Editor’s Letter: Renovations and Reinventions

Ideas and traditions from the past inspire the future in our annual look at the state of American design.

The homes in our annual American design issue all draw from history. Not the standard narrative, but one that’s real. It’s a story that comes out of the queer, Black, Indigenous, and other histories that have built truly great architecture in Dwell’s home country. It’s complicated and messy, but it’s more important than official traditions. It looks back. But it looks forward.

Photo: Brian W. Ferry

Some homes in this issue play with Gilded Age excess, like two townhomes in tony Sutton Square, an early-20th-century New York City enclave of exclusionary wealth. Renovating one—let alone two—may be an elite problem to tackle, but both homes contain ideas about preserving original buildings while updating them for contemporary life that could work in any historic home. One also contains stories about the unconventional households that have always existed in this country. Other homes have personal histories, like a cabin in the Adirondacks designed to pay homage to family and local traditions while carrying them forward in a structure that’s both simple and thoroughly considered, as designed by the emerging architecture firm Ideas of Order. Material honesty and formal clarity may be clichés, but they’re among the many values embodied by the building.

The couple play with their four-year-old, Ben, play in the townhome’s 1970s penthouse addition. Adrienne says it was the most difficult part of the project.

The couple play with their four-year-old, Ben, play in the townhome’s 1970s penthouse addition. Adrienne says it was the most difficult part of the project.

Photo: Brian W. Ferry

Does your house have a urinal? Mine doesn’t. But I can appreciate a couple’s update of a 2000s Fritz Haeg house in Los Angeles that preserves that quirk and many of the others original to the structure in an effort to make sure the structure remains the “very gay house” that the architect originally built.

Photo: Will Pippin

See the full story on Dwell.com: Editor’s Letter: Renovations and Reinventions
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