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    On The Market

    Marked as teardown, now a treasure: Houston's only Frank Lloyd Wright house is a preservation beauty

    Barbara Kuntz
    Barbara Kuntz
    Jul 24, 2014 | 7:46 am

    Editor's Note: Houston, the surrounding areas and beyond are loaded with must-have houses for sale in all shapes, sizes and price ranges. In this continuing series, CultureMap snoops through some of the best and gives you the lowdown on what's hot on the market.

    The Houston-area's only Frank Lloyd Wright-designed house was once plagued with architectural and design interruptions as former owners painted over redwood walls, added distracting pineapple details and eventually put the property on the market as a teardown in the early 1990s.

    Preservationists stepped in, thankfully, as did the most recent owners. The Thaxton House, named after its first occupants who commissioned Wright, is once again an architectural gem for sale at $3,195,000.

    Walk through
    Owners enter the property, located at the end of the cul-de-sac at 12020 Tall Oaks St. in Bunker Hill, through a gated drive, revealing the 1.2-wooded acre lot. The large front yard keeps the home even more secluded, while a circular driveway welcomes with plenty of parking for guests.

    Even the cushions in the built-in sofa are actually parallelograms puzzled together. The fireplace is angled to face the living room, and is made for logs to burn upright.

    The original 2,000-square-foot structure is nestled beyond the trees. Owners walk in to immediately see Wright's signature design elements, including red-pigmented concrete floors, concrete block walls, walls of windows overlooking the patio and swimming pool and knotless redwood paneling on walls and ceilings. Built-in sofas and bookcases — more Wright techniques, these he employed to keep residents from changing room arrangements, are found throughout the home.

    As are angles.

    "The house is distinctive for being planned on a 30 degree-60 degree diagonal grid, rather than a 90-degree grid," Stephen Fox, architectural historian and a lecturer at the Rice School of Architecture explains in an email. "Wright felt like this 'reflexive geometry' - his term - provided for more open spaces than a conventional right-angled plan geometry."

    Even the cushions in the built-in sofa are actually parallelograms puzzled together. The fireplace is angled to face the living room, and is made for logs to burn upright. The dining table, attached to a wall, is a reproduction of the original dining table with irregular-shaped stools with cushions. Triangular skylights bring natural light into the kitchen.

    Two other rooms in the small abode were once bedrooms following the same architectural styling. And Wright must have had an interesting sense of humor, or was a gentleman fan of folly. He incorporated an elongated window in a bathroom as a jumping point into the swimming pool.

    "Most of Wright's houses, especially those built in the last 25 years of his practice, 1934-'59, are fairly small," Fox says. "The houses from the 1930s-'50s correspond to the house type Wright called 'Usonian' —Wright's term for 'American,' his ideal house for a middle-income American family. They tend to have expansive living areas, organized around a fireplace, but small bedrooms and baths."

    Big addition

    Beyond the original structure, preserved almost as a Wright museum in its intimate space, is the substantial annex that wraps around the back of the Wright house, touching it at either end but otherwise stepping back from it and creating an inner courtyard.

    The addition, which was completed in the 1990s, brings total square footage to more than 8,000, but is done in a most complementary fashion.

    The addition, which was completed in the 1990s by Kirksey Architecture for the most recent owners, brings total square footage to more than 8,000, but is done in a most complementary fashion. Intentionally not seamless, the three wings make nods to the famous architect with stained concrete floors cut in triangular patterns, walls of glass and wood paneling and accents in maple.

    Gallery-style hallways with high ceilings, exposed beams and glass walls take owners from the original home to a public wing with new kitchen, dining room and expansive living area to the children's wing lined with bedrooms to the master wing. Floor-to-ceiling windows open three sides of the house to views of the courtyard and backyard gardens from every room.

    All bedrooms include en suite baths, walk-in closets, spacious lofts and French doors leading outside. In total, the house has seven bedrooms and six and one-half baths.

    Step outside
    The scored concrete flooring continues to a deck, once a screened-in porch overlooking the swimming pool. The flooring here shows, as it does in the original house, where new and old construction meet. The swimming pool is very angular.

    Covered parking is available under a carport — a term Wright himself coined. As Wright is quoted to say, "A car is not a horse, and it doesn't need a barn."

    Square footage: 8,026 plus loft space

    Asking price: $3,195,000

    Listing agent: Karen Harberg, Martha Turner Sotheby's International Realty

    The Wright home is open for touring from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Thursday, July 24; private viewings can be arranged by contacting the agent.

    Welcome to 12020 Tall Oaks St., a Frank Lloyd Wright house sitting on about 1.2 wooded acres as a gated compound. The large front yard is surrounded by a circular driveway.

    On the Market 12020 Tall Oaks St. Frank Lloyd Wright house July 2014 front exterior
    Photo courtesy of © TK Images
    Welcome to 12020 Tall Oaks St., a Frank Lloyd Wright house sitting on about 1.2 wooded acres as a gated compound. The large front yard is surrounded by a circular driveway.
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    on the trail

    Celebrate spring's arrival at these 2 Houston garden tours

    Emily Cotton
    Mar 5, 2026 | 11:23 am
    Bayou Bend museum gardens
    Courtesy of Bayou Bend
    The tour includes Bayou Bend's impressive gardens.

    The Azalea Trail, one of Houston’s most enduring seasonal traditions, returns this weekend. Once an annual event, the now biennial tour is a do-not-miss affair offering the opportunity for Houstonians to experience some of the best gardens and architecture the city has to offer — all before the Bayou City gets too balmy. Additionally, the newly opened Ismaili Center will offer complimentary tours of their nine acres of gardens in conjunction with the Azalea Trail.

    Now in its 88th year, the River Oaks Garden Club’s Azalea Trail has long served as something of Houston’s unofficial kickoff to spring — that moment when azaleas, camellias, dogwoods, and early bulbs begin peaking across the city and residents head outdoors again. The event blends horticulture, history, architecture, and philanthropy into a weekend experience that consistently draws both dedicated gardeners and design-minded visitors from around the city and the region.

    “Throughout the 88-year history of the Azalea Trail, select homeowners have generously offered an intimate look at their beautifully-curated private home gardens. In 2026, Azalea Trail goers will be able to tour four private home gardens featuring unique, breathtaking designs,” Emily Bolin and Hilary Purcel, chairs of this year’s River Oaks Garden Club Azalea Trail, tell CultureMap.

    “Each location, which also includes Bayou Bend, Rienzi and the River Oaks Garden Club’s Forum, will offer an abundance of inspiration, including enticing planting combinations, creative concepts, emerging trends, and stunning floral displays. We hope to see everyone this weekend as we kick off the spring season in Houston.”

    This year’s Trail runs March 6-8 and includes access to seven gardens for $35, spanning four private residential landscapes in the Tanglewood and close-in Memorial areas plus the aforementioned established cultural sites including Bayou Bend, Rienzi and the River Oaks Garden Club’s own Forum of Civics garden.

    The private gardens — always a highlight — offer rare behind-the-gates access to curated residential landscapes showcasing planting combinations, emerging design ideas and seasonal floral displays that often influence Houston gardening trends. Meanwhile, the institutional stops provide historical context:

    Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens: a 1926 River Oaks estate, now stewarded by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and surrounded by formal gardens and natural woodland landscapes, including azaleas, camellias, redbuds, and seasonal bulb displays planted by Garden Club members. Also, it is their 60th anniversary this year (opened to the public on March 5, 1966).

    Rienzi: a former River Oaks residence turned MFAH house museum, where formal European-inspired gardens meet native Texas plantings.

    Forum of Civics: the Garden Club’s historic River Oaks area headquarters, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

    Importantly, Trail proceeds directly fund local beautification, conservation, and horticultural education efforts, including historic garden preservation and environmental programming across Houston.

    Tour the Ismaili Center

    Just minutes away, the newly opened Ismaili Center, Houston — already earning international architectural attention — will offer complimentary public tours on March 7 and 8 from 8 am to 4 pm. The Center’s landscape makes it a compelling add-on to an Azalea Trail itinerary.

    Designed by Thomas Woltz of Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects — also responsible for recent projects at Rice University, Rothko Chapel, and Memorial Park — the more than nine acres of gardens reinterpret historic Islamic garden traditions through a contemporary Texas lens.

    The design incorporates terraced lawns, shaded promenades, water features, and resilient plantings arranged as a symbolic ecological “transect of Texas,” moving from desert species to prairie and Gulf Coast plant communities. The landscape also doubles as environmental infrastructure, engineered to withstand major storm events while creating a calm, civic sanctuary overlooking Buffalo Bayou Park. Visitors that weekend can choose:

    • Full architectural/property tours
    • Focused garden introductions
    • Self-guided QR-enabled exploration

    Together, the Azalea Trail and the Ismaili Center present a compelling narrative about Houston’s garden culture — where historic private landscapes and philanthropic garden traditions intersect with a globally-influenced new civic landscape designed for reflection, dialogue and public access.

    The Azalea Trail will offer a free shuttle service between Rienzi and Bayou Bend. The locations of the four private homes on the tour will be sent via email with ticket purchase confirmations — street parking is available at all private home locations. The event will take place rain or shine, so keep an umbrella handy this weekend.

    Bayou Bend museum gardens

    Courtesy of Bayou Bend

    The tour includes Bayou Bend's impressive gardens.

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