Credit: photos by Gerald E. McLeod

The Boot House and Cowboy Hat House either greet visitors to Huntsville arriving from the west on Texas Highway 30 with a tip of the hat, or give them the boot as they leave town.

The two conspicuous houses are the handiwork of the late Dan Phillips, who died Dec. 21, 2021, at age 76. For more than 20 years, Phillips and his wife, Marsha, had a construction company specializing in building low-cost housing using recycled materials and training construction workers.

Of the more than 20 houses that the Colorado native built, he estimated that 85% of the materials came from detritus from other construction companies destined for the landfill. Wine corks went into flooring, ceramic tile scraps created mosaic walls, and old license plates were used for roofing.

Inspired by the story of an old woman who lived in a shoe, the Boot House was completed in 2016. Most of the living space is in a 711-square-foot bungalow attached to the boot. A spiral staircase climbs 35 feet to a rooftop deck.

Next door, a white cowboy hat covers a small house. The crown of the hat provides a rooftop deck to watch the traffic on downtown Huntsville’s main east-west thoroughfare.

By all accounts Dan Phillips was a Renaissance man who spent a life well lived. According to John Nova Lomax in a thoughtful remembrance in the January 2022 Texas Highways magazine, the Eagle Scout was also a champion bull rider as a teenager, an Army intelligence officer, inventor of a word game called “Brainsqueeze,” a talented woodworker, a dance teacher at Sam Houston State University for a decade, an author, and a beloved husband and father.

The Boot House and Cowboy Hat House are in the 2600 block of West 11th Street a short distance east of Interstate 45. Both are private residences, so please respect the homeowners’ privacy.

1,719th in a series. Everywhere is a day trip from somewhere: Follow “Day Trips & Beyond,” a travel blog, ataustinchronicle.com/daily/travel.

A note to readers: Bold and uncensored, The Austin Chronicle has been Austin’s independent news source for over 40 years, expressing the community’s political and environmental concerns and supporting its active cultural scene. Now more than ever, we need your support to continue supplying Austin with independent, free press. If real news is important to you, please consider making a donation of $5, $10 or whatever you can afford, to help keep our journalism on stands.

Gerald E. McLeod joined the Chronicle staff in November 1980 as a graphic designer. In April 1991 he began writing the “Day Trips” column. Besides the weekly travel column, he contributed “101 Swimming Holes,” “Guide to Central Texas Barbecue,” and “Guide to the Texas Hill Country.” His first 200 columns have been published in Day Trips Vol. I and Day Trips Vol. II.