Interior designer Sara Garza, as those who know her will attest, is a rebel with a cause—especially when that cause involves saving a home from demolition. “We actually wrote them a letter asking for a chance to keep it standing,” says Garza of her current family nest in Dallas’s Oak Cliff neighborhood, the them in question being the grandchildren of the original owners of a 1940s home, who were considering selling to developers. Garza’s heartfelt appeal struck a chord, prompting the family to reconsider. “Meeting the grandson was such a treat,” recalls the founder and principal of Dallas-based Punch World Studio. “He shared stories that made us love the place even more.”
Garza was captivated by its rich history. Once spanning several acres, the property originally included a greenhouse and a horse stable—its only remnant now a hitching post by the back door. There was even another house behind the main one, built in the 1930s. History seemed to be tucked into every corner. “We were told that the grandmother arrived in Dallas with 11 dollars and Stanley Marcus’s phone number, befriended the Marcus family, and became a Neiman Marcus showroom girl. And that his grandfather worked at Frito-Lay and had a hand in inventing the Dorito. With a legacy like this, how could anyone ever tear this house down?”
Built during World War II, the home didn’t adhere to a specific architectural style, which gave Garza the opportunity to start with a clean slate—though, as she tells it, she never truly erased its history. “What we loved most about this place was its mix of a-little-bit-fun and a-little-bit-fancy, so we really leaned into those qualities,” she shares, explaining how the goal was to honor the home’s past chapters while crafting new ones. “The interior had the potential to go in a few different directions, but we like to think of ourselves as a fun family—bold dreams and big feelings—and I wanted that to shine through in our home,” says Garza, who lives with her husband, Rocky, and their two kids: nine-year-old son Ezra and six-year-old daughter Marlow.