With The Right Hands, This East Dallas Dome House Went From Hobbit to High Style

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After several updates, this geodesic dome home in East Dallas looks miles better.

Back in 2015, Michael Russell decided that after 13 years in his super cool Midcentury Modern it was time to move on.

That Midcentury Modern was so cool, in fact, it just recently sold again and we featured it. In the feature we called out the mega-deck out back and guess what? Russell built that himself.

Before, this geodesic dome house sported traditional doors in a stunning shade of … brown.

It’s no surprise that this time around, it was gone in a second, but Russell said even back in 2015 they listed Thursday and it was sold by the weekend. Over asking price even. But hey, cool is cool.

Russell updated the doors and added bright blue paint. Additional landscaping makes the home pop!

Back in 2015 when the MCM was no longer his, Russell decided to take a breather from home ownership and settled into a rental in Uptown. Well, that didn’t last, so he headed out to again find a killer place to call home. He said he’s not into any specific style of home really, he just likes something unique. And that’s what he loves about his current house.

The skylights!
Not many people who have seen this dome house know that it’s two-story!

It’s a geodesic dome!

When he first saw it, it had been flipped and he said the remodelers made some “interesting choices,” he said.

At that point, it was just sitting on the market so he brought his friends by to see what they thought. And then some more friends. Was he crazy? This was a cool house, right? One friend dubbed it the Hobbit House and it stuck.

The kitchen is a stainless-steel work of art.
Making that low slope WORK in the kitchen.

Russell decided to make an offer and it was accepted. Now, the Hobbit House was officially his.

He grew up in Arkansas and remembers one very similar geodesic dome house just a few streets over. Maybe that was the appeal. Maybe it was being back in East Dallas. Or the incredible greenbelt out back. No matter what it was, Russell moved in.

Originally, Russell only intended to stay for five years. He snagged a great conversation starter of a house for a reasonable price and just assumed after a few years he’d head on down the road to his dream home.

The primary bedroom has all the right angles.
There’s gorgeous granite and updated tile in the primary bath.

Well, maybe this is it. He said he really can’t imagine moving at this point, and in this market, he gets approached all the time.

Michael’s home office has a killer view.

As we talked, he glanced out his backyard from his home office and saw the greenbelt and all the trees. He said the view alone is worth staying put. Though he called it Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom back there. There are owls and possum and once he even saw a coyote. The next day he had his fence guy out for a 7-foot top-off.

Before: Missing that Michael touch.
After: Plants and planters and real, live grass. The view is irresistible!

Inside, he said he’s corrected a lot of the previous shortcuts and made it his own touches. There’s a big open space downstairs that makes his house perfect for hosting, which he has done quite frequently — before it was frowned upon, of course.

The other thing he loves about his dome home? It’s just a surprise inside. He said there are neighbors that stop by and had no idea it’s a two-story home. And they’ve lived on the street forever.

Russell’s house at 5026 Groom Lane is not for sale. This is just a sweet little follow-up to our Geo-Dome Story. Do you have an interesting house? Tell us about it!

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Nikki Lott Barringer is a freelance writer and licensed real estate agent at Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty.

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