DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Reading: 30 Years Later, Completed AMLI Fountain Place Joins Skyline (Almost) as Henry Cobb Intended
Share
Font ResizerAa
DALTX Real EstateDALTX Real Estate
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
  • Home
  • Guest Post
  • Agents
  • Contact Us
  • About
  • Advertise With Us
Follow US
© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
DALTX Real Estate > Downtown Dallas > 30 Years Later, Completed AMLI Fountain Place Joins Skyline (Almost) as Henry Cobb Intended
Downtown Dallas

30 Years Later, Completed AMLI Fountain Place Joins Skyline (Almost) as Henry Cobb Intended

4 Min Read
SHARE
Contents
AMLI Fountain Place a Fraternal TwinCompare and ContrastTelling a ‘Residential Story’Reflectivity and Light
AMLI_Fountain_Place-bathroom-sRGB-03
Photos by Sean Gallagher

With cranes disappearing from Fountain Place plaza, AMLI Fountain Place nears completion. Some 30 years after I.M. Pei’s iconic tower graced the Dallas skyline, we’re finally seeing the companion building architect Henry N. Cobb always intended.

Well, almost as he intended.

AMLI Fountain Place a Fraternal Twin

AMLI

Cobb’s original design called for two identical towers, rotated at 90-degrees from one another. But instead of an exact copy of the original tower, the new addition is its own design, one that pays homage to its predecessor, with some notable differences.

Primarily, at 45 stories, the blunt-topped new tower comes up shy of Fountain Place’s 60. Echoing the distinct, late-modernist lines, it complements rather than copies Cobb’s original design. Similar, but managing somehow not to be derivative. So while not exactly the twin Cobb envisioned, the new high rise is constructed with the same green glass exterior, visually uniting them as siblings. Fraternal twins, perhaps.

Compare and Contrast

AMLI_Fountain_Place-bathroom-sRGB-03
An incomparable view. Photos by Sean Gallagher.

But it’s what’s inside that truly differentiates the two buildings.

Cobb could never have imagined the downtown Dallas of 2020, with more than 70,000 residents in the city’s center, where once only commerce had been. He certainly wouldn’t have anticipated the need for a 367-unit residential community taking root in Fountain Place Plaza. With this new structure, not only was there a residential need to be met, a competing commercial building would have run contrary to the owner’s interests.

Telling a ‘Residential Story’

So how did the purpose of the building, which differs starkly from that of the original, inform the design of such an important addition to downtown?

AMLI_Fountain_Place-bathroom-sRGB-03
Wendy Dunnam Tita, FAIA, IIDA, LEED AP

Wendy Dunnam Tita, Principal and Interior Architecture Director at Page, the architecture firm that designed both the building and its interiors, said that the design was intended to tell what she called, “a residential story.” Carefully selected materials like warm woods, gold tiles, and amber glass play a contrast to the green glass curtain wall and the inclusion of balconies were intended to give the building a hospitable feeling.

“Even the lushness of the landscaping is meant to signify a residential component,” Tita said. “We wanted the design to say, ‘This is a residential building.’ We knew we were creating something that wouldn’t take away, but that would add to skyline, and that illustrated that people inhabited it. Not an office building posing as a residential building.”

Reflectivity and Light

That careful attention to detail continues on inside the luxury units. From wallcoverings to plumbing fixtures and millwork, every design element makes the most of the building’s stunning glass. “It will be one of the wonderful moments for the residents to have that floor-to-ceiling glass,” said Tita. “The cabinets inside the building are a glossy reflective gray so they almost disappear to provide reflective light in the units. Light and reflectivity are so important.”

AMLI_Fountain_Place-bathroom-sRGB-03
Glossy millwork in the kitchens reflect light. Photos by Sean Gallagher.

As important to the design as carefully selected materials was honoring the designer’s intentions of the original Fountain Place. It was feeling of responsibility and stewardship, something Tita says guided the entire project team from the beginning.

“We’ve been cautiously pleased and humbled,” Tita said of the new tower’s reception. “We expected a lot of scrutiny. People have been kind to understand the challenges and appreciative of the gestures made in the new building.”

Hear Award-Winning Architect Rick Joy at The 2nd Annual Frank Welch Memorial Lecture
Dallas Design Experts Offer Inspiring Panel Discussion Jan. 17
NYT Publishes Emily Summers’ Highland Park Preservation Home & Design Book!
Coffee Table Books Are The Perfect Last-Minute Gifts For Dallas Design Lovers
Dallas Architecture Forum Hosts Lecture From Renowned Architect Jason Long
TAGGED:1800 N. Field StreetAMLI Fountain PlaceArchitectureDowntown Dallas Luxury LeasingFountain PlacePageWendy Dunnam Tita
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Interest Rates Drop As Market Braces For Virus Impact
Next Article You Get Beauty and Brains in this French Transitional
Popular News
Lake Home For Sale

Contemporary Home On Lake Lewisville Has Luxury Interiors and Stunning Water Views

A Bentley Place Villa in Greenway Parks for Under a Million!?
East Dallas Charmer With An Equally Charming Price
March Into Spring Break Lake Life With These Three Staycation Open Houses of The Week
Carolyn Rosson and Malinda Howell Promoted to Ebby Halliday Regional VP
about us

DaltxRealEstate.com is the largest real estate blog and the only one in North Texas.

Links

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us
  • Paid Guest Post Submission

Categories

  • Wednesday WTF
  • East Dallas
  • Monday Morning Millionaire
  • Upon Closer Inspection

Get Involved

  • Advertise With Us
  • Write for Us: Submit Guest Post

Find Us on Socials

© DALTX. All Rights Reserved.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?