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    Guide to Round Top

    The insider's guide to Round Top Antique Week's hidden treasures

    Sarah Ellison Lewis
    Mar 30, 2018 | 9:15 am
    Marburger tents at Round Top
    Marburger Farm runs March 27-31.
    Photo by Sarah Ellison Lewis

    I was just a young girl when my mother started dragging me alongside her adventures as a Texas primitive antiques dealer at Round Top, Texas. Several decades later, I still can’t stand to miss the event, as it continues to grow and be a tradition for dealers and pickers across the U.S. My fashion market styling and photography career has taken me to Paris and New York City and back, but nothing inspires me more than treasure hunting every spring and fall in Round Top.

    This Spring Antique Week is April 2-7. The main action occurs between Round Top and Warrenton, Texas, a five-mile stretch of 60-plus fields about halfway between Austin and Houston. Below, I’ve combined my personal picks with event favorites, whether you’re on a budget, looking to decorate your dream home, or just searching for a touch of vintage.

    Before you go
    The weather varies, and it’s usually rain or shine, so dress for it (hat, sunscreen, comfy shoes), and bring cash. ATM machines are hard to trek to, and though a lot of vendors take Square and other Apple point-of-sale systems, they are dependent upon wireless which is hit or miss. Most vendors are from out of town and won’t take a check, so cash makes negotiating more likely. Traffic can also be at a standstill during rush hour, so starting later or earlier is recommended, even though most fields and booths open around 9 am. Porta-potties are parked along the way, so take advantage when you pass one. Most restaurants and buildings have bathrooms — look for them when you duck inside.

    If you only have one day
    Marburger Farm, March 27-31, is the week before Antique Week and is a continued favorite of design experts and collectors, with 350-plus vendors curated with amazing art, furniture, and sculptures, under several tents and barns. Vendors like Michelle Billette comb the globe and bring curations to us first; she specializes in little-known but fabulous unframed contemporary art and unique fine jewelry. The $10 admission includes parking. There are a few outdoor cafes in Marburger, with nice selections, seating, and the wait is never long. Parking is well-organized and close to the entrance.

    If you’re on a budget
    You’ll find free parking at most fields along FM 237, just get there early to snag a spot not too far out of the way. Most vendors nestle together in paths for miles from field to field and don’t require admission. There are also fairground-style food vendors, with some grab-and-go bites like corn dogs and tacos.

    For music festival and foodie artisans
    Elton Rains, an Airstream refurbisher and former Ralph Lauren stylist, is set up with his signature chambray and denim collections at Sheila Youngblood’s Rancho Pillow Mercado. The 20-acre compound includes four main lodges and campsites turned Feast to Field events — two main all-inclusive meals, which sell out early — but you can see the compound and shop the mercado anytime during the week, including jewelry and bespoke leather by Nashville’s Atelier Savas inside the main house.

    If you’re DIY’ing industrial chic spaces
    Architectural salvage, statues, signage — it’s all in one place at both Excess fields. With vendors from all over the world and products from all corners of the globe, you’ll have that gotta-have-it moment a dozen times. Catering is by the 145 Sisters in both fields, with great coffee, tacos, sandwiches, and salads.

    If you love rare and European
    The Big Red Barn (and adjacent Continental Tent) is celebrating this year with “50 Years of Fabulous,” music, nibbles, drinks, and late shopping. It is curated, air-conditioned, and has great parking — it's a destination and worth the trek. Many of the pieces aren’t just unique, they’re also rare, so it has more of a gallery and museum feel than a treasure hunt.

    The best of the best
    Market Hill's 130,000-square-foot warehouse and studio are worth the time if you’re looking for very special pieces. With a few dozen vendors and most of the work done for you, it’s a top-notch design collective.

    Mark Massey’s The Compound has set the bar when it comes to merging the studio and showroom appeal, hosting events around curated wares in multiple spaces. His 57-acre event and entertainment development is bookended by the seasoned expertise of Kathy Johnston, as he’s also owner of Henkel Square and Rummel Square, destination showroom shows. Check out The Compound’s Savory Southern Picnic on April 4.

    Take a load off
    Open March 30-April 7, Zapp Hall, an old dance hall in Warrenton, is surrounded by outside vendors. It's also located next to Royer’s at Zapp Hall, a great place to grab a good lunch (or a beer). Enjoy a casual meal with friends at one of the picnic tables or stick around to catch live music every night. The Junk Gypsy Junk-o-Rama annual prom is Thursday, April 5, a free homecoming of sorts, where guests turn up their outfits and music for a celebration.

    If you love to brown bag it
    The Round Top Mercantile is a huge Shell gas station in Round Top. The local grocery store, deli, and coffee shop also sells hardware and general-store goods. It’s a great first stop before hitting the shows.

    Last stop: wine
    If 5 o’clock is wine o’clock, hit Prost wine bar, which offers a great wine and cheese selection in an adorable rock house in downtown Round Top.

    Overnight stays
    The Vintage Round Top has reinvented modern vintage design with blog-worthy homes available for rent. The spaces are an Insta-dream, and they host great events and meetings led by owners Paige and Smoot Hull.

    The Frenchie Round Top, a partnership of Katy Bader and Kristin Light, just opened. There’s a 19th-century main house, two farm buildings, and other outposts like a potting shed turned wine bar.

    Also brand-new, FlopHouze is the second arm of Pieces of the Past Architectural Salvage owner Matt White and team. With refurbished shipping containers turned into amazing hotel houses, it's nice to at least peek inside and see how adorable shipping container living can be, but staying there is definitely memorable. If you’re thinking of your own tiny home, they can make it for you, and they ship all over the world from their warehouse/shop next door.

    Gyspyville Wander Inn is the newest adventure for famed Junk Gypsy locals Jolie and Amie Sikes, an eight-suite guest house next to their headquarters.

    Rancho Pillow Mercado.

    Rancho Pillow Mercado Round Top
    Photo by Sarah Ellison Lewis
    Rancho Pillow Mercado.
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    la dolce vita

    How a Houston designer transformed an Uptown hotel into an Italian escape

    Emily Cotton
    Jun 5, 2026 | 1:07 pm
    Hotel Granduca
    Photo by Julie Soefer
    Bespoke furnishings blend seamlessly with the antiques throughout.

    The Hotel Granduca — with its posh Uptown Park address, walled-grounds, and recently-refreshed interiors — has quietly pulled a fast one on Houstonians. While heads have been tilted toward the skyline’s mammoth new developments, the six-story Hotel Granduca has climbed the ranks of the trendiest boutique hotels around town for locals to just, well, be.

    The dark-and-heavy “Texas Tuscan” architecture and decor of the hotel’s earlier days have been replaced with bright interiors, a greenhouse, library, and a European garden terrace more in rhythm with actual Italian villa aesthetics. In addition to the in-house restaurant Remi, additions such as programming like Mahjong Mondays, themed brunches, local boutique pop-ups, live music performances, daily afternoon social hours, and a newly-minted preferred partnership with Biologique Recherché and Evolve Salon have made it impossible to deny the hotel’s reignited appeal. On any given day, someone in the group chat is headed to “The Granduca.”

    "Hotel Granduca presented a unique opportunity to reimagine what boutique luxury hospitality can look like in Houston," said Thomas Duncan, managing director of Transwestern Hospitality Group. “Hospitality should tell the story of the city it calls home, and our continued commitment to enhancing the property reflects a desire to create an experience that authentically captures Houston's warmth, diversity, and quiet sophistication. We are proud to offer a more intimate and personalized expression of luxury that is distinctly different from anything else available in Houston today."

    Originally opened in 2006, Houston’s only all-suite hotel was ready for a bit of a spa day of its own. Houston-based luxury designer Kara Childress — known for her elegant designs and one-of-a-kind antique finds — was picked by Transwestern for this grand reimagining. The newly-completed phase I of the renovation includes the lobby, library, Remi and Bar Remi, the garden courtyard, and over 5,000-square-feet of event spaces. The 141 suites will be rejuvenated as part of phase II.

    “Uptown Park is such a great, easy-to-get-to neighborhood with so many shops, and the hotel was in such need of a facelift,” explains Childress. “My hope was to make it more residential, and not so commercial like some big hotels. I think it feels good. I’m trying to transport you and make you feel like you’re in a beautiful old villa. These [Italian] families take so much pride in their homes. They never tear anything down and start over, they just keep adding to it.”

    Textural layering is something Childress effortlessly does to perfection. From the bones of the building to finishing with the placement of an 18th-century bibliothèque behind the check-in desk, the new design provides a naturally-formulated progression of the eye that suggests to the viewer that the hotel has been this way all along — which is exactly the point.

    Childress intends for the design to transport guests to an old Italian palazzo or monastery. Ceilings were raised and a pair of east-west doors was updated to a contemporary steel and glass combination, allowing the once dark interior space to become vibrant. Save for the doors, the space moves backwards in time. Designer-favorite Segreto Finishes replaced faux plaster paint techniques with genuine lime plaster throughout — including the elevators. Faux-limestone-printed porcelain floor tiles were replaced with genuine limestone, and 100-year-old pine floors reclaimed from a stable and installed in the restaurant all grant the hotel the genuine authenticity it had needed all along.

    “We brought in a lot of authentic materials. We just gave the bones back to the building; that added a lot of character,” says Childress. “When you go to Italy, all of those hotels have been renovated from beautiful old buildings that all have that gorgeous architecture and they’re so outstanding. It’s all new, but it actually feels like it’s been there forever, because it’s all old materials. And that’s what I was hoping for. I didn’t want it to be shiny and brand new; it feels like it’s been there for a long time and it’s not too precious. The more you use and enjoy it actually adds to the age, and it just feels better.”

    Bespoke furnishings blend seamlessly with the antiques throughout. A contemporary mohair sofa is fast friends with an 18th-century French walnut buffet with unlacquered brass hardware. A lobby-centered tête-à-tête dressed in a plush, tiger’s stripe silk velvet by Scalamandré, a mid-17th-century walnut-paneled cassapanca chest, and 19th-century large Louis Philippe mirror mix materials, patinas, and eras to fall perfectly into place as a beacon of Contemporary Classicism.

    While the overall color story in the lobby is a wash of natural limestone and plaster tones, Childress introduces hints of terra-cotta and Mediterranean-inspired teal and blues, followed by a full commitment to color in both the more communal restaurant and library spaces.

    “I want the eye to look outside and not get arrested in the entry. I used teal and terra-cotta because they lean into Tuscan colors, but I really leaned heavily into the ones in the bar,” explains Childress. “Those colors are so warm and rich. We’re wanting it to be a hotel that — obviously — people come and stay when they’re from out of town, but also just locals. It’s a great place for a burger, and the breakfast is incredible.”

    Directly across from Remi and Bar Remi is the equally-moody library. A marble fireplace, Persian rugs, a c.1860 black and burl walnut Italian mirror, oil paintings, accessories, and hundreds of leather-bound books populate the space, while seating for groups and individuals makes it the perfect place to enjoy a coffee and check emails or share cocktails and stories with friends and family.

    Just outside, the garden courtyard serves as an al fresco dining and lounge space. The once-exposed pool fencing has been cleverly concealed with tall hedgerows that play as a backdrop to a large 18th-century horse trough repurposed into a lovely fountain. “Outdoor terrace dining is such a treat to be able to have in Houston, and that’s a really fun place to be when they have live music,” adds Childress.

    The new art collection at Hotel Granduca is a mix of large-scale antique painted canvases — like the depiction of cranes in the lobby and the 18th-century Dutch painted panels behind the front desk — mixed with fun, over-the-top works by Scottish-born philanthropist and photographer David Yarrow speckled around the property. The black and white photos were chosen by Childress — from Yarrow’s La Dolce Vita series — for their playful narratives and mix of sensibilities. With names like “Bull Rider,” “The Last Supper in Texas,” and “Cowgirl,” it’s easy to see the appeal for a hotel in Houston.

    “They’re all black and white, and they have a vintage feel to them, and it’s a little bit Italian and a little bit Texan,” explains Childress. “I’m kind of combining two cultures: Texas, which we are so proud of; and Italy, which we all love. They’re both friendly and convivial, and ‘nobody meets a stranger,’ which I love. So we tried to weave those two together.”

    The pièce de résistance lies within the belly of Hotel Granduca. A short journey through a hallway opens up to the elevator lobby and breathtaking plaster mural by Segreto Finishes. Floor-to-ceiling and wall-to-wall, this incredible piece reads sculptural more than anything — imagine a frieze extended down an entire wall. Childress worked with the team at Segreto to design a piece that is distinctly Texan. A large live oak tree (complete with a squirrel and snake) branches out over native flora and fauna, an armadillo, deer, birds, and even a windmill. This piece is absolutely worth seeking out when visiting the hotel.

    Overall, the reimagined Hotel Granduca is a testament to how excellent design, hospitality, and thoughtful partnerships and programming can be positively transformative. So much so that a handful of live-in residents partake of the available long-term rental options. As mentioned previously, the hotel doesn’t have an on-site spa, but the new partnership with Biologique Recherché makes for an easy spa day, with full concierge-driven appointments and hotel car service.

    Whether visiting from out of town or just down the street, settle in for the day, night, or even month. There is always something to do at Hotel Granduca. With the FIFA World Cup beginning soon, the hotel will offer an exclusive viewing lounge for all Houston-hosted matches, themed cocktails inspired by competing nations, and complimentary country-inspired bites for the first hour of each match.

    Houston-hosted World Cup Match Dates:

    • June 14 | Germany vs. Curaçao | 12 pm
    • June 17 | Portugal vs. Congo DR | 12 pm
    • June 20 | Netherlands vs. Sweden | 12 pm
    • June 23 | Portugal vs. Uzbekistan | 12 pm
    • June 26 | Cabo Verde vs. Saudi Arabia | 7 pm
    • June 29 | Round of 32 | 12 pm
    • July 4 | Round of 16 | 12 pm

    Hotel Granduca

    Photo by Julie Soefer

    Bespoke furnishings blend seamlessly with the antiques throughout.

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