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    hail britannia

    Catching up with Houston's new British Consul-General and top UK designer

    Emily Cotton
    Nov 14, 2025 | 4:14 pm

    British aesthetics and sensibilities have recently been front-and-center in everything from sartorial choices to residential design. From Cottagecore to Cluttercore, Houston has embraced it all.

    Recently, far more than British aesthetics have sailed up the bayou. Between a newly-appointed Consul General, details about the residence’s secret art gallery and annual Winston Churchill birthday bash, to a book tour by veteran interior designer and Churchill descendant Lady Henrietta Spencer-Churchill, there has been a lot.

    A home in River Oaks, which is sometimes known to project the Union Jack upon its classic white façade, has been home to the British Consul General since the building’s purchase in 1963. The nearly 4,500-square-foot manse dates back to 1948 (when it was valued at $11,380!), but with the diligent stewardship of the Brits, one can hardly notice its age.

    Beginning in September of this year, the residence has been inhabited by Keith Scott, the current Consul General (which has overall responsibility for leading the UK’s engagement in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana, and New Mexico) and acts as a meeting and event space as well as housing a rotating first floor art exhibition curated by Yvonamor Palix of Gallery Artique in the Heights.

    “I’m so very excited to be in Houston,” says Scott of his new assignment. “When I was growing up in Aberdeen, a lot of my friends ended up in the oil industry and came to Houston. And there has always been a big, big exchange of people in Houston and Aberdeen, so it was always in the back of my mind as a place to come and visit.”

    Scott admits that being in the residence makes the old adage true — everything is bigger in Texas. “This house is huge, the driving is huge, the businesses are huge. I was proud, when I had to go to the UK embassy in Washington, to wear my Texas pin badge, and see the number of staff who jumped up from their chairs and were shouting: ‘Republic of Texas!’ It was really good to get that sense of where Texas sits in the U.S., and all these stats about Texas — we’re the eighth biggest GDP in the world. They keep me busy, and I’m looking forward to more of this.”

    One thing Scott wasn’t quite expecting of his new home is that almost the entire first floor is an art gallery. For nearly 15 years, international art curator and gallerist Yvonamor Palix has been at the helm of curating works for both the British, French, and Mexican residences — open for exploration and enjoyment by all invited guests.

    “I am the daughter of a career diplomat who loves art,” says Palix. “It was my parents’ influence that took me to discover this amazing field of work on an international level — Paris, Mexico City and then Houston. I have been curating in diplomatic venues for much of my career. Perhaps it is because art is a conversation starter, or it brings people together and creates unique experiences.”

    Current artists on view — by vetted appointments by Palix and residence staff — include Ruth Gervich, Jane Liang, Duncan Wylie, Alex Gutierrez, Pep Guerrero, Alicia Paz, Karine Parker, Lesley Bodzy, Cha DAE-Duck, and Claire Basler.

    British designer sounds off

    Most recently, the residence hosted an invite-only soirée to commemorate the birthday of Winston Churchill, while simultaneously operating as an intimate de facto tour stop for a new book written by his relative, Lady Henrietta Spencer-Churchill, about his birthplace (if interested in the somewhat complicated family tree — buy the book).

    Blenheim: 300 Years of Life in a Palace, published by Rizzoli, is Spencer-Churchill’s 12th book. While her previous books have all been written strictly on interior design, this book is a heritage project more for her family than anything else. CultureMap sat down with Spencer-Churchill for a chat about her new book, her design career, tips on how to curate a British aesthetic, and why she thinks social media is giving interior design a bad name.

    “I did this [book] as a legacy for my family home,” Spencer-Churchill begins. “I didn’t do anything to be business-related; it’s just a legacy for our family home — people, architecture, interiors, the park and garden, lifestyle, logistics, and the future.”

    As a 45-year interior design veteran, with a shop in Woodstock, where Blenheim Palace is located, and her wildly-successful Spencer-Churchill Design firm, the great-granddaughter of Consuelo Vanderbilt is slowing down just enough to spill the proverbial tea.

    With a specialty in restoring listed (i.e., historically-protected) buildings and old houses, especially Georgian-era architecture, Spencer-Churchill appreciates the opportunity to stretch her imagination with a new-build project from time to time.

    “In a funny way, it gives you a chance to be more creative, because you’re putting in the features,” she explains. “The more challenging ones are the ones you start from scratch, especially because listed buildings have so many restrictions. I love the creativity of putting in the architectural features — picking the fireplace, picking the trim, picking the plaster work, all of that sort of thing. I think that’s what adds all of the character to a room.”

    As for tips for getting that effortless, just-so look? “I always want to start with the bones, and make sure that’s right,” says Spencer-Churchill. “Then, from that, you build it up with the layers — the furniture, the pictures, the furnishings, etc. I use a lot of antiques in my business, because, largely, they give a lot of character; secondly, they are so much better made; and thirdly, they are much cheaper than what’s available new.”

    Auctions are where Spencer-Churchill suggests shoppers look for the best deals on quality antiques: “In England, a lot of the old antique shops have disappeared. They just don’t have enough business, and rates and rents, and everything are so high — so I think that’s why now a lot of people are buying at auction.”

    When asked about social media trends involving interior design, Spencer-Churchill admits that it’s a bit of a double-edged sword: “I use the internet as much as anyone else does now — you have to.” She will use Pinterest for research purposes (relatable!), but thinks that “designers” who chase trends for likes on social platforms are contributing to problematic practices.

    “There are a lot of designers who are really just decorators. I think this is why I get quite negative about Instagram and things like that, because it’s easy for someone to photograph something, put it on Instagram, and say ‘Look at this, look at that!’ It slightly drives me mad. And I think, in a sense, it gives the industry a bit of a bad name—that’s why I’ve gotten a little bit annoyed.”

    At the end of the day, good design is something that doesn’t shout someone else’s tastes, it’s about taking what the homeowner loves, and making it theirs, something that Spencer-Churchill prides herself on.

    “I’m one of those designers where I don’t put my stamp on a project. I very much try to reflect the client, and I’m passionate about the architecture and details. I don’t have an ego, or my ego is that I’ve done a really good job and the client is happy — it’s on budget, it’s on time. I don’t have to live with the decor. There is definitely a lot of stuff I’ve done that I wouldn’t want to live with myself, but that’s fine — you know?”

    British Consul General home Houston

    Courtesy of the British Consulate-General

    The garden includes a pergola that's perfect for an Instagram moment.

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    And the winners are...

    Preservation Houston names 16 winners of 2026 Good Brick Awards

    Emily Cotton
    Jan 30, 2026 | 1:40 pm
    Preservation Houston 2026 Good Brick Awards River Oaks Theatre
    Photo by Corey Watson
    The River Oaks Theatre reopened in 2024.

    The best time of year for Houston preservation lovers has finally arrived! Preservation Houston has announced their 2026 Good Brick Award recipients. This year, some very familiar public-facing properties are getting their flowers, including The Houston Zoo, an adaptive reuse project at a historic hospital, the historic River Oaks Theater, and the wildly-well-received Marlene Inn and Bar Madonna.

    Preservation Houston will present these coveted awards during their annual Cornerstone Dinner taking place Friday, February 27th, celebrating adaptive reuse projects, legacy businesses, and community-led preservation efforts that are keeping Houston’s cultural identity intact amid rapid development.

    Since 1979, the Good Brick Awards have recognized outstanding contributions to the preservation, restoration, and enhancement of Houston and Harris County’s architectural and cultural heritage. The awards honor individuals, organizations, and projects that have made a significant and lasting impact on protecting historic resources.

    Each year’s winners represent a wide range of preservation efforts, including restoration of historic homes and buildings, adaptive reuse of commercial and institutional spaces, protection of cultural landmarks, publications, documentaries, and educational initiatives, and craftspeople, preservation leaders, and legacy businesses across Houston and Harris County.

    “The Good Brick Awards bring public attention to the people and projects shaping Houston’s historic landscape,” says Jennifer Kapral, Executive Director of Preservation Houston. “By sharing these stories, we hope to inspire broader appreciation for the role preservation plays in strengthening our city’s identity and future.”

    As always, award nominations are open to the public, and recipients are selected by an independent jury of preservation experts. Along with spotlighting each winner, CultureMap has asked each recipient for a fun fact about their property or project(s). Be sure to keep an eye out for some of these local gems when the popular Good Brick Tour returns this fall.

    Residential

    Lee Ann and James Badum for the restoration of the Jahn House (c.1935) in Southside Place.
    A true love letter to Southside Place’s architectural roots, the restoration of 3767 University Boulevard preserves one of the neighborhood’s rare 1930s Crane Ready-Cut bungalows. Thoughtfully updated for modern living, the home retains its original floor plan, roofline, and historic details while incorporating salvaged materials, custom millwork, and period-appropriate finishes, proving historic preservation and contemporary life can beautifully coexist.

    Fun Fact: During demolition, original wallpaper was uncovered throughout the house, and select samples were framed and preserved as artifacts.

    Donna and Jim Bennett for the restoration of the Lund House (c.1896) and the Modern Print Shop (1927) in the Houston Heights.
    This circa-1898 Queen Anne home and former 1927 print shop were thoughtfully preserved and reimagined as a connected residential retreat in the Houston Heights. By restoring original windows, trim, and structure and adapting the historic print shop into a hobby woodworking shop, the project safeguards two distinctive buildings while honoring the area’s architectural legacy and creative spirit.

    Fun Fact: The homeowners personally restored all 321 steel awning windowpanes in the former print shop, each one cleaned, reglazed, and repainted to working condition.

    Jennifer and Jarrett Ellzey for the restoration of the S.I. Morris House (1952) in Waverly Court.
    Designed in 1952 by prominent Houston architect S.I. Morris, Jr., 2 Waverly Court is a midcentury modern landmark organized around a series of intimate interior garden courts. This thoughtful restoration removed incompatible later additions and returned the home to its original massing, materials, and rhythm, while discreetly adapting it for contemporary family life. The result honors Morris’ restrained modern vision and secures the home’s longevity as a protected City of Houston landmark.

    Fun Fact: Each major room opens onto its own private garden court, creating a lush, inward-facing layout that feels far more expansive than the home’s modest footprint.

    Fan and Peter Morris for stewardship of the Carpenter House (1959, Lucian Hood) in Cherokee Place.
    Built in 1959 and designed by noted Texas architect Lucian T. Hood, Jr., 5330 Mandell Street is a quintessential expression of Houston’s midcentury ranchero style. Over three decades of stewardship, the homeowners focused on careful repair, thoughtful updates, and landscape restoration, embracing the home’s original plan, materials, and indoor-outdoor ethos while allowing it to evolve gracefully with family life.

    Fun Fact: Instead of replacing the home’s famously pink kitchen tile, the owners leaned into it, following designer Herbert Wells’s advice to “out-pink the pink” with a bold three-tone palette that has become a beloved signature.

    Jen and Vinod Pathrose for an addition to their bungalow (1920) in Cherryhurst.
    This imaginative addition to a 1920 Cherryhurst bungalow reimagines preservation through light, color, and landscape. Designed as a conservatory that links old and new, the project preserves the original home’s integrity while introducing a contemporary two-story addition that remains visually deferential from the street. The result is a joyful, highly personal space that celebrates craft, ecology, and the evolving life of a historic home.

    Fun Fact: The sculptural stair railing was inspired by cut paper art and fabricated using CNC technology, repeating a geometric floral pattern found throughout the home.

    Holly and Gregory Suellentrop for the renovation of the Klunkert Farmhouse (c. 1875) in Woodland Heights.
    Originally built between 1875 and 1900, this former farmhouse has lived many lives, but this restoration carefully untangled decades of piecemeal changes to reveal the home’s original scale, proportions, and character. By restoring historic room volumes, reestablishing the central hall, and adding a discreet rear addition, the project honors the house’s layered history while creating a flexible, light-filled family home built to last another century.

    Fun Fact: During renovation, the team uncovered original ceilings measuring 10 feet, 6 inches high,hidden for years beneath dropped ceilings, dramatically transforming the home’s sense of space.

    Commercial and Institutional

    Lily Barfield for the adaptive reuse of the Stewart House (1910, George H. Fruehling) in the Avondale East Historic District as The Marlene.
    Once a private residence, the John S. Stewart House has been thoughtfully repurposed into The Marlene, a boutique inn and cocktail bar that opens a historic Avondale landmark to the public. Built in 1910 –1911, the Neoclassical home’s original floors, millwork, and Ionic-columned porch were carefully preserved while adapting the space for modern hospitality and accessibility, proving that historic integrity and contemporary use can coexist beautifully.

    Fun fact: The project secured Protected Landmark designation with the City of Houston, ensuring the house’s preservation long after its transformation into a public-facing space.

    Culinary Khancepts for the rehabilitation of the River Oaks Theatre (1939, Pettigrew & Worley).
    Houston’s oldest operating suburban movie theater has reopened its doors. Originally built in 1939, River Oaks Theatre was meticulously restored to highlight its Streamline Moderne design, from its neon boomerang marquee and terrazzo floors to sculptural bas-relief artwork by Buck Wynn Jr. The revived space once again serves the community with film screenings, live performances, and cultural programming.

    Fun fact: The theatre was officially listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2024, the same year it reopened to the public.

    Houston Zoo for the restoration of its Reflection Pool and Colonnades (1950, Hare & Hare with Irving R. Klein and Associates).
    A beloved entryway to the Houston Zoo for generations, the historic Reflection Pool and Colonnades have been carefully rehabilitated to restore their original character while addressing decades of structural wear. The project removed non-historic finishes, repaired concrete and limestone elements, upgraded drainage and lighting, and returned the colonnades to their understated modernist beauty, all while honoring the site’s role as a civic gathering place.

    Fun fact: The Reflection Pool was created in the late 1940s by combining three smaller pools into one unified basin, forming the iconic promenade visitors experience today.

    Scarlet Capital for the rehabilitation of the San Jacinto Warehouse (1926) in the Near Northside.
    Built in 1926 as the San Jacinto Warehouse, this former industrial hub has been reimagined as The Docks, a dynamic mixed-use campus for artists, entrepreneurs, and creatives. Original brick masonry, steel windows, dock doors, and bowstring trusses were preserved, honoring Houston’s industrial past while activating the space for a new generation of cultural and professional use.

    Fun fact: The Docks is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, recognizing its significance in architecture, commerce, and transportation history.

    Publications and Other Projects

    Ben Koush and Kathryn O’Rourke for their book Home, Heat, Money, God.
    Rooted in decades of architectural documentation, Home, Heat, Money, God reframes how we see Texas’s modern built environment through photography and accessible storytelling. With Houston at its core, the book connects everyday buildings, from schools and houses to churches and cultural institutions, to the social forces that shaped them, offering a powerful tool for preservation advocacy and public understanding.

    Fun fact: Approximately 17 percent of the buildings featured in the book are located in Harris County, underscoring Houston’s outsized role in shaping modern architecture across Texas.

    Dijana Handanovic for the restoration of a K67 kiosk (1966, Saša Mächtig).
    Designed in 1966 by Slovenian architect Sasa Mächtig, the Kiosk K67 is an iconic piece of modern design once found throughout former Yugoslavia as a hub for everyday commerce and connection. This meticulous restoration revived a rare surviving kiosk using salvaged original components, returning it to its signature Traffic Orange and reintroducing it to public life in Houston as a platform for cultural exchange, art, and community gathering.

    Fun fact: Out of approximately 7,500 K67 kiosks originally produced, only a handful remain. This restored unit was reconstructed using parts from two deteriorated kiosks sourced in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

    Southampton Place for the restoration of Southampton’s historic concrete street markers.
    First installed in the early 1940s through a WPA-funded initiative, Southampton’s concrete street markers are a defining element of the neighborhood’s historic streetscape. Faced with loss and deterioration, residents organized a multi-year preservation effort to restore existing markers and recreate missing ones, ultimately reviving the entire original streetscape through craftsmanship, community fundraising, and innovative 3D-printing techniques.

    Fun fact: The project involved more than 150 donors, raised $40,000, and required setting and removing letter molds 1,240 times to recreate 31 historically-accurate street markers.

    The Martha Peterson Award

    Fifth Ward Community Redevelopment Corporation and CloudBreak Communities for the adaptive reuse of St. Elizabeth Hospital (1947, Maurice J. Sullivan) as St. Elizabeth Place.
    Once the only hospital serving Black residents in Houston’s Fifth Ward during the Jim Crow era, St. Elizabeth’s Hospital has been thoughtfully rehabilitated into St. Elizabeth Place, a mixed-income housing community. The project preserved the Art Moderne complex’s historic masonry, terrazzo, and circulation patterns while adapting patient rooms and support spaces into 85 residential units, honoring the building’s legacy of care while meeting today’s community needs.

    Fun fact: The non-historic rear addition was fully removed, restoring the hospital’s original site configuration and reinforcing its historic presence in the Fifth Ward.

    The Legacy Business Award

    Hamilton Shirts for four generations of craftsmanship and tradition.
    Founded in 1883, Hamilton Shirts is one of Houston’s oldest family-owned businesses and America’s longest-standing bespoke shirtmaker. For more than 140 years, Hamilton has upheld the art of hand-cut, custom shirtmaking, passing down its craft through four generations of family ownership. As Houston has grown into a global city, Hamilton has remained a constant, reflecting the enduring value of skilled craftsmanship, family enterprise, and businesses built to last.

    Fun Fact: Hamilton continues to hand-cut every custom shirt today, using techniques passed down since the company’s founding in 1883.

    The Preservation Houston President’s Award

    Steven F. Curry, FAIA for his contributions to historic preservation in Houston and Texas.
    Steven F. Curry, FAIA, is a longtime leader and trusted voice in Houston’s preservation community whose work has helped shape thoughtful, informed approaches to saving historic places across the city and state. Through decades of professional practice and public service, including leadership with Houston Mod, service on the Docomomo US Awards Committee, and membership on the Houston Archaeological and Historical Commission, Steve has championed modern and historic architecture with care, rigor, and lasting impact.

    Fun Fact: In addition to his advocacy work, Steve is also a Good Brick Award recipient, earning the honor in 2016 for the restoration of the Bendit House (1953), designed by Lars Bang.

    Preservation Houston 2026 Good Brick Awards River Oaks Theatre

    Photo by Corey Watson

    The River Oaks Theatre reopened in 2024.

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