Writing Archive
Mix Master | Dwell
T+L’s Definitive Guide to San Francisco | Travel + Leisure
Quito Parts | Dwell
Hariri & Hariri | Dwell
Yasmeen Lari | Dwell
A World Apart | Dwell
Hotel Lautner | Dwell
The Real Cost of Rip-Offs | Dwell
Hygge House | Dwell
Learning on the Job | SAAS in Focus
Off the Beaten Path | SAAS in Focus
Furniture Complex | GRAY
Good Neighbors | GRAY
Bringing it Home | GRAY
Finding Beauty | GRAY

All Together Now | Dwell
When Svetlin Krastev and Dessi Nikolova had their second child, they saw two options: Go broke buying a bigger apartment, or renovate their existing 620-square-foot home.

An Epic Plot | Dwell
Architect Steve Bull designed a high-impact, low-maintenance home for a pair of intrepid clients in Alaska, but that was only the beginning of the adventure.

Bless This Desk | Dwell
The right workspace can transform your creative life. Dwell puts six desks to the test.

Bright Young Things | Cultured
We spotlight three international design galleries—in Paris, Seoul, and Brussels—that are shaping the future of their fields.

Bringing it Home | GRAY
Legendary New York City–based architect and iconoclast Steven Holl pays tribute to the Northwest, the place where his obsession with light and space first took hold.

Captain Kangaroo | T: The New York Times Style Magazine
Australia’s answer to the Galapagos Islands makes a giant leap forward.

Check In, Check Out: Colony Palms Hotel, Palm Springs | The New York Times
The Colony Palms Hotel was built in 1936 by the Detroit mobster Al Wertheimer as a front for a brothel and gambling house. But despite its notorious past and a $16 million overhaul, the 56-room white-stucco hotel still resembles a motel on the outside.

Check In, Check Out: Hotel Saint Cecilia in Austin, Texas | The New York Times
Named after the patron saint of music, Hotel Saint Cecilia is already a favorite of big-name musicians who swing into town to play on the city’s countless stages.

Check In, Check Out: Seattle: Hotel 1000 | The New York Times
After surfing Hotel 1000’s website, which tallies the hotel’s many futuristic technologies (a tub that fills from the ceiling, infrared occupancy sensors), you may arrive at the hotel expecting a scene from the Jetsons. If so, the low-tech but stylish lobby will be a letdown. The hotel-of-the-future is actually behind the scenes.