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A Texas Empty Nester Home and Studio With Room for Family, Too

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Design

A Texas Empty Nester Home and Studio With Room for Family, Too

A renowned residential designer takes on the task of creating his next home, and the result is both beautiful and functional


By Larry W. Garnett, FAIBD December 6, 2022
Larry Garnett's design for his Texas Home and studio
The extra-wide street frontage allowed space for a detached Studio, while a gently sloping walkway to the home’s raised front porch offers an “access-friendly” entrance. Stone window headers, low-profile gutters, and slivers of tapered stone just below the roofline are small but impactful details in this Arts and Crafts–inspired design. | Photos: Virtuance
This article first appeared in the November/December 2022 issue of Pro Builder.

As a residential designer, I’ve learned that creating designs for homeowners can be both challenging and gratifying. My priority has always been to focus on the client’s desires and personal tastes, and I constantly remind myself that my task is to translate their needs and wants into a functional, well-proportioned home that enhances their daily lives. In essence, my job is to help them achieve their vision.

When my wife and I decided it was time to resize our living condition, I recalled the old adage, “A physician who treats himself has a fool for a patient.” But I quickly discarded that wisdom and began to consider I might finally create my own vision for our lives.

In many ways, my wife of 50 years and I fit the description of a typical Baby Boomer couple: three grown children, eight grandkids, and a desire to downsize. These facts offered at least a starting point for our new home’s overall design and functionality.


PROJECT SPECS

Location: Old Mill Crossing, Granbury, Texas

Builder: Coker & Company, Granbury

Size: 2,875 sf (two levels + 157 sf detached Studio)

Beds:Baths: 4

Photos: Virtuance


Site plan for Larry Garnett's Texas home

 

Floor plan for Larry Garnett's Texas home

The Design Brief: Where and Why

Old Mill Crossing, a quaint neighborhood of 27 historically inspired residences, provided the setting for our new home. Located two blocks from a vibrant historical town square in Granbury, Texas, it’s a 5-minute stroll to restaurants, shops, hotels, and a beach-front lake.

The typical 70-foot-by-110-foot lot size in this neighborhood doesn’t provide a great deal of space for homes ranging from 1,800 to 3,600 square feet. Having previously designed the majority of the neighboring residences for clients with similar circumstances to our own, I knew we needed to have as much living area on the first level of our home as possible.

Although my wife is retired and I’m headed in that direction, too, we each wanted a space to pursue our personal interests. A former teacher, my wife spends time studying family genealogy, while I wanted to retain a few books in a right-sized library/study.

Our wish list continued with her desire to have a dining area large enough for our entire family (all 18 of us!), while I imagined a cozy living room with an adjacent screened porch for outdoor living. Like most of our neighbors (and a large number of all Boomer clients), we insisted on an overall design that minimizes maintenance.

The kitchen in Larry Garnett's Texas home
An 18-inch-thick stone wall divides the kitchen and living room from the staircase and entry/dining area, providing a sense of permanence and continuity. A “secret” walk-in pantry behind the two doors to the right of the refrigerator is a clever and functional feature that doesn’t intrude on the kitchen’s overall layout or aesthetic.
Screened porch in Larry Garnett's Texas home
Both of the east-facing screened dining and living porches provide opportunities for outdoor living almost year-round in the often warm, usually dry north Texas climate. Raised above the side courtyard, with access via a shallow porch and a wide set of stairs, the spaces inspire hours of comfortable dining and conversation—or secluded private time—almost every afternoon and evening.
Primary bedroom in Larry Garnett's Texas home
The primary bedroom features a textured accent wall built from the same reclaimed brick used for the site’s perimeter wall and for the porches (above). A sloped ceiling achieves ideal proportion and delivers some dimension while framing one of three windows, one of which peeks into the screened porch from a cozy alcove to steal some daylight. While it is the only formal bedroom in the house, other rooms offer wall beds, sofa beds, and private or semi-private bathrooms to accommodate overnight guests.

RELATED


Unique Home Details

After several discussions and concept sketches, we decided to take advantage of the unusual shape and sloping topography of our cul-de-sac corner lot. Early design studies indicated we could create a raised front porch using what is essentially a concrete foundation with stem walls.

This sloping lot also had an extended small strip of frontage, which inspired the side courtyard and detached 157-square-foot stone-built Studio (see top image, opposite page). Influenced by the area’s local architectural history and an appreciation for Arts and Crafts style, I knew it had the potential to become a unique home and setting.

Although selecting a builder can be difficult, I’m quite fortunate to have become friends with local builder Brad Coker, as we’ve worked on a number of historically inspired residential projects together over the past 15 years. Our shared passion for detail and quality made Coker & Company the obvious choice for our home.

Embracing the history of the property, the detached Studio was intentionally designed to look like a 100-plus-year-old farm out-building. Constructed with massive stones individually selected by a personal friend from the banks of the Paluxy River and intricately set by a local stonemason, many of the larger boulders required heavy equipment for their placement.

The tapered base of the Studio and the main house are a nod to Charles and Henry Greene, preeminent Arts and Crafts architects known for their carefully proportioned and tapered stone façades in the early 1900s. Bricks salvaged from old buildings in Kansas City, Kan., clad the screened dining and living areas overlooking the courtyard. This same brick laid with an over-grout technique also forms the privacy fence and an accent wall in the primary bedroom.

Exterior of studio in Larry Garnett's Texas home
Across the side courtyard from the home’s screened porch is a detached Studio. Its 30-inch-deep stone base intersects with the reclaimed brick perimeter wall. Landscaping native to the warm Texas climate requires a minimal amount of water, as do the vegetables selected for an adjacent raised planter.
Studio interior at Larry Garnett's Texas home
The Studio’s interior is a tight 157 square feet, but it lives bigger thanks to natural light on two sides (including a glass-framed door). Built-ins provide efficient, stylish storage, while a separate mini-split heating and cooling unit keeps the space comfortable at an affordable cost.

Our initial insistence on ensuring there was “no wasted living space” led to the home having just one dedicated bedroom. That being said, there are three opportunities to accommodate overnight guests: built-in wall beds (aka Murphy beds) were installed in my wife’s workroom and in my library, while a queen-size sofa bed converts the second-level loft space into a secluded suite complete with a private bath. 

 

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