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  #2321  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2013, 4:38 AM
JoninATX JoninATX is offline
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Love that density.
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  #2322  
Old Posted Jan 28, 2013, 4:39 AM
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^

Awesome! They're finally filling in those two parking lots.
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  #2323  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2013, 4:15 AM
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500,000 sq foot suburban Dallas shopping, apartment and office complex kicks off



By Steve Brown, Dallas Morning News, 01-30-13

Cencor Realty Services and Weitzman Group have broken ground for the 15-acre West Plano Village project at the northeast corner of the Dallas North Tollway and Parker Road.

The combination of shops, apartments and offices will occupy one of the last vacant corners along that section of the tollway.
.....

Full article: http://www.dallasnews.com/business/c...-long-wait.ece
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  #2324  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2013, 4:22 AM
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6 boutiques infiltrating Hi Line Drive in the Downtown Dallas Design District in 2013

by Kendall Shiffler of Dallas Design District Daily, 01-10-13

DALLAS — Watch out Slocum and Dragon, another Design District street is making a name for itself in the Dallas Design District.

Hi Line Drive is the Design District’s hippest new address, and I can prove it. Last year The Bernadette Schaeffler Collection, the new 23 story luxury 1400 Hi Line Apartments, and much-buzzed-about restaurant FT33 opened their doors, joining a prestigious line up of showrooms that already call Hi Line home.

2013 is primed to bring a burst of new energy to the avenue with numerous new openings on this high design drive. Here’s a sneak peek of what is to come this year.
.....

Full article: http://www.pegasusnews.com/news/2013...3/?refscroll=0
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  #2325  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2013, 4:37 AM
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New Dallas Design District mixed use project will bring more retail and residential space to growing neighborhood


The five-story District 1444, at Oak Lawn Avenue and Dragon Street, is envisioned with retail and offices on the bottom and luxury apartments on the top. Two showroom buildings now occupy the property, and Harwood International will clear one for the project.


By Steve Brown, Dallas Morning News, 01-31-13


Dallas’ hot Design District is getting another major development — this time with a large chunk of retail space.

Developer Harwood International, one of the biggest builders in Uptown, is about to break ground on the mixed-use project at Oak Lawn Avenue and Dragon Street.

The five-story urban-style development will replace an old showroom building along the east side of Dragon.

Harwood plans to build 46,000 square feet of restaurant and shopping space on the ground level, with 224 apartments on top in the project it calls District 1444.

“We see this as an extension of what Uptown has to offer,” said Alexis Barbier-Mueller, director at Harwood International. “The Design District is an area of Dallas that in the last five to 10 years has transformed into an environment that deserves this type of quality.”
....

About six years ago, builders and investors who had seen property prices jump in Uptown started looking at redevelopment opportunities in the Design District.

Since then, developers have constructed three major apartment projects with almost 1,500 high-end rental units.

Michael Ablon, who’s been marketing properties in the Design District since 2007, said most of the large apartment development sites are gone in the area.

“Any remaining apartments in the district will be built closer to Riverfront Boulevard,” Ablon said. “Everything that has been built has leased extremely well.”
....

The newest Design District apartment building, the 23 story luxury 1400 Hi Line tower, opened last summer and is almost half full.

“The project is going good,” said Bryant Nail, PM Realty’s senior development officer. “We did a focus group with the residents and heard overwhelmingly that they loved the fact they were close to Uptown but not in the middle of it.”
....

Harwood International’s project a few blocks away will bring more residents to the neighborhood and add to the retail and restaurant base.

“We’ve already pre-leased three out of five restaurant spaces, which shows that the demand is strong,” said Jihane A. Boury, Harwood’s director of leasing and vice president.

She said the developers hope to attract a small grocer to their project.

“We would love to do an urban-size grocery,” Boury said. “We want to bring a 24/7 environment to all the people who live in the neighborhood.”
....

The developer will demolish the west side of the complex to make way for the new buildings. A remaining showroom will be used for a second phase.
....

Harwood International is one of the biggest players in Dallas’ booming Uptown market.

The developer has constructed five office buildings in its Harwood project along McKinnon Street. It’s preparing to start work on the 22-story Frost Bank Tower on Wolf Street.

Harwood International also built the 31-story Azure condo tower near the entrance to the Dallas North Tollway.

Barbier-Mueller said the firm is using its experience with the luxury Azure project on the Design District apartments and similar developments.

The apartments will feature a pool deck lounge with cabanas overlooking the city skyline, a fitness center, game room and gardens.

“It’s part of a new wave of products we want to bring to the market,” he said. “We’d like to build more of these and have started looking for more locations in Dallas and the state.”

Full article: http://www.dallasnews.com/business/c...#ssStory876587
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  #2326  
Old Posted Feb 3, 2013, 6:41 AM
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All of this, this is all very very good.
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  #2327  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 12:22 AM
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775 apartments in the works to replace old retail space in Far North Dallas



By Steve Brown, Dallas Morning News, 01-21-13

Developers want to replace an aging Far North Dallas retail center with 650 new luxury apartments and 125 units of seniors housing.

Real estate firms represented by Folsom Cos. are asking for approval from the City of Dallas to redevelop the 16-acre property on Arapaho Road just east of the Dallas North Tollway.

The site on the north side of Arapaho at Knoll Trail Drive is now occupied by several retail buildings totaling more than 190,000 square feet.

The shopping center dates back to the late 1970s and was once a companion retail center to the old Prestonwood Towne Center mall, which was located to the south.

While the mall is long gone and replaced by new shopping and residential buildings, the center on the north side of Arapaho has lagged in leasing.

Folsom officials are seeking approvals to tear down most of the two-story retail strip and replace it with a 650-unit apartment community and a 125-bed seniors housing facility.
....

Plans filed with the city plan commission show the new development will be in three large buildings no taller than 75 feet high.

The planned apartment blocks will have parking garages and interior courtyards with swimming pools.
....

Article: http://bizbeatblog.dallasnews.com/20...h-dallas.html/

Last edited by skys the limit; Feb 4, 2013 at 12:37 AM.
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  #2328  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 12:27 AM
skys the limit skys the limit is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by StatenIslander237 View Post
All of this, this is all very very good.
^^^^^^^
Dallas is booming practically across all districts of the entire city - north, south, east and west!

And especially huge growth and development in very close in central Dallas - the CBD, the Dallas Design District, Uptown, Victory Park, Oak Lawn/Turtle Creek, Knox/Henderson, the Dallas Medical District, Love Field, North Oak Cliff, West Dallas, and the Cedars/Southside District.

But surging residential growth is not restricted to those close-in central city Districts as huge residential projects are going in in Far North Dallas, Northwest Dallas, and East Dallas.

Plus the commercial boom that is growing larger and larger by the day at the Dallas Inland Port in south Dallas to further solidify Dallas' leading national role in transportation logistics and as a major distribution hub in the nation.

And the world-class golf course, with both SMU and AT&T providing huge support behind it, that is underway south of Downtown Dallas near the Trinity River Audubon Center will fuel a boom in growth around it with the Bryon Nelson Golf tournament moving there in 2018 from the suburbs (Las Colinas).

Soon there will be a sea of cranes dominating the central city landscape with the 17 story Parkland Hospital Tower underway (Medical District), the 12 story University Hospital Tower underway (Medical District), the 22 story Stoneleigh Residences Tower underway (Uptown), the 24 story West Village residential tower now under construction (Uptown), the 17 story 3003 Carlisle residential tower underway (Uptown), the soon to start 22 story Frost Bank Tower (Uptown), a soon to start 24 story residential tower in Uptown at Turtle Creek, and what appear to be imminent ground breakings for the 25 story Cesar Peli Cesar Tower in Uptown and the 17 story Hall Financial Arts District Tower in the Arts District (CBD).

There are other highrise towers coming in the near term in addition to all of those listed above.

In addition, there are already numerous cranes all over center city Dallas for large scale mid-rise residential and mid-rise office campus projects already underway.

Plus add in all of the strong growth also occurring in Dallas' suburbs concurrent with the red-hot growth occurring in the City itself.

Dallas is indeed booming!

Last edited by skys the limit; Feb 4, 2013 at 1:18 AM.
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  #2329  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 3:04 AM
R1070 R1070 is offline
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Dallas doesn't have a large following on this website. A lot of folks on here don't realize how much Dallas has going on right now.
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  #2330  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 4:31 PM
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Originally Posted by R1070 View Post
Dallas doesn't have a large following on this website. A lot of folks on here don't realize how much Dallas has going on right now.
Just a reflection of the lack of regional pride in Dallas-Fort Worth. The Fort Worth side, wants their own identity and much of suburbia tends to look down upon and disassociate with Dallas proper. Not to mention its rare to read a good thing about the place from our own rags.
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  #2331  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 4:53 PM
Dallas Snob Dallas Snob is offline
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I agree! I live in Downtown Dallas and work in Uptown. It's too bad we couldnt identify people that live in each "area" who could be the rep for that district and report once a month or so on development. I try to post downtown and uptown pics as often as I can, and now with my new iPad, I can do more...espeically on the progress side of projects under construction. I have always felt that either people are overwhelmed with posting Dallas progress because there is just so much going on, or, they just don't care. I like to think it's becuase there is just so much development happening.

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Originally Posted by Owlhorn View Post
Just a reflection of the lack of regional pride in Dallas-Fort Worth. The Fort Worth side, wants their own identity and much of suburbia tends to look down upon and disassociate with Dallas proper. Not to mention its rare to read a good thing about the place from our own rags.
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  #2332  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 8:36 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Owlhorn View Post
Just a reflection of the lack of regional pride in Dallas-Fort Worth. The Fort Worth side, wants their own identity and much of suburbia tends to look down upon and disassociate with Dallas proper. Not to mention its rare to read a good thing about the place from our own rags.
Wow. No, it is a reflection of a much more active community on DallasMetropolis.
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  #2333  
Old Posted Feb 4, 2013, 9:05 PM
Owlhorn Owlhorn is offline
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Originally Posted by eburress View Post
Wow. No, it is a reflection of a much more active community on DallasMetropolis.
Dallasmetropolis has really slowed down with all of the negativity these days.
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  #2334  
Old Posted Feb 5, 2013, 8:43 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by skys the limit View Post
^^^^^^^
Dallas is booming practically across all districts of the entire city - north, south, east and west!

And especially huge growth and development in very close in central Dallas - the CBD, the Dallas Design District, Uptown, Victory Park, Oak Lawn/Turtle Creek, Knox/Henderson, the Dallas Medical District, Love Field, North Oak Cliff, West Dallas, and the Cedars/Southside District.

But surging residential growth is not restricted to those close-in central city Districts as huge residential projects are going in in Far North Dallas, Northwest Dallas, and East Dallas.

Plus the commercial boom that is growing larger and larger by the day at the Dallas Inland Port in south Dallas to further solidify Dallas' leading national role in transportation logistics and as a major distribution hub in the nation.

And the world-class golf course, with both SMU and AT&T providing huge support behind it, that is underway south of Downtown Dallas near the Trinity River Audubon Center will fuel a boom in growth around it with the Bryon Nelson Golf tournament moving there in 2018 from the suburbs (Las Colinas).

Soon there will be a sea of cranes dominating the central city landscape with the 17 story Parkland Hospital Tower underway (Medical District), the 12 story University Hospital Tower underway (Medical District), the 22 story Stoneleigh Residences Tower underway (Uptown), the 24 story West Village residential tower now under construction (Uptown), the 17 story 3003 Carlisle residential tower underway (Uptown), the soon to start 22 story Frost Bank Tower (Uptown), a soon to start 24 story residential tower in Uptown at Turtle Creek, and what appear to be imminent ground breakings for the 25 story Cesar Peli Cesar Tower in Uptown and the 17 story Hall Financial Arts District Tower in the Arts District (CBD).

There are other highrise towers coming in the near term in addition to all of those listed above.

In addition, there are already numerous cranes all over center city Dallas for large scale mid-rise residential and mid-rise office campus projects already underway.

Plus add in all of the strong growth also occurring in Dallas' suburbs concurrent with the red-hot growth occurring in the City itself.

Dallas is indeed booming!
Deep Ellum is about to explode with the Elm St. reconstruction underway(wider sidewalks and trees) and a developer bought a whole bunch of vacant property to restore them. http://www.wfaa.com/news/local/Devel...189134541.html

The Trinity River Corridor Project is gaining traction with Moore Park almost complete, the upper chain of wetlands are under construction, and the Elm Fork sports complex under construction. There are also many trails and cleanups in progress. I'm certain the horse park is still in planning.
http://www.dallasnews.com/news/commu...citys-core.ece

Oak Cliff streetcars will begin construction on March 11(Houston Street Bridge closing).
http://oakcliffblog.dallasnews.com/2...truction.html/
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  #2335  
Old Posted Feb 5, 2013, 9:31 AM
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I must say, I think the reason why I, as a far-flung New Yorker, am so interested in development in Texas is because of the unique process of a city developed like Dallas in the 20th Century attempting to truly urbanize in the 21st. No comparable process ever happened in old cities like New York, Chicago or Philadelphia, which were initially built dense, and now face challenges in the new millennium that are totally different from those of the Sunbelt cities.

Also, I'm fascinated by how Dallas and Houston seem to be developing equally rapidly, but in totally different ways. Dallas' transformation since 2000 has been led by showpiece projects such as the Arts District, the Trinity River bridges, the rapid expansion of the DART light rail and streetcars, Klyde Warren Park, etc. ...all together intended to develop an iconic image of the city as a quintessential American metropolis. Emphasis on densifying the general built environment has been largely limited to downtown and closer-in neighborhoods of the city proper.

Houston, on the other hand, has focused far less on showpiece projects, outside of Discovery Green, but the built environment of the city has transformed dramatically since 2000, with mid-rise residential complexes and tracts of dense townhomes replacing any and all already-built types favoring larger lots...ALL over the city. I'm waiting to see which city, if ever, pulls ahead to become the more vital urban area. However, ideally, I'd love if both cities developed into sublimely urbanized places, each with individually unmistakably identities. It's a great show to watch.
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  #2336  
Old Posted Feb 5, 2013, 9:41 AM
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Originally Posted by StatenIslander237 View Post
I must say, I think the reason why I, as a far-flung New Yorker, am so interested in development in Texas is because of the unique process of a city developed like Dallas in the 20th Century attempting to truly urbanize in the 21st. No comparable process ever happened in old cities like New York, Chicago or Philadelphia, which were initially built dense, and now face challenges in the new millennium that are totally different from those of the Sunbelt cities.

Also, I'm fascinated by how Dallas and Houston seem to be developing equally rapidly, but in totally different ways. Dallas' transformation since 2000 has been led by showpiece projects such as the Arts District, the Trinity River bridges, the rapid expansion of the DART light rail and streetcars, Klyde Warren Park, etc. ...all together intended to develop an iconic image of the city as a quintessential American metropolis. Emphasis on densifying the general built environment has been largely limited to downtown and closer-in neighborhoods of the city proper.

Houston, on the other hand, has focused far less on showpiece projects, outside of Discovery Green, but the built environment of the city has transformed dramatically since 2000, with mid-rise residential complexes and tracts of dense townhomes replacing any and all already-built types favoring larger lots...ALL over the city. I'm waiting to see which city, if ever, pulls ahead to become the more vital urban area. However, ideally, I'd love if both cities developed into sublimely urbanized places, each with individually unmistakably identities. It's a great show to watch.
Agreed! I recently went to Houston and was impressed with what they're doing to help densify the city. Dallas is also a big interest for me right now. They've built some amazing projects. I am planning on visiting this coming weekend. Keep up the good work, y'all!
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  #2337  
Old Posted Feb 5, 2013, 3:21 PM
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StatenIslander - If were to track downtown / uptown Dallas where the majority of the urban redevelopment has been centered since the mid-90's you would be surprised at the changes. Here is a link to an article about uptown Dallas in 1984 vs. today. http://bizbeatblog.dallasnews.com/20...n-dallas.html/ This growth has spawned new developments over the past 5-8 years in the Design District, Deep Ellum, East Side of 75, and slowly southside to create a ring of new development around downtown Dallas. Here is a recent article about the TIF districts in Dallas and the benefits the city is profiting from http://realpoints.dmagazine.com/2013...-tif-district/ .

Houston gets a lot of buzz on this forum, mostly due to them having a very active group of posters and DFW posters kinda stick to dallasmetropolis. What you will find is a difference in the final results, in my opinion due to one city having zoning while the other does not. Both cities have similar types of developments and both have quite a bit of activity. For example, Houston's midtown and Dallas's uptown are both adjacent to their respective downtown cores. They are very different currently. Go to Google maps and zoom in. Dallas's uptown is north of downtown and Houston's midtown is on the otherside of 45 from their downtown. I was just down in Houston meeting with the city and had some time to kill before lunch so I drove around midtown. In its current state the developments dot the landscape, and resembles Dallas's uptown back in the late 90's early 2000's. On the flip side you'll find Houston's Galleria much more built up then Dallas's with some large scale projects in development. Dallas's Galleria area is surrounded by an old car dearlership (that was suppose to be redeveloped back around 2008) and some old housing. The majority of the urban redevelopment in Dallas is centered around downtown and the adjacent neighborhoods.

Last edited by TTU Arch; Feb 5, 2013 at 5:10 PM.
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  #2338  
Old Posted Feb 18, 2013, 3:23 AM
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The Dallas Farmers Market is about to have a complete overhaul. An excellent shot in the arm for this area! In two, or three years, it will serve as an anchor to that portion of downtown and stimulate growth, along with the other redevelopment projects like the Butler Brothers, the Atmos Complex, etc.

http://cityhallblog.dallasnews.com/2...s-market.html/




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  #2339  
Old Posted Feb 18, 2013, 4:40 AM
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Great news! This area has so much potential. I see the east end of downtown and west side of Deep Ellum filling in with very cool developments. It seems like anything that gets built in the area now sells out before its finished being built. I'm excited to see what happens to this area of town in the future.
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  #2340  
Old Posted Feb 19, 2013, 2:47 PM
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^ It has been. A developer is currently building on and filling in a city block adjacent (north) to the Farmer's Market with more townhomes. (http://www.dallasnews.com/business/r...ers-market.ece) They are building them as they sell them. Believe they have more than a few dozen under construction right now with a finishout of around 100. This corner of downtown is really getting a makeover, and turning into one of my favorite areas downtown. The views of the skyline from this area are uninterrupted. Looking forward to what comes about with this new plan for the Farmer's Market and what one developer is doing in Deep Ellum next door.

There is one developer that has bought more than thirty parcels of the old wardhouses in Deep Ellum. He was interviewed on the local media (http://www.wfaa.com/entertainment/De...189134541.html), and stated he plans to rework the store fronts, repurpose (not teardown) the buildings for new tenants, work with the city on streetscapes, bring in a new mix of art galleries, restaurants, bars, and music venues. All this with a targeting a more mature crowd then what we knew in the 80's and 90's. Miss the 80's / 90's Deep Ellum, but this new plan will be good for the area.

Last edited by TTU Arch; Feb 19, 2013 at 3:10 PM.
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