A Texas ranch house blends Californian charm and Asian minimalism in a 'balance in hybridity'
Pontious, a Texas ranch house designed by OWIU, is a home grounded in its owner's cultural identity, uniting Californian, Chinese and Japanese roots

Dripping Springs, where this ranch house is located, sounds like a fictional town plucked from a storybook. Yet, located just on the cusp of Austin, Texas, it is the address of the new home designed by architecture studio OWIU. By working closely with the client, health and wellness influencer Remi Ishizuka, Pontious Ranch House is a result of combining elements from her very specific identity; an architectural manifestation rooted in Californian, Chinese and Japanese culture.
Pontious Ranch House designed by OWIU
The studio Only Way Is Up (OWIU) carefully redesigned a traditional ranch house infusing it with Asian minimalism - or rather its entirely unique iteration that is personal to Ishizuka. Inspiration was drawn from the food she ate, the art she was exposed to, and adapted family traditions which allowed for her, as OWIU described, ‘to understand balance in hybridity.’
OWIU founders, Joel Wong and Amanda Gunawan, shared that the most challenging aspect was striking a balance between breathing new life into the rustic 'barn style' home and preserving its original cultural integrity and contextual connection to the surrounding environment. They say: 'We wanted to modernize the space while respecting the historical essence and significance of the home, ensuring that the transformation enhanced its character without compromising its roots or the local heritage it represents.’
A Texan landscape coupled with Japanese minimalism and a Californian laissez-faire attitude may be an unconventional blend, yet the LA-based architecture studio took on the challenge to remodel the traditional ranch and manifest its creative vision. The home was originally built in 2018, and OWIU worked closely with the former owner Michael Contello to preserve the original foundations.
'We specialize in the intersection of preservation and restoration, embracing the belief that homes should evolve while honouring their past. Our approach centers on safeguarding the historical essence of a space, while infusing it with new life, ensuring that the old and the new coexist in harmony. This philosophy is at the core of every restoration project we undertake,’ say the OWIU founders.
The soul of the inspiration that is threaded throughout the home is its nod to the building’s surrounding environment. Golden Texan fields and crisp blue skies offer a meditative colour palette, with a cream and white gradient tying it all together. This creates a fluid interaction between the interior and exterior of the home.
These breezy blurred lines between indoor and outdoor living are continued throughout the ranch with touches of natural materials. This can be seen in the kitchen which was designed to be not only a functional cooking space but also a workspace for the client’s recipe developments. The island is crafted from natural rock and marble. It extends to a wood dining table, moulded with polished round edges.
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
This tonality and soft silhouette flow into the living room which is surrounded by wood-framed windows, creating a snapshot of the Texan countryside, which is described as ‘perfectly capturing the balance of organic textures and modern design.
Tianna Williams is Wallpaper’s staff writer. When she isn’t writing extensively across varying content pillars, ranging from design and architecture to travel and art, she also helps put together the daily newsletter. She enjoys speaking to emerging artists, designers and architects, writing about gorgeously designed houses and restaurants, and day-dreaming about her next travel destination.
-
A family home turns into an immersive exhibition space for London Design Festival
Ceramicist Emma Louise Payne displays design in domestic surrounds for group show ‘The Objects We Live By’
-
Carmela’s joins London’s pizza renaissance
A Little Italy-inspired pizzeria lands in Islington with 13-inch pies, pepperoni heat and big flavour energy
-
Triennale Milano unveils Gioco, a new creative space for kids
At Triennale Milano, Gioco by architect Luca Cipelletti is a playful example of how design can be fun, functional, and family-friendly
-
Meet Studio Zewde, the Harlem practice that's creating landscapes 'rooted in cultural narratives, ecology and memory'
Ahead of a string of prestigious project openings, we check in with firm founder Sara Zewde
-
The best of California desert architecture, from midcentury gems to mirrored dwellings
While architecture has long employed strategies to cool buildings in arid environments, California desert architecture developed its own distinct identity –giving rise, notably, to a wave of iconic midcentury designs
-
A restored Eichler home is a peerless piece of West Coast midcentury modernism
We explore an Eichler home, and Californian developer Joseph Eichler’s legacy of design, as a fine example of his progressive house-building programme hits the market
-
How LA's Terremoto brings 'historic architecture into its next era through revitalising the landscapes around them'
Terremoto, the Los Angeles and San Francisco collective landscape architecture studio, shakes up the industry through openness and design passion
-
Inside a Donald Wexler house so magical, its owner bought it twice
So transfixed was Daniel Patrick Giles, founder of fragrance brand Perfumehead, he's even created a special scent devoted to it
-
The Pagani Residences is the latest ultra-luxe automotive apartment tower to reach Miami
Rising up above Miami, branded apartment buildings are having a renaissance, as everyone from hypercar builders to crystal makers seeks to have a towering structure bearing their name
-
A modern cabin in Minnesota serves as a contemporary creative retreat from the city
Snow Kreilich Architects' modern cabin and studio for an artist on a lakeside plot in Minnesota was designed to spark creativity and provide a refuge from the rat race
-
Touring artist Glenn Ligon's studio in Brooklyn with its architect, Ravi Raj
Glenn Ligon's studio, designed by architect Ravi Raj, is an industrial Brooklyn space reimagined for contemporary art