
Welcome to our annual exploration of destination homes around the world.

Whenever I visit a new place, I look for a house museum. In fact, I’ve planned entire trips around them. Whether it’s the home of a renowned figure or a piece of regional history enshrined in the built environment, a preserved and exhibited historic home always tells a story about the hopes, fears, ideals, ambitions, and context of the people who once lived there in a way that only experiencing their space can. Many on the Dwell staff share my enthusiasm, so in our annual travel issue, we decided to pay homage tosome of our favorite house museums around the world.

Photo: Victor Stonem
We have a Donald Judd doubleheader, with both New York City and Marfa, Texas, represented. Two regular Dwell contributors offer up a tranquil ceramist’s home in Kyoto and Lina Bo Bardi’s luminous São Paulo masterpiece, respectively. I write about Eileen Gray’s E1027—I’ll confess, it might be the most inspiring house I’ve ever visited—as well as the life’s work of Dennis Severs, a townhouse packed with a semihoarder accumulation of enchanting objects haunted by a fictional family in London. We also head to Queens, New York, to visit Louis and Lucille Armstrong’s house, where, despite his fame, the beatified musician remained modestly embedded in his neighborhood. All of these deserve to be on your next itinerary.

Photo: Peter Fisher
We also went to contemporary houses with very different relationships to traveling. For example, a family keeps a connection with the Dominican Republic by repurposing a prefab structure—made of beautiful hardwood components—as a beach house. We checked on the owners of some famous on-screen homes about how they cope with the streams of fans making pilgrimages to their houses. It turns out that living in a famous house gets mixed reviews. Did I mention Phish? I’m not really a jam band person—please don’t quiz me—but the house in the Vermont woods where bassist Mike Gordon takes a break from touring could not have been built for anyone else. (With all apologies to our friends at Architectural Digest, this is basically our version of a celebrity home tour.)

Photo: Matt Dutile
AdvertisementAdvertisement#«Rpekkr8lb2m7nfddbH1» iframe AdvertisementAdvertisement#«R19ekkr8lb2m7nfddbH1» iframeSee the full story on Dwell.com: Editor’s Letter: The Travel Issue 2025