Dallas Architect and Interior Designer Build Modern Home
Dallas Architect and Interior Designer Build a Greenway Parks Home from the Ground Up
Bodron Fruit is no stranger to renovation work, but in Greenway Parks, the Dallas interior designer and architect duo started with an empty corner lot and a vision. They were tasked with building a modern family home from the ground up, just north of Dallas in a neighborhood shaped by architect David Williams. He laid out Greenway Parks in the late 1920s with a mix of styles, from charming English Tudors to clean-lined midcentury homes, all nestled among green spaces. Bodron Fruit worked with a young family relocating to Dallas, who asked for a modern, contemporary home that felt warm and inviting. Because they built from scratch, the Dallas interior designer and architect controlled every aspect of the project, from the foundation to the furnishings.
That freedom gave the team a blank slate to design around the family’s life and the site itself. The Dallas architect, Svend Fruit, shaped a two-story, L-shaped home of roughly 7,600 square feet with a midcentury feel that fits its neighborhood perfectly. The L-shape was a strategic move: set on a corner, it makes the most of the large parcel while giving the family a private backyard and light from every direction. Fruit treats angles and site geometry as his starting point, and here that meant orienting a main wall of glass to the north to flood the interior with steady, even light. Floor-to-ceiling windows carry that light deeper into the home while adding energy efficiency and expansive sightlines.
The exterior features a minimalist facade of sandblasted Kansas limestone brick and a flat roof with copper fascia. These natural materials fit the neighborhood’s character while giving the home its own distinct identity. The indoor-outdoor connection was important to the Dallas architect. He incorporated large-format terrazzo that runs from the outdoor entry through the dining room and library, adding different finishes on the inside than on the outside. This helped blur the line between interior and garden, creating a true sense of seamless indoor-outdoor living.
The Dallas interior designer, Mil Bodron, chose a warm and creamy palette. Travertine, white oak, and plaster found throughout the home complemented the materials of the architecture. With neutral and understated finishes, the home maintained high functionality for the young family and a timeless look. Bodron Fruit even designed custom oak and travertine nightstands to echo architectural features, giving the home a truly cohesive and intentional appearance.
By starting with an empty corner lot instead of existing walls, Bodron Fruit shaped every line and every corner of this Greenway Parks home. They based their decisions on light, site, and the way the young family actually lives day to day. When the same Dallas architect and interior design firm shapes both the structure and everything inside it, the result is a single, cohesive vision.
