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Team Scores Points with Hill Country Design
By Kevin Phinney
Special Sections Writer, Austin-American Statesman
Photography by Clay Walls.
(Click on any image to view an enlargement)If designer Francois Levy knows anything, it's how to adapt. Take, for example, the Northwest Austin home he and Mark Winford have designed as part of the architectural firm known as Studio Mosaic. Their first sketches have been praised, approved, revised, improvised upon and altered enough times that, for a lesser talent, there might be little of the original design remaining.
"That's what makes it interesting to me," says Levy. "I like to work in a collaborative environment. Don't get me wrong; it would probably drive some people crazy. I know that to do this work well, you have to have a certain amount of ego. But it also helps to recognize the other person may actually have a better idea. "
Unlike most designers, Levy works on every project in collaboration with Winford. The results are complementary, highly creative and utterly unique.
We're like Lennon and McCartney," Levy says with a grin, "except that they occasionally did things by themselves when they were partners. We create each design together and it's a real back-and-forth kind of thing. Ultimately, though, we're both always pleased with the results."
The home in the shadow of Mt. Bonnell is no exception. Strolling the property, Levy points to an other home nearby that sits parallel to the horizon-atop a huge concrete slab to keep it Ievel on the sloping hillside. "There's nothing wrong with the house per se," he says, shrugging, "except that it doesn't take the topography into consideration at all. We tried to be responsive to the landscape, and you can see how differently this plan has come together."
"We also decided to push the house to the far side of lot so that instead of having a tiny yard surrounding the house, there would be more room for landscaping on one side."
The walkway to the home is overlooked by an entry tower of concrete block slurried over with mortar, which closely resembles limestone. A decorative cedar pattern provides an open-air roof to the structure, offering more shade than protection from the elements. The remaining exterior is comprised of stucco and wrought iron accents, and sheet metal roofing.
Through the gate, Levy gestures at the large windows and cascading steps that lead down to the front door.
"Light is problematic in Texas, because it brings so much heat with it," he says. "So we've sheltered the home from direct sunlight and yet it still looks so open that you don't feel claustrophobic."
The walkway yields to a series of larger landings, until at the bottom, there's room for outdoor tables and chairs to entertain in relative privacy.
"Since the buyer signed on early in the process, there are elements here that neither Mark nor I had in mind at first; things that weren't the builders' ideas either," Levy says. "And I believe that adds to the overall flavor of the place."
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