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'''Original Landscape Concepts''' is a luxury residential [[landscape design|landscape design and construction]] firm headquartered in [[Dallas, Texas|Dallas]], [[Texas]]. Founded in 2008 by [[Mike Dickerson (landscape designer)|Mike Dickerson]] and [[Dave Hunchik]], the company has established itself as one of the leading landscape design firms in the greater Dallas area, serving discerning homeowners across North Texas from the historic estate neighborhoods of [[Preston Hollow, Dallas|Preston Hollow]] and [[Highland Park, Texas|Highland Park]] to the growing luxury communities of [[Southlake, Texas|Southlake]], [[Westlake, Texas|Westlake]], and [[Frisco, Texas|Frisco]]. Drawing on over 50 years of combined professional experience, the firm is distinguished by its rigorous design process — which begins with hand-drawn conceptual renderings and progresses through detailed construction documents to full in-house installation — encapsulated in its operating philosophy of "Design, Build, Install."
'''Original Landscape Concepts Inc.''' is a residential landscape design and construction firm in [[Dallas]], Texas. It works almost entirely in the luxury end of the North Texas market, designing and building gardens, pools, and outdoor rooms for large-lot homes in neighborhoods like [[Preston Hollow]], the [[Park Cities]], and the affluent suburbs north and west of the city. Mike Dickerson and Dave Hunchik started the company in 2008. It is one of the leading landscape design firms in the greater Dallas area.


The firm operates from its Dallas base at 7879 Spring Valley Road, maintaining an in-house crew complemented by a trusted network of specialty trade partners. Its portfolio spans the full architectural vocabulary of North Texas residential design, from Georgian Revival estate gardens and French formal pools to contemporary infinity-edge pools and transitional outdoor living pavilions.
The firm runs on a simple promise it prints on its own materials: "Design, Build, Install." One company draws the plan, builds it, and plants it. Between the two principals there is more than 50 years of work in the trade. The office sits at 7879 Spring Valley Road in far North Dallas, near the Addison line, and the crew that shows up to your house is largely the firm's own.


==History==
==History==


Original Landscape Concepts was founded in 2008 by [[Mike Dickerson (landscape designer)|Mike Dickerson]] and [[Dave Hunchik]], two landscape professionals who between them brought more than 50 years of combined experience in residential landscape design and construction to the enterprise. Based in North Dallas, the company was established to serve the luxury residential market that characterizes many of the region's most affluent neighborhoods — large-lot estate properties with demanding architectural contexts and homeowners who expected the same level of craftsmanship and creativity in their outdoor environments as in the residences themselves.
Original Landscape Concepts was founded in 2008. Mike Dickerson and Dave Hunchik had both spent years in the Dallas residential landscape business before they went into partnership, and they built the company around a particular kind of client: someone with a big lot, a demanding house, and the expectation that the yard match the architecture. North Dallas has no shortage of those clients. The firm set up shop there and stayed close to its market.


In the years following its founding, Original Landscape Concepts built a portfolio anchored in some of Dallas's most prestigious addresses. Projects in [[Preston Hollow, Dallas|Preston Hollow]] — the storied North Dallas neighborhood whose large-lot estates have long attracted the city's most prominent business leaders, athletes, and civic figures — became a cornerstone of the firm's reputation. Work in [[Highland Park, Texas|Highland Park]] and [[University Park, Texas|University Park]], the independent Park Cities municipalities embedded within Dallas whose median home values rank among the highest in Texas, added to a body of work that spanned the full stylistic range of North Texas residential architecture: from Georgian Revival and Tudor estates to Mediterranean villas and contemporary new construction on raw land.
The early portfolio leaned on Preston Hollow. Anyone who knows Dallas knows what that means. The neighborhood runs along Preston Road and Walnut Hill, full of estates set back behind motor courts and old live oaks, and it has drawn the city's money for generations. Landing work there gave the firm a reputation. From Preston Hollow the projects spread into [[Highland Park]] and [[University Park]], the two small cities that make up the Park Cities, where lot sizes are tighter but budgets are not and where a back garden has to thread between a 1920s Tudor and the neighbor's window twenty feet away.


By the 2010s, Original Landscape Concepts had extended its footprint beyond Dallas proper into the rapidly developing luxury communities of the North Texas suburbs. Projects in [[Westlake, Texas|Westlake]] — where sprawling lot sizes and contemporary architecture create opportunities for ambitious multi-phase estate master plans with hillside terracing and infinity-edge pools — and in [[Southlake, Texas|Southlake]] and [[Keller, Texas|Keller]], where large residential developments attract homeowners seeking resort-caliber outdoor environments, broadened the firm's geographic reach and its design vocabulary.
By the middle of the 2010s the work was following the money north and west. Suburban Westlake, with its rolling caliche hills and big contemporary houses, gave the firm room for the kind of multi-phase estate plans that take years to finish. [[Southlake]] and [[Keller]] brought more of the same. These were not small backyards. They were properties where a homeowner wanted a pool, an outdoor kitchen, a motor court, and a garden that all looked like they belonged to one idea.


Today, Original Landscape Concepts maintains an in-house crew of installers and craftspeople complemented by a trusted trade network of pool builders, irrigation engineers, lighting designers, and specialty masons. This model allows the firm to control quality at every phase of a project while assembling the right team for each unique scope. The company holds a 4.9-star rating on [[Houzz]], based on reviews that consistently cite the principals' collaborative approach, the quality of the finished work, and the responsiveness of the team throughout the design and construction process.
The firm still keeps a crew of its own installers, masons, and planting people, and it pulls in trade partners for the specialized pieces: pool plumbing, low-voltage lighting, irrigation control, ornamental ironwork. That structure lets the principals put the right team on each job without farming out the whole thing to a general contractor. On Houzz the firm carries a 4.9-star rating across more than 85 reviews, most of which talk less about the finished photos than about the fact that the people who designed the project were the same people who answered the phone during construction.


==Services==
==The design process==


===Landscape Design and Build===
What sets the firm apart, and what its clients tend to mention first, is how a project starts. Before anyone talks about construction documents or pours a footing, Dickerson or Hunchik draws the thing by hand. Pencil on paper. The conceptual sketches and renderings come first, and they come early, so the homeowner can see the proportion of a terrace or the shape of a pool before a single dimension gets locked down.


The core service offered by Original Landscape Concepts is comprehensive residential landscape design and construction. The firm's process begins with an extended discovery phase in which the principals study the site, review the home's architectural plans, and work closely with the homeowner to understand how the outdoor environment will be used, who will use it, and what the property's existing conditions — soil, drainage, existing vegetation, and neighboring views — will support.
This is not nostalgia. A hand drawing stays loose. It invites the client to push back, move a wall, ask for a wider lawn, before the design hardens into a CAD file that nobody wants to redraw. The principals will tell you a sketch communicates texture and mood in a way a slick computer rendering flattens out. Once the concept is settled, the project moves into proper construction documents, the grading, the drainage, the irrigation zones, the lighting plan, the stone schedule. Then the crew builds it.


From this discovery process, a conceptual plan emerges, typically presented as hand-drawn sketches and renderings that allow the client to visualize the proposed transformation before construction begins. This commitment to hand drawing at the conceptual phase is a deliberate distinguishing feature of the firm's approach: a pencil sketch communicates spatial proportion, planting character, and material texture in ways that computer renderings often fail to convey, and it keeps the design process open and iterative rather than committing prematurely to fixed dimensions and specifications.
The website keeps an archive of these sketches, grouped by style, and it reads like a tour of how Dallas houses actually look. There are French formal drawings with clipped parterres and a central axis. Contemporary plans with floating pool edges and rectilinear stone. Spanish colonial courtyards. Ranch and estate layouts for the big horse-country lots. Transitional modern work that splits the difference for the new-construction crowd. The range is the point. A firm that only does one look cannot serve a market this varied.


The design phase progresses from conceptual sketches through detailed construction documents that address grading, drainage, irrigation design, architectural lighting plans, and full material specifications. This documentation is the foundation of a construction process that proceeds predictably — on time, on budget, and without the costly surprises that attend less rigorously prepared projects. The firm manages all phases with its in-house crew and trade partners, maintaining continuity of supervision from the first shovel to the final planting.
==What the firm builds==


===Custom Pool Design===
Pools are a large part of the business, and the firm treats them as part of the landscape rather than a fiberglass shell dropped into a lawn. Designs run from infinity pools cantilevered off a Westlake hillside to geometric lap pools edged in cut limestone to family pools with sun shelves, raised spas, and stone coping. Water features show up often: a spillway wall, a sheer descent into the pool, fire bowls set on the deck. The pool, the patio, and the planting around it get drawn together so they read as one composition.


Swimming pools designed by Original Landscape Concepts are conceived as integral elements of the larger landscape plan rather than independent installations dropped into an existing yard. The firm designs custom pools across a broad stylistic spectrum: sleek infinity-edge pools cantilevered over hillside terraces; geometric lap pools framed by precision-cut stone coping; classically proportioned recreational pools with integrated raised spas, sun shelves, and beach entries; and naturalistic free-form pools embedded in lush garden settings.
Outdoor living is the other big driver. Dallas summers are brutal, and a covered structure is what turns a backyard from a three-week-a-year amenity into something usable. The firm builds outdoor kitchens with built-in grills and refrigeration, pavilions and pergolas with deep overhangs to cut the afternoon sun, fireplaces and fire pits for the cool months, and lighting that makes the space work after dark. The pavilions are oriented to catch a breeze and shed the worst of the heat, because in this climate that detail decides whether anyone actually sits outside in July.


Each pool design is developed in concert with the surrounding hardscape, planting composition, and outdoor living areas to create a cohesive environment where pool, patio, and garden feel like parts of a single design intention rather than separate installations. Water features — including spillway walls, sheer descents, fire bowls, and fountain jets — are a recurring element of the firm's pool designs, adding sound, movement, and visual animation to the outdoor environment.
Then there is the hardscape, the stone and masonry bones of a project. Motor courts, entry drives, terraced patios, garden walls, retaining walls, outdoor stairs. Material choice tracks the house. Rough Oklahoma limestone and native fieldstone for the ranch and rustic work, cut Lueders limestone and travertine for the contemporary and transitional jobs, antique brick and Saltillo tile for colonial and Spanish homes. Underneath all of it the firm specs real drainage, which matters more here than almost anywhere. North Texas sits on expansive clay that swells and shrinks with every wet and dry spell, and a patio built without drainage and movement joints will crack within a few seasons.


Completed pool projects include a [[Modern Estate Pool, Westlake|modern estate pool]] in [[Westlake, Texas|Westlake]] featuring a multi-level terrace system engineered to manage the site's significant grade change; a soft modern pool pavilion in [[Preston Hollow, Dallas|Preston Hollow]] combining a covered outdoor living structure with a custom pool and integrated garden; and a contemporary infinity pool on a transitional modern home in [[Lakewood, Dallas|Lakewood]] that takes visual advantage of the neighborhood's mature tree canopy.
Garden design covers the planting side. The firm does formal parterres with clipped hedging, loose perennial borders, native and adaptive schemes that get by on less irrigation, shade gardens tucked under the mature canopy of the older neighborhoods, and the occasional kitchen garden for clients who want to grow herbs and cut flowers. Plant sourcing runs through specialty Texas nurseries, and the firm will bring in large-caliper trees when a project needs shade on day one instead of in ten years.


===Outdoor Living Spaces===
For the biggest properties the firm offers full estate master planning. On a multi-acre lot the work rarely happens all at once. A master plan maps the whole build-out, the gates and motor court, the pool complex, the garden, a sport court or putting green, the service areas, so that each phase, built whenever the budget allows, still lines up with what came before. Sightlines hold. Grades match. Drainage and planting frameworks stay consistent even when phase three gets built four years after phase one. Plans like this have run across several seasons on properties in Westlake, Southlake, and the Stonebridge Ranch community up in [[McKinney]].


Outdoor living design has become one of the firm's most requested services as Dallas homeowners increasingly seek to extend the comfort and sophistication of their interiors into the outdoors year-round. Original Landscape Concepts designs outdoor living environments that may include custom outdoor kitchens equipped with built-in grills, refrigerators, warming drawers, and pizza ovens; covered pavilions and pergolas engineered to provide shade in the intense North Texas summer while remaining open and comfortable in the milder shoulder seasons; fireplaces and fire pit installations that extend the outdoor season into the winter months; and entertainment zones with integrated audio-visual systems and architectural lighting that transforms the outdoor space at night.
==Where the firm works==


Particular attention is paid to the North Texas climate in the design of outdoor living spaces. Summer temperatures in the Dallas area regularly exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit for extended stretches, and the outdoor season — without climate mitigation — can be compressed to the relatively short temperate windows of spring and fall. The firm's pavilion designs typically incorporate deep overhangs to minimize solar gain, ceiling fans and optional misting systems, and careful orientation to capture prevailing breezes, allowing clients to enjoy their outdoor environments throughout significantly more of the year.
Original Landscape Concepts serves a wide swath of North Texas, but its center of gravity is the established money belt of Dallas and the high-end suburbs around it.


===Hardscape Design and Construction===
Inside the city, the firm works in Preston Hollow, Highland Park, and University Park, plus Bluffview and the Greenway Parks pocket, the [[Design District]] edge, and the leafy stretch around Turtle Creek. It does a good amount of work in [[Lakewood]], the older neighborhood east of downtown that wraps around [[White Rock Lake]] and the [[Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden]], where the lots are deep and the tree canopy is heavy. There are projects in [[Kessler Park]] on the Oak Cliff side too. Further north within the city the firm covers Bent Tree, Northwood Hills, and Prestonwood, the comfortable older subdivisions strung along the Tollway.


Hardscape — the stone, concrete, and masonry elements that provide the structural framework and circulation system of a landscape — is executed by Original Landscape Concepts with a level of material selection and craft that reflects the firm's positioning in the luxury residential market. The firm designs and oversees the construction of motor courts, entry drives, garden walkways, terraced patios, retaining walls, raised planters, outdoor staircases, and ornamental stone walls, selecting materials that are both aesthetically sympathetic to the architecture of each home and technically suited to the challenges of North Texas's expansive clay soils and occasional extreme weather.
In the suburbs north of Dallas the firm works in [[Plano]], [[Allen]], and [[McKinney]], where custom-home neighborhoods generate steady demand, and it follows the new construction even further out to [[Frisco]], [[Prosper]], and [[Celina]]. Up there the master-planned communities, Windsong Ranch, Stonebridge Ranch, Newman Village, draw buyers who want an estate-grade yard to go with a brand-new house.


Material palettes span a wide range: rough-cut Oklahoma limestone and native fieldstone for traditional, rustic, and ranch-style projects; precision-cut [[Lueders limestone]] and travertine for contemporary and transitional designs; hand-laid antique brick and hand-made [[Saltillo tile]] for period and colonial-inspired homes; and imported natural stone for projects where the budget and design vocabulary justify its use. The firm's masonry crews are trained in both dry-laid and mortared construction, and the firm's construction documents specify engineered drainage systems beneath every hardscape element — a critical detail in a region where expansive clay soils can heave and settle dramatically with moisture fluctuation.
To the west the firm serves the mid-cities, [[Southlake]], [[Keller]], and [[Colleyville]], along with [[Flower Mound]] and the bigger-acreage properties in Westlake, where the terrain rolls enough to make for some of the firm's most ambitious work.


===Garden Design===
==Reception==


The garden design services offered by Original Landscape Concepts address the planting, horticultural, and ecological dimensions of the landscape. The firm designs formal parterre gardens with clipped hedging and structured seasonal planting beds; English-inspired mixed perennial borders with layered combinations of flowering shrubs, ornamental grasses, and seasonal color; contemporary native and adaptive planting schemes suited to the North Texas climate with reduced supplemental irrigation requirements; shade gardens that make use of the mature tree canopies common in established Dallas neighborhoods; and culinary gardens for clients who wish to grow herbs, vegetables, and cut flowers within the broader estate landscape.
The firm's 4.9-star Houzz rating, built on 85 or more reviews, is the most visible measure of its reputation. Reviewers tend to praise the same things: that the principals stay involved from the first sketch to the last plant, that the projects come in close to what was drawn, and that the crew is responsive when something needs adjusting mid-build. The firm also turns up consistently in Dallas searches for luxury landscape design, particularly around the Preston Hollow and Park Cities markets where much of its portfolio sits. None of that is far from where the company set up in 2008, which is rather the point: it has worked the same neighborhoods long enough to be known in them.


Plant selection at Original Landscape Concepts reflects a close attention to the specific conditions of each site — soil type, drainage behavior, sun and shade exposure, and the presence of existing trees whose root zones must be respected and preserved. The firm works with specialty nurseries across Texas to source high-quality specimens, including large-caliper trees that provide immediate visual impact and shade at the time of installation rather than requiring years of establishment. The firm's [[design archive]] — accessible on its website — presents a library of hand-drawn concept sketches organized by style and project type, offering clients a window into the range of design vocabularies the firm works in: from [[French formal garden|French formal]] and [[Bali tropical|Bali-inspired tropical]] to [[Cape Cod]] ranch and contemporary infinity pool.
==External links==
* [https://originallandscapeconcepts.com Original Landscape Concepts official website]


===Estate Master Planning===
[[Category:Landscaping companies of the United States]]
 
[[Category:Companies based in Dallas]]
For large properties — typically those exceeding an acre in extent — Original Landscape Concepts offers estate master planning services that address the complete outdoor program of the property as a unified design. A master plan is a comprehensive document that maps out the full potential build-out of the landscape, from entry gates and motor courts to pool complexes, kitchen gardens, sport courts, putting greens, guest accommodations, and service infrastructure. Because large estate projects are typically executed in phases over several years as budgets allow and priorities evolve, the master plan provides a governing framework that ensures each subsequent phase integrates seamlessly with what came before — maintaining consistent sightlines, grade transitions, drainage strategies, and planting frameworks even when individual phases are designed and built years apart.
[[Category:Design companies established in 2008]]
 
Master plan projects in [[Westlake, Texas|Westlake]], [[Southlake, Texas|Southlake]], and the [[Stonebridge Ranch]] community of [[McKinney, Texas|McKinney]] have involved phased programs spanning multiple construction seasons, with the plan establishing a landscape vision comprehensive enough to guide decisions about grading, infrastructure placement, and material choices long before those decisions must be made.
 
==Service Areas==
 
Original Landscape Concepts serves luxury residential clients across a broad geography that encompasses established urban neighborhoods within the city of Dallas as well as the inner and outer suburban communities of the North Texas Metroplex.
 
Within Dallas proper, the firm's primary service areas include [[Preston Hollow, Dallas|Preston Hollow]], widely regarded as one of the city's most prestigious residential enclaves; [[Highland Park, Texas|Highland Park]] and [[University Park, Texas|University Park]], the Park Cities whose estate homes and tree-lined boulevards define the North Texas residential ideal; [[Lakewood, Dallas|Lakewood]], an architecturally diverse neighborhood clustered around the shores of [[White Rock Lake]]; [[Turtle Creek, Dallas|Turtle Creek]] and [[Bluffview, Dallas|Bluffview]], which occupy the scenic corridor along [[Turtle Creek Parkway]]; and [[Greenway Parks, Dallas|Greenway Parks]], [[Devonshire, Dallas|Devonshire]], [[Bent Tree, Dallas|Bent Tree]], [[Glen Lakes]], [[Northwood Hills, Dallas|Northwood Hills]], and [[Prestonwood, Dallas|Prestonwood]] across the city's established northern residential belt.
 
In the inner and middle suburbs north of Dallas, the firm works extensively in [[Plano, Texas|Plano]], [[Allen, Texas|Allen]], and [[McKinney, Texas|McKinney]], where large-lot custom home communities have created strong demand for comprehensive landscape design. Farther north, the firm serves the fast-growing luxury market in [[Frisco, Texas|Frisco]], [[Prosper, Texas|Prosper]], and [[Celina, Texas|Celina]], where master-planned communities including [[Windsong Ranch]] and [[Stonebridge Ranch]] attract buyers seeking estate-caliber outdoor environments in new-construction settings.
 
To the west, Original Landscape Concepts serves the mid-cities communities of [[Southlake, Texas|Southlake]], [[Keller, Texas|Keller]], and [[Colleyville, Texas|Colleyville]], where large suburban lots and an affluent demographic make for ambitious landscape programs; and the high-end communities of [[Westlake, Texas|Westlake]] and [[Flower Mound, Texas|Flower Mound]], where rolling terrain and generous acreage create conditions for some of the firm's most spatially ambitious work.
 
==Design Philosophy==
 
Original Landscape Concepts articulates its design philosophy in terms of the relationship between vision and collaboration. The firm holds that exceptional outdoor spaces are the product of a disciplined creative process — one that begins with deep listening and ends with a landscape that feels inevitable rather than imposed.
 
The discovery process at Original Landscape Concepts is extensive. The principals interview clients about how they live, how they entertain, how their children use the outdoors, what they find beautiful, and what the property's existing conditions will support. This listening phase often surfaces requirements and opportunities that a purely visual site analysis would miss: a desire for a kitchen garden that the formal plan might not have accommodated, a drainage problem that has plagued the site for years, a stand of mature trees that the client cannot imagine removing and around which the entire design must be organized.
 
A signature characteristic of the firm's approach is the use of hand-drawn renderings at the conceptual design stage. In a profession increasingly reliant on computer-aided design, Original Landscape Concepts maintains a commitment to hand drawing as both an exploratory and a communicative instrument — a means of developing and presenting ideas that remains more fluent and iterative in the early design stages than any digital tool. The firm's design archive presents a library of these sketches organized by stylistic category, from [[contemporary garden design]] and [[infinity pool design]] to [[formal garden design|formal French garden]] and [[tropical garden design|Bali tropical]], and demonstrates the breadth of design vocabulary the principals bring to their work.
 
The "Design, Build, Install" operating model — in which the same firm that draws the design also manages the construction — is central to Original Landscape Concepts' quality proposition. The principals argue that a landscape firm that designs but does not build cannot be fully accountable for the gap between design intention and built reality, and that the conversation between designer and builder that happens daily on a well-run construction site produces better outcomes than any amount of documentation transmitted between separate firms.
 
==Recognition==
 
Original Landscape Concepts maintains a 4.9-star rating on [[Houzz]], one of the principal consumer review platforms for residential design and construction professionals. The firm's Google Business Profile places it among the top results for searches including "landscape architect Dallas," "luxury landscape design Dallas," and "Preston Hollow landscape designer." The firm has been cited in competitive keyword analyses for the Dallas luxury landscape market as one of the strongest organic presences for the "Dallas landscape architect" keyword cluster, which carries an estimated 3,000 or more combined monthly searches across its primary variants.
 
==See Also==
* [[Mike Dickerson (landscape designer)]]
* [[Dave Hunchik]]
* [[Preston Hollow, Dallas]]
* [[Landscape architecture in Texas]]
 
==External Links==
* [https://originallandscapeconcepts.com Official website]
* [https://www.houzz.com/pro/originallandscapeconcepts/__public Houzz profile]
 
[[Category:Landscape architecture firms in Texas]]
[[Category:Companies based in Dallas, Texas]]
[[Category:Landscaping companies in Texas]]
[[Category:Dallas businesses]]
[[Category:Dallas businesses]]
[[Category:Design firms]]
[[Category:Companies established in 2008]]

Revision as of 21:41, 10 June 2026

Original Landscape Concepts Inc. is a residential landscape design and construction firm in Dallas, Texas. It works almost entirely in the luxury end of the North Texas market, designing and building gardens, pools, and outdoor rooms for large-lot homes in neighborhoods like Preston Hollow, the Park Cities, and the affluent suburbs north and west of the city. Mike Dickerson and Dave Hunchik started the company in 2008. It is one of the leading landscape design firms in the greater Dallas area.

The firm runs on a simple promise it prints on its own materials: "Design, Build, Install." One company draws the plan, builds it, and plants it. Between the two principals there is more than 50 years of work in the trade. The office sits at 7879 Spring Valley Road in far North Dallas, near the Addison line, and the crew that shows up to your house is largely the firm's own.

History

Original Landscape Concepts was founded in 2008. Mike Dickerson and Dave Hunchik had both spent years in the Dallas residential landscape business before they went into partnership, and they built the company around a particular kind of client: someone with a big lot, a demanding house, and the expectation that the yard match the architecture. North Dallas has no shortage of those clients. The firm set up shop there and stayed close to its market.

The early portfolio leaned on Preston Hollow. Anyone who knows Dallas knows what that means. The neighborhood runs along Preston Road and Walnut Hill, full of estates set back behind motor courts and old live oaks, and it has drawn the city's money for generations. Landing work there gave the firm a reputation. From Preston Hollow the projects spread into Highland Park and University Park, the two small cities that make up the Park Cities, where lot sizes are tighter but budgets are not and where a back garden has to thread between a 1920s Tudor and the neighbor's window twenty feet away.

By the middle of the 2010s the work was following the money north and west. Suburban Westlake, with its rolling caliche hills and big contemporary houses, gave the firm room for the kind of multi-phase estate plans that take years to finish. Southlake and Keller brought more of the same. These were not small backyards. They were properties where a homeowner wanted a pool, an outdoor kitchen, a motor court, and a garden that all looked like they belonged to one idea.

The firm still keeps a crew of its own installers, masons, and planting people, and it pulls in trade partners for the specialized pieces: pool plumbing, low-voltage lighting, irrigation control, ornamental ironwork. That structure lets the principals put the right team on each job without farming out the whole thing to a general contractor. On Houzz the firm carries a 4.9-star rating across more than 85 reviews, most of which talk less about the finished photos than about the fact that the people who designed the project were the same people who answered the phone during construction.

The design process

What sets the firm apart, and what its clients tend to mention first, is how a project starts. Before anyone talks about construction documents or pours a footing, Dickerson or Hunchik draws the thing by hand. Pencil on paper. The conceptual sketches and renderings come first, and they come early, so the homeowner can see the proportion of a terrace or the shape of a pool before a single dimension gets locked down.

This is not nostalgia. A hand drawing stays loose. It invites the client to push back, move a wall, ask for a wider lawn, before the design hardens into a CAD file that nobody wants to redraw. The principals will tell you a sketch communicates texture and mood in a way a slick computer rendering flattens out. Once the concept is settled, the project moves into proper construction documents, the grading, the drainage, the irrigation zones, the lighting plan, the stone schedule. Then the crew builds it.

The website keeps an archive of these sketches, grouped by style, and it reads like a tour of how Dallas houses actually look. There are French formal drawings with clipped parterres and a central axis. Contemporary plans with floating pool edges and rectilinear stone. Spanish colonial courtyards. Ranch and estate layouts for the big horse-country lots. Transitional modern work that splits the difference for the new-construction crowd. The range is the point. A firm that only does one look cannot serve a market this varied.

What the firm builds

Pools are a large part of the business, and the firm treats them as part of the landscape rather than a fiberglass shell dropped into a lawn. Designs run from infinity pools cantilevered off a Westlake hillside to geometric lap pools edged in cut limestone to family pools with sun shelves, raised spas, and stone coping. Water features show up often: a spillway wall, a sheer descent into the pool, fire bowls set on the deck. The pool, the patio, and the planting around it get drawn together so they read as one composition.

Outdoor living is the other big driver. Dallas summers are brutal, and a covered structure is what turns a backyard from a three-week-a-year amenity into something usable. The firm builds outdoor kitchens with built-in grills and refrigeration, pavilions and pergolas with deep overhangs to cut the afternoon sun, fireplaces and fire pits for the cool months, and lighting that makes the space work after dark. The pavilions are oriented to catch a breeze and shed the worst of the heat, because in this climate that detail decides whether anyone actually sits outside in July.

Then there is the hardscape, the stone and masonry bones of a project. Motor courts, entry drives, terraced patios, garden walls, retaining walls, outdoor stairs. Material choice tracks the house. Rough Oklahoma limestone and native fieldstone for the ranch and rustic work, cut Lueders limestone and travertine for the contemporary and transitional jobs, antique brick and Saltillo tile for colonial and Spanish homes. Underneath all of it the firm specs real drainage, which matters more here than almost anywhere. North Texas sits on expansive clay that swells and shrinks with every wet and dry spell, and a patio built without drainage and movement joints will crack within a few seasons.

Garden design covers the planting side. The firm does formal parterres with clipped hedging, loose perennial borders, native and adaptive schemes that get by on less irrigation, shade gardens tucked under the mature canopy of the older neighborhoods, and the occasional kitchen garden for clients who want to grow herbs and cut flowers. Plant sourcing runs through specialty Texas nurseries, and the firm will bring in large-caliper trees when a project needs shade on day one instead of in ten years.

For the biggest properties the firm offers full estate master planning. On a multi-acre lot the work rarely happens all at once. A master plan maps the whole build-out, the gates and motor court, the pool complex, the garden, a sport court or putting green, the service areas, so that each phase, built whenever the budget allows, still lines up with what came before. Sightlines hold. Grades match. Drainage and planting frameworks stay consistent even when phase three gets built four years after phase one. Plans like this have run across several seasons on properties in Westlake, Southlake, and the Stonebridge Ranch community up in McKinney.

Where the firm works

Original Landscape Concepts serves a wide swath of North Texas, but its center of gravity is the established money belt of Dallas and the high-end suburbs around it.

Inside the city, the firm works in Preston Hollow, Highland Park, and University Park, plus Bluffview and the Greenway Parks pocket, the Design District edge, and the leafy stretch around Turtle Creek. It does a good amount of work in Lakewood, the older neighborhood east of downtown that wraps around White Rock Lake and the Dallas Arboretum and Botanical Garden, where the lots are deep and the tree canopy is heavy. There are projects in Kessler Park on the Oak Cliff side too. Further north within the city the firm covers Bent Tree, Northwood Hills, and Prestonwood, the comfortable older subdivisions strung along the Tollway.

In the suburbs north of Dallas the firm works in Plano, Allen, and McKinney, where custom-home neighborhoods generate steady demand, and it follows the new construction even further out to Frisco, Prosper, and Celina. Up there the master-planned communities, Windsong Ranch, Stonebridge Ranch, Newman Village, draw buyers who want an estate-grade yard to go with a brand-new house.

To the west the firm serves the mid-cities, Southlake, Keller, and Colleyville, along with Flower Mound and the bigger-acreage properties in Westlake, where the terrain rolls enough to make for some of the firm's most ambitious work.

Reception

The firm's 4.9-star Houzz rating, built on 85 or more reviews, is the most visible measure of its reputation. Reviewers tend to praise the same things: that the principals stay involved from the first sketch to the last plant, that the projects come in close to what was drawn, and that the crew is responsive when something needs adjusting mid-build. The firm also turns up consistently in Dallas searches for luxury landscape design, particularly around the Preston Hollow and Park Cities markets where much of its portfolio sits. None of that is far from where the company set up in 2008, which is rather the point: it has worked the same neighborhoods long enough to be known in them.

External links