and is a great loss to the community. #highlandpark #historic #preservation #historicpreservation #teardown #spanishcolonial #mediteraneanstyle #Home #architecture #architect #architecturallysignificant #architecturephotography #dallas #Dallashome #1920s #dallasarchitecture #beverlydrive #highlandparkvillage #realestate #travesty #lot #neighborhood #history #design #balcony #style
Bridge to Roof Front Door

Some of the best modern architecture submits to the site. Some of the best homes are designed when there is a three-way conversation between the architect, the client, and the site. This home is a good example. It was hidden from view at the end of a short cul-de-sac in Bluffview, a small downtown neighborhood just five miles from the Arts District. Pictured is a footbridge that took one from the street to a series of porches and balconies that ascended to the formal rooftop entrance. From there one would enter the front door and descend into the living room. Whether it was Turtle Creek Boulevard that linked Highland Park to downtown or Haskell Boulevard with just a few blocks completed at City Place which was intended to link Highland Park with Fair Park, one can see the vision of James Pratt to provide mobility to the city in a beautiful way. James Pratt successfully negotiated with Baylor Hospital, Criswell College, and McDonald’s Corporation to realign their property and plans to allow this majestic boulevard to link the established and older neighborhoods to Fair Park. Unfortunately, this plan was derailed by the then Executive Director of Fair Park and a few elected officials who owned property along Haskell. Nevertheless, James Pratt’s vision and sensitivity to Dallas, its architecture, and its future was profound. You will enjoy hearing from architects James Pratt and Philip Henderson at the upcoming conversation about shaping Dallas.
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/shaping-dallas-architecture-the-legacy-of-pratt-box-and-henderson-tickets-45570714233 #architecture #architect #modern #modernarchitecture #landscape #midcenturymodern #texasmodern #architecturallysignificant #homesthatmakeushappy #site #aiadallas #aia #jamespratt #dallas #preservation #neighborhood #bluffview #footbridge #bridge #entrance #design #midcenturyhome #midcenturyarchitecture #history #creativity #rooftop @aiadallasyp
Texas Porch in a City

The upcoming Thursday conversation about architects Pratt, Box and Henderson, Shaping Dallas Architecture, has me thinking about James Pratt and his contribution to architecture. The home pictured in the Bluffview neighborhood of Dallas is an architecturally significant home that I enthusiastically described in my TEDx talk, Homes That Make Us Happy, advocating the importance of architects. This mid-century Texas modern home was built behind a ravine which led James Pratt to design a footbridge over the ravine to long porches wrapping around the house and ascending to the roof where one would enter the front door and descend into the living room. James Pratt and his firm approached the City in the same way he approached a residential site, cognizant of protecting and accentuating the environment and bringing joy to the inhabitants for decades. Think what it would be like if we had a highway instead of Turtle Creek Boulevard linking Highland Park to downtown Dallas and dozens of other contributions long-forgotten or unrecognized. This will be a fascinating and important conversation.
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/shaping-dallas-architecture-the-legacy-of-pratt-box-and-henderson-tickets-45570714233
#architect #architecturallysignificant #architecture #texas #modern #midcenturymodern #texasmodern #historic #preservation #design #porch #dallas #photography #city #neighborhood #bluffview #cityplanning #design #aiadallas #dallasarchitects #HomesThatMakeUsHappy #landscape #Greenspace #texas #trees #docomomo
Estate Home Overlooking White Rock Lake

White Rock Lake offers very few estate properties, but the sites here are some of the best in the City. These lots have accentuated the architectural design of homes by Frank Welch and the recent architecturally significant modern homes designed at the lake by Cliff Welch @welch_architecture and around the point by Jason and Signe Smith @Smitharc Architects. These architect-designed homes have interior and exterior spaces overlooking the lake. The property in this video on a hill at the top of a finger peninsula has the most dramatic views at the lake. This site allows a home to look out over four acres of the terraced landscape designed by landscape architect David Hocker @HockerDesignGroup and further enhanced by the design of landscape architect David Rolston @DallasGardens and with a 270º view of White Rock Lake. One enjoys watching the sailboats, kayaks, rowers, and cyclists riding by. White Rock Lake in Lakewood, five miles from downtown, is the best known place in Dallas and the best kept secret.
#WhiteRockLake #PathtoTrinityGroves #SantaFeTrail #Luxury #LuxuryHomes #Estate #Home #ArchitecturallySignificant #Architecture #Architect #CorinthianSailingClub #Dallashome #DallasArboretum #Rowing #Cycling #City #Lake #LakeHome #Fishing #Lawn #Landscape #Sailing #Sailboats #Lakewood #HomesThatMakeUsHappy #Neighborhood #realestate @davidhalloran
Mayor and Morning News Massage Dallas

The rooftop terrace of the new Dallas Morning News headquarters originally designed by George Dahl, brought into focus the old City Hall building pictured behind Dallas Morning News publisher Jim Moroney. The clear view of this ornate building flooded me with memories. My most vivid memory from the time I was a recent graduate of SMU was often roaming the floors of old City Hall visiting mayor Robert Folsom, City Council members, or City Hall beat reporters, Hank Tatum and Kit Bauman. Then, on the same trip downtown, proceeding to the Dallas Morning News Building on Young Street to roam those floors to speak with editors and reporters of different departments on the single family rezoning and revitalization progress of Munger Place and Old East Dallas. Oh, the advantage of an era with virtually unlimited and unsecured access along with the naiveté of one being in their early 20s when the idea of protocol for waiting for an invitation to visit was not yet comprehendible. The Dallas Morning News reporting and their editorial positions, along with the support from Mayor Folsom, were the two overriding reasons the largest rezoning in Dallas history was successful. Rezoning 2000 properties, mostly apartments to single family zoning, laid the foundation for a billion dollars of renovation and new construction in this 100-block neighborhood of Dallas. This restoration area is now comprised of three historic districts: Munger Place, Jefferson Peak, and Junius Heights. Jim Moroney and the extended family retain controlling interest of the Dallas Morning News. The talented editors and reporters and directors continue to have the greatest positive influence on the future of Dallas. #dmn #dallasmorningnews #city #cityhall #dallas #architect #architecture #architecturephotography #zoning #cityplanning #downtown #rooftop #newspaper #publisher #breakfastgroup #oldcityhall #city #cityscape #citizen #historic #historicpreservation #landmark #revitalize #historicalbuilding #historical #mungerplace #juniusheights #jeffersonpeak

