Friendship Guides The Renovation Of An Austin Residence

Details

modern home exterior with limestone...

Landscape architect Cameron Campbell orchestrated a new front drive, approach and entry for this Austin home. Undulating grasses soften the hard edges of limestone pavers and augment the property’s organic aesthetic.

entryway with wood floors, clerestory...

Drawing inspiration from the organic cream stone, the entry incorporates a caffè latte palette. An Emmemobili Birignao table sits underneath Apparatus’ Synapse pendants in aged and blackened brass.

Seating area with big abstract...

In the seating area, a Petite Friture chandelier illuminates a Noguchi table sourced from Scott + Cooner and a Matt Camron Rugs & Tapestries floor covering from Canvas Showroom. Minotti Angie armchairs wear nubuck leather, complementing the showpiece artwork by Malcolm Hill.

neutral living room with plush...

A Minotti Connery sectional, the first purchase for the house, anchors the family room below a Roi James painting. Stools from Page Home Design rest atop a Vanghent rug from Canvas Showroom.

Breakfast nook with plush leather...

Defining the breakfast nook, a banquette made by Briley’s Upholstery Shop features leather sourced from Canvas Showroom, its tufting echoing the fluted plaster details in the kitchen and family room. Edwood Studio designed the oval white oak pedestal table.

white kitchen with pendant lights...

Christophe Delcourt barstools line the kitchen’s quartzite waterfall island from Architectural Tile & Stone under the soft glow of Gabriel Scott pendants. Installed by Sloan Montgomery Plaster, the fluting on the vent hood introduces a motif that weaves throughout the house.

outdoor dining area with steel...

Campbell Landscape Architecture created an outdoor dining area connecting the main house to the casita. A steel and Thermory ash trellis offers the perfect structure for vines to climb and envelop the space.

living room with curved sofas...

The living room’s curved Tacchini Julep sofas from Scott + Cooner provide a foil for the home’s right angles. A Thomas Newman Studio chandelier crowns the space, while a rug from Black Sheep Unique lies beneath the 1900s waterfall coffee table.

interior courtyard with natural boulder...

The homeowners wanted to turn the interior courtyard into an inspiring retreat made of natural elements, such as a Japanese maple and an onyx boulder. The sculptural tree carving by the door brings that organic spirit inside.

serene bedroom with earth tones,...

A custom Venetian treatment by Sloan Montgomery Plaster on the walls sets the tone in the primary bedroom. The Giorgetti bed is upholstered in Adamo & Eva Panama velvet and dressed in linens and pillows from Wildflower Organics. A Luna Kaleido pendant by Gabriel Scott hangs over the vintage teak table.

earthy powder room with marble...

The color palette for the project coalesced around the Calacatta Macchia Vecchia marble used for the powder room vanity, which integrates the sink to look like it’s carved from a single block of stone. A faucet from J&L Hardware Studio matches the sconces from Apparatus and a 1960s mirror from Incollect.

backyard outdoor pool and deck...

The pool terrace beckons with chaises by Kingsley Bate. A powder coating from Austin Coatings and new panels from Anchor-Ventana Glass refresh the exterior sconces.

When they first met as neighbors in the early aughts, designer Viki Chupik and her client developed a relationship that has since transcended seasons of life and changes of address. “We’ve been friends for decades now, which is a really special thing,” the client shares. “We have a genuine appreciation for each other’s design eye.” So, when she and her husband decided to move to a new home in Austin, who better to call than the woman who knew them so well?

“My mission is always to provide spaces where families can recharge, both spiritually and emotionally,” reflects Chupik, who designed the owners’ previous house. “But this project was also about friendship and building an even deeper bond through collaboration.”

The new residence, built several years before the couple purchased it, sits next to a wildlife preserve. “We’re surrounded by nature, but we’re not isolated,” the husband observes, noting how the home’s orientation optimizes the amount of natural light. “The front of the house is aligned to the sunrise, and in the evening, there’s nothing better than the colors of a Hill Country sunset in the backyard.” The wife also gravitated to the clean lines of the structure, which exuded a midcentury quality along with an inviting, contemporary scale.

Luckily, the house didn’t need much work. “It was about adding personality and quiet drama,” Chupik says. But as she and the wife began sharing images, they started dreaming about dinners by the pool, sleepovers in the casita and weekends with their adult children, who grew up together. And so, with residential designer Isabelle Bogran and builder David Wilkes, plans evolved from a fresh coat of paint to a full remodel.

“We fell in love with the home’s modernist-meets-Prairie style and really appreciated its materials, like the limestone used both inside and outside,” says Bogran, who collaborated with her firm partner Lowe Jones on the project. Their first objective was to enlarge the primary bedroom’s bathroom and closets, then update the kitchen and powder room and turn the pool house into a more comfortable guest space.

Bogran also elevated finishes as she went, including the artful fluted plaster details on the kitchen vent hood and living room fireplace. “Instead of stripping the character, we tried to complement it,” she states. “It’s easy to look at a home and say, ‘This doesn’t work, let’s start over.’ But these clients were keen on saving the authenticity of the house, which is the most sustainable approach.”

Chupik, too, found inspiration in the architecture (the fossil stone in the entryway sparked an “organic modern” theme), but she also focused on functionality to accommodate the owners’ lifestyles. “I work from home and love to float from room to room, following the light of the day or the best energy that will help me be productive,” the wife shares. To that end, the designer placed a small marble table and velvet chairs in one corner of the living room for an ideal Zoom spot. Foregoing a formal dining room that would be infrequently used, she instead created a seating area that looks out into the interior courtyard. “We envisioned it as a place where friends could enjoy a cocktail and talk well into the night,” Chupik muses. When holidays arrive, the four leather armchairs can be relocated to make way for a dining table. “There’s a subtlety to the layering of textures that effortlessly flows between the spaces,” she notes, pointing out how she carried the same materials—plasterwork, velvet—into the primary bedroom for an especially soothing cocoon.

That effortless circulation continues outside, where landscape architect Cameron Campbell kept the focus on views of the preserve while expanding the exterior living spaces. A fossil-stone fire pit creates the perfect spot for stargazing when the couple isn’t lounging by the pool. Meanwhile, a new dining pergola between the house and the casita offers a much-used alfresco area that has already inspired new traditions: Last November, the homeowners’ and Chupik’s families gathered under it for their first annual Taco Saturday. “It’s special to create a project like this with a friend, especially one you know will be around to enjoy it,” the wife says.

Reflecting on the process, the designer agrees, “The gift of this home was the hours we got to spend together. There was a synergy in designing this house, and the result is a wonderful sense of calm.”