She had zero hospitality experience, banks wouldn’t lend her money, and South Congress Avenue was the last place anyone expected a boutique hotel. Liz Lambert bought the flophouse anyway.
In 1994, the Manhattan prosecutor was spending time at Austin’s Continental Club when she spotted the seafoam-green San José Motel across South Congress Avenue. According to Texas Monthly, the area was “dicey” – no traffic, no pedestrians, certainly no tourists. Lambert knocked on the door anyway. By 1995, she’d quit law and purchased the property for approximately $500,000, according to the Texas Standard. She had zero business experience and banks refused funding for a boutique hotel in that neighbourhood. For three years, Lambert worked the front desk herself whilst slowly renovating room by room.
Then Annie Leibovitz photographed Lucinda Williams in an unmade San José bed. David Byrne played the courtyard. According to Texas Monthly, the hotel became the place where “Austinites wanted to be poolside, basking in the reflected grooviness of whichever reigning hipster was in town.” South Congress Avenue transformed from neglected thoroughfare to design destination. Lambert had created something beyond accommodation – a cultural gathering place that changed its neighbourhood.
The Bunkhouse expansion
The San José’s success spawned an empire. In 2006, Lambert founded Bunkhouse Group, building a portfolio that defined Texas boutique hospitality. Hotel Saint Cecilia (2008) became a rock-and-roll sanctuary with private vinyl libraries. Hotel Havana in San Antonio (2009) restored a 1914 Mediterranean Revival building with Cuban-inspired design. Each property carried Lambert’s signature attention to sensory detail – custom soundtracks, signature scents, colours that embodied each location’s personality.
But her most ambitious project sat 200 miles west in Marfa, the minimalist art mecca where her seventh-generation ranching family maintained land. According to Hospitality Design, Lambert purchased a 21-acre horse pasture in 2006. Three years later, El Cosmico opened as something unprecedented – vintage Airstream trailers, Sioux teepees, Mongolian yurts scattered across desert landscape where guests could “disconnect, see the stars, and feel the vast sense of space,” according to the hotel’s description.
The concept pioneered what would later be called “glamping.” According to The Daily Beast, Lambert’s design philosophy centred on place – architect Christopher Alexander’s ideas about spaces that reflected their surroundings. At El Cosmico, that meant embracing the cosmic scale of West Texas skies, the counterculture appeal of getting back to the land, Marfa’s artistic heritage. She collaborated with Lake Flato architects and hosted the annual Trans-Pecos Festival of Music + Love.
Industry recognition followed. Standard International’s CEO Amar Lalvani called Lambert’s work “genius,” according to Hospitality Design. In 2015, Standard acquired a 51 per cent stake in Bunkhouse. For a time, the partnership worked – Standard provided growth capital whilst Lambert maintained creative control.
The corporate rupture
Behind the scenes, tensions mounted. In 2017, Standard took investment from Thai company Sansiri, which gained effective control over Bunkhouse. According to Texas Monthly, Lambert grew unhappy with what she perceived as haphazard expansion, nearly quitting at least once. By spring 2019, she attempted to buy Bunkhouse back, but Sansiri’s valuation exceeded $30 million – far beyond her reach.
In September 2019, after attempting to retain her role, Lambert received the call. Standard CEO Lalvani told her she’d become “an unmanageable employee,” according to Texas Monthly. She was fired from the company she’d founded, one day before her 55th birthday. Skift reported the news in October 2019: “Liz Lambert will no longer hold her role as the chief creative officer at Bunkhouse.”
The properties she’d created – San José, Saint Cecilia, Havana – remained under Bunkhouse management. But Lambert retained ownership of El Cosmico and stakes in several other hotels.
The comeback blueprint
Within months, Lambert partnered with Austin restaurateur Larry McGuire and Tom Moorman, transforming their restaurant group into McGuire Moorman Lambert (MML) Hospitality in 2021. Their first project had been underway before Lambert’s departure: Hotel Saint Vincent in New Orleans’s Lower Garden District.
According to Where Y’at Magazine, Lambert spotted the 1861 orphanage building in 2014 whilst walking Magazine Street. After years of negotiations and one disappeared owner (his car was found near the airport), she secured the property with partners. The $22.5 million restoration opened June 2021 – 75 rooms blending “60s and 70s decadence over the beautiful base layer of New Orleans classic Garden District design,” Lambert told Country Roads Magazine. Room rates start at $319, reaching $1,319 for suites. The hotel houses San Lorenzo restaurant (coastal Italian), Paradise Lounge, and the members-only Chapel Club.
Saint Vincent proved Lambert’s creative vision hadn’t dimmed without Bunkhouse’s infrastructure. According to HOTELS Magazine, MML now operates 17 restaurants and bars plus two hotels, with developments in Austin, Aspen, and New York underway.
The 3D-printed future
But El Cosmico remains Lambert’s most audacious project. In March 2023, she announced plans to relocate and expand the property with ICON (the 3D-printing firm building NASA’s lunar habitats) and Bjarke Ingels Group. According to Whitewall, the new 60-acre site will feature organically curved, 3D-printed structures that “rise from the desert like something from a sci-fi Western.”
The technology allows unconventional shapes impossible with traditional construction – domed forms, parabolic geometries, curved walls that echo the cosmic imagery Lambert has always woven through the property. Construction takes weeks rather than months.
The original El Cosmico closed in July 2025, according to the Big Bend Sentinel. The new property targets a 2027 opening. Lambert also plans to transform the original 21-acre site into affordable housing for hospitality workers – addressing Marfa’s housing crisis where median home prices hit $670,000 whilst average salaries hover around $40,000, according to Surface Magazine.
The resilience test
For Lambert, who told Austin Monthly she has “grief for the loss” of her Bunkhouse properties, the question isn’t whether she can create compelling spaces – Saint Vincent and her restaurant partnerships prove that capability. Rather, it’s whether 3D-printed structures in remote West Texas and boutique hotels in secondary markets can scale without the infrastructure she built at Bunkhouse.
The prosecutor who bought a flophouse motel thirty years ago changed how Americans think about independent hotels – prioritising sense of place over amenities, community over luxury, authenticity over polish. Whether that philosophy survives translation to 3D-printed architecture and corporate partnerships, the hospitality industry watches closely.




