Tour An Austin Home Refreshed With Nods To California And Italy

Details

light-filled living room with seating...

Baker’s Anton sofa, matching armchairs from Dmitriy & Co in a Rubelli textile and a Lorae lounge chair from The Bright Group gather around a coffee table from Lawson-Fenning in the living room. A Ross Gardam Nebulae chandelier from Studiotwentyseven hangs above a rug from Truett Fine Carpets & Rugs.

entryway with a console and...

A custom travertine console, Alexa Allen Designs mirror and chair from The Renner Project mingle in the light-filled entryway. The Chisholm Clean lantern is from The Urban Electric Co.

minimalistic stairwell in Venetian plaster...

The redesigned two-story stairwell features soft curves rendered in Venetian plaster. Accents include a Studio Henry Wilson Surface wall sconce from Stahl + Band and a table from Kathy Kuo Home.

family room with vintage furnishings,...

In the family room, known as the “record room,” a painting by Marcelyn McNeil from Conduit Gallery overlooks a 1930s Dutch sideboard from 1stdibs. The vintage wood-frame French chairs and Apparatus pendant are from M.Naeve. A Lawson-Fenning coffee table rests on the custom sisal rug from Truett Fine Carpets & Rugs.

kitchen with green cabinetry and...

Benjamin Moore’s Vintage Vogue coats the kitchen cabinetry, complementing Calacatta Primavera marble from Aria Stone Gallery on the countertops and backsplash. Dornbracht’s Tara Classic faucet is from Ferguson Bath, Kitchen & Lighting Gallery.

kitchen with green cabinetry and...

Cassina counter stools from Scott + Cooner pull up to the kitchen island’s custom brass top and base below pendants from The Urban Electric Co. Throughout the first level, wood floors are from BoardHouse.

dining room with a coffered...

In the dining room, a Nickey Kehoe Purist credenza sits below art by Lance Letscher. Walls painted Benjamin Moore’s Seapearl blend with draperies in Mokum’s Rhythm linen from Holly Hunt. A Merida rug grounds the space.

dining room with wallpaper and...

Materia’s Forchette 18 chandelier from M.Naeve illuminates Porter Teleo’s hand-painted Kintsugi wallcovering in the dining room. Stahl + Band’s leather campaign chair and a Bowie chair from Shoppe Amber Interiors line the custom table. Knoll’s Espresso velvet covers the banquette.

main bedroom seating area with...

Primary bedroom seating encircles a vintage coffee table from The Renner Project atop a rug from Niba Designs. The sofa in a Kufri fabric and chair are both from Lawson-Fenning. Hudson Valley Lighting’s Bruckner bedside pendant suspends near James Sullivan art from Conduit Gallery.

outdoor seating area with fireplace...

The patio creates additional entertaining space accessible off the dining room and study. Here, Palecek’s Rain Drum table and Santorini outdoor lounge chairs complete the scene.

This house could be in the Hollywood Hills,” says designer Chad Dorsey of a project he recently completed in Austin. “You walk into the entry and the view goes right through the living room and out to the pool. It’s very dramatic.” It’s so striking, in fact, that the owners selected it as the backdrop for their nuptials—a fitting choice as this renovation, which went from minor to major after a storm sent Texas into a freeze, expresses the couple’s shared vision. “We thought we’d paint the exterior, nothing too extreme, but the storm damage provided an opportunity to create what we really wanted,” recalls the husband. Chimes the wife: “And it showed us how well we make decisions together.”

With builder Teresa Duffin and her project manager, Kenny Torres, also on board, the couple enlisted Dorsey to update the interiors. “My clients wanted it to be livable, and they liked my ‘relaxed luxury’ style,” he recalls. Working with his senior designer, Georgia Bass, Dorsey began to reimagine the home in a more contemporary way while honoring the existing Mediterranean-inspired styling. To that end, one of the first tasks was replacing the living room’s series of French doors with a retractable design to enhance the vistas. Throughout, the team continued the transformation by embracing “timeless materials like natural stone and plaster walls to add texture and warmth without a lot of color,” Dorsey notes. 

Since the clients frequently entertain, a key to furnishing the interiors was finding pieces that easily transition from place to place. “That way, if they need to rearrange a chair during a party, it will still look great,” explains Dorsey, who sourced items both online and on buying trips. Beginning in the living room—which serves as a pass-through to the kitchen and family room—he brought in an assortment of upholstered seats to suit the light and airy color palette. “The view out onto the verdant hills has a calming effect, and we wanted that to be reflected in the furnishings and to set the tone for the rest of the home,” the designer explains. Grounding the soothing space are darker elements like wood accents, black-painted doors flanking the fireplace and even an adjacent cocktail bar with midnight-blue cabinetry.

The dining room—notably one of Dorsey’s favorite spots in the house—retains a similarly easy spirit. “It’s comfortable for just the two of them on a Tuesday morning, but on a Saturday night it feels like your favorite restaurant,” the designer observes. Here, seating comprises not only chairs but also a custom chocolate-velvet-and-walnut banquette surrounding an oak dining table. Dorsey layered these against a backdrop of hand-painted metallic paper on one wall and a work by local collage artist Lance Letscher on the other. His collected approach “is authentic to us,” muses the wife, who shared projects by Los Angeles luminaries Jake Arnold and Kelly Wearstler, as well as memories of Italy’s Amalfi Coast, during meetings. “That’s the energy we wanted—not to replicate it exactly, but to have Chad put his spin on it.” Adds the designer: “The combination of materials—wood, metal, textiles, plaster, paint—creates a rhythm and a language develops.”

While there’s certainly a mix that ties everything together, each space retains a unique character. For example, the family room, dubbed the “record room,” serves as a laid-back, conversational area with vintage pieces in keeping with a turntable. The kitchen and husband’s study both nod to the couple’s openness for color with moody, smoky greens on the walls and cabinetry, respectively. And the primary bedroom invites relaxation with an intimate seating area and warmer tones imparted by a wood-paneled alcove for the bed, an idea repeated around the couple’s bathroom tub with espresso-stained oak paneling. “I love our bedroom suite,” says the wife. “Every morning the shades go up and there’s that view—the first thing I see—and the bathroom seems like our very own spa.”

It’s this unexpected nature of things that makes the couple’s first house as newlyweds feel like a true home. “Spaces don’t have to be new and perfect,” Dorsey explains. “It’s really about the subtleties of the design and creating different experiences.”