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Sic'EmBears

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Posts posted by Sic'EmBears

  1. Uptown Dallas' new Central Market store will anchor a high-rise mixed-use project

     

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    The supermarket will be part of a high-rise development planned for the block at McKinney and Lemmon avenues that will include offices, shops and restaurants.

    "We see this project as the unifier between Uptown and what's going on in Cityplace and the West Village," said KDC president Toby Grove.

    Instead of just remodeling the existing building, Central Market will occupy the lower levels of a 19-story mixed-use project KDC plans for the high-profile Uptown block.



    Dallas architect Omniplan and San Antonio design firm Lake|Flato are designing the development, which will take up most of the 4.8-acre block between McKinney and Oak Grove.

    "It's going to be very well-connected with the DART rail station nearby and the street car that stops out front."



    KDC plans to build a 2-acre public plaza on the roof of the Central Market that will have access to the office tower and shops and restaurants facing the elevated public space.

    "Central Market shoppers will have parking on two levels of garage on top of the store," said KDC executive vice president Walt Mountford. "On top of that, the amenity deck will have great views of downtown.



    "It's going to be a great experience for both the retail users and tenants in the office building."

    "This will be largest store in Central Market's portfolio," Mountford said. "There will be a total of 150,000 square feet of retail in the entire project.

    "This activates the entire street frontage, and it will be a great pedestrian experience."



    The planned Uptown store will be Central Market's seventh location in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

     

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    KDC will seek zoning changes for the Uptown block to allow the construction of the development, including asking for an additional 85 feet in building height.



    The 450,000-square-foot office tower is being made taller to allow for the plaza area on the south side.

    The Office of James Burnett — the same firm that did downtown's Klyde Warren Park — is designing the plaza and street-side landscaping.

    "This will be the longest storefront on McKinney Avenue," said KDC senior vice president Colin Fitzgibbons. "The pedestrian experience should be great and a vast improvement over what is there today."

    Because of the complexity of the project and underground parking that will be excavated on most of the block, construction will take more than two years.

    The planned Uptown Central Market will be the fourth new urban grocery store in central Dallas that is combined with a high-rise building.

  2. Construction on phase 2 of Post Sierra at Frisco Bridges expected to last 22 months

     

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    The second phase of Post Sierra at Frisco Bridges started construction in mid-July and is expected to last 22 months.



    The multifamily community, located on the southwest corner of Rifle Gap Road and Warren Parkway, will have 348 units that include one- and two-bedroom lofts or one- and two-bedroom traditional apartment homes.

  3. Airline launches its first DFW Airport to Florida route, prices start at $39

     

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    Sun Country Airlines is launching two Florida flights from Dallas Fort Worth Airport this week. It will mark the first time the airline has operated a scheduled flight to Florida that originated at DFW Airport.



    The airline's new DFW-to-Fort Myers route begins Wednesday, and a DFW-to-Tampa flight will start Friday. Sun Country said flights to Fort Myers and Tampa are available for as little as $39 and $49, respectively.

    It also flies to Cancun out of DFW and will start a DFW-to-Punta Cana, Dominican Republic route in November.

  4. Dallas area lands two more huge Amazon shipping hubs

     

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    Amazon is expanding its warehousing operations with two huge fulfillment centers — one in West Dallas and another on Interstate 45 in southern Dallas County.



    This week the Dallas City Council voted to give the Seattle-based Internet retailer about $2 million in economic incentives to build a more than $100 million distribution center in West Dallas that is expected to create 1,500 new jobs.

    The 100-acre ecommerce facility will be located at 1301 Chalk Hill Road near Davis Street south of Interstate 30. Developer Hillwood Properties is building the huge shipping hub which will have 855,000 square feet.

    Amazon already has nine major distribution and sorting centers in the D-FW area.



    The company is just opening a more than 1-million-square foot shipping hub in Wilmer south of Dallas.

  5. Chinese development group to bring mall project to US 380 corridor

     

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    Frisco City Council approved to rezone 77 acres on Tuesday along US 380 for a multilevel shopping center project with additional retail, office, hotel and urban-living residential units.



    The rezoning request was approved with the condition that the developer would begin construction on 100,000 square feet of office space plus the first phase of the mall and retail aspects before receiving a building permit for any residential building.

    Lesso America, a subsidiary of building material manufacturer China Lesso Group Holdings Ltd., has owned the land for two years and plans to move its American headquarters to the development.

    The development is planned to have three different districts

    a frontage district with a mixture of retail, hotel and office;
    a lifestyle district that would contain most of the retail with one urban-living tower;
    and a southern district that would contain mostly urban-living units as well as some office, hotel and retail space.

    Ron Patterson, president of Frisco Economic Development Corp., said the project is valued at about $2 billion, which would bring in a lot of tax revenue.

  6. Not a fan of the surface parking, but this is what Dallas needs more of - developments that fit the context of their neighborhood.

     

    Look: Here’s what’s planned for the old Gloria’s

     

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    Gloria’s restaurant moved to Fire Station No. 15 on Bishop at Davis in 2011, and the local chain’s original building, at the southeast corner of Davis and Llewellyn, was demolished in 2013.



    The lot sat vacant for years until recently. A new restaurant building is under construction on the site now.

    A listing from the Woodmont Co. says the building will comprise 2,546 square feet and have a 900-square-foot patio.

  7. Frisco condo tower in the works on $5 billion mile

     

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    The developers of the $700 million Gate development on the Dallas North Tollway plan to build a 10-story residential building. The condo tower, on John Hickman Parkway just west of the tollway, will have more than 100 residential units, according to plans filed with the city.



    "The Gate will be for-sale condos," said Michael Cox with architect Humphreys & Partners, which is designing the project. The more than 3-acre development site is part of the 40-acre mixed-use Gate project, which was part of Frisco's original $5 billion mile.

    The Gate property is owned and has been planned by Dubai-based Invest Group Overseas. The project is planned to include almost 20 buildings ranging in height from about three stories to more than 10 floors.



    The development is designed for more than 650,000 square feet of office space, almost 1 million square feet of residential buildings, and more than 130,000 square feet of retail space, plus a luxury hotel.

    Two high-rise rental residential buildings are also under construction next door to The Gate in the Frisco Station and the Dallas Cowboys' Star developments.



    Atlanta developer Novare Group is building a 25-story residential rental building along the west side of the tollway in Frisco Station.

    And a 17-story apartment tower is being built by Columbus Realty Partners and Dallas Cowboys owners the Jones family in the Star development.

  8. Developers are betting smaller is better with new East Dallas rental project

     

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    The 70-unit Fitzhugh Flats development will have 1-bedroom and studio apartments averaging just 615 square feet.



    The project is being built east of downtown Dallas between Ross Avenue and Live Oak Street.

    The project will include garages and covered parking spaces, storage units, a lounge and dog park for residents.



    "Our goal is to provide a project that will appeal to the majority of renters in the market based on the price point" said Reid Beucler, principal of Slate Properties LLC.

    "With projected rents starting around $1,200 per month, we feel like we are positioned well to compete with the other communities in the neighborhood."

  9. TEXRail overpass bridge nears completion

     

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    The TEXRail bridge over SH 114/121 is nearing completion after more than a year of construction. The new bridge connects the TEXpress lane rails as they head south from Grapevine into DFW International Airport.



    The bridge is 1,580 feet long and held in place by more than 40 columns. It will have one track running across it when it opens, although it has the capacity to carry two.

    In the coming months, the roadway beneath the bridge will be restored to its pre-construction status as the lane closures come to an end. 

    This fall the bridge will begin to see trains traverse between the airport and Grapevine as the service prepares to begin at the end of the year.

  10. Frisco Station developers ready to start construction on second major office building

     

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    Missouri-based VanTrust Real Estate is set to begin construction this month on a second major office building at Frisco Station, the 242-acre mixed-use project at the Dallas North Tollway and Warren Parkway.



    Called Offices Two at Frisco Station, the 210,000-square-foot building is a speculative venture -- being launched without a major tenant attached -- and is planned for the southwest corner of Cowboys Way and Gridiron Road.

    It will be the second of five buildings planned for the office district at the $1.8 billion Frisco Station. Construction costs for the new office building were not released.

    Frisco Station is set to have 5 million square feet of office space upon completion and a daytime employment of nearly 15,000 people



    Meyer said his firm, which has a regional office in Frisco, anticipates strong demand for both buildings.

    "We're pretty confident about ... several deals that we're working on," he said. "And the activity that we've got on building one exceeds the vacancy that we've got."

    Construction on the six-story office tower is slated for completion in September 2019.

    Frisco Station is one of the first developments in the nation using the technology, and the combination of wireless stealth microcells, ultra-fast internet powered by AT&T Fiber and robust Wi-Fi throughout all common areas, will provide "the ultimate wireless user experience," the company's announcement said.



    Offices Two at Frisco Station is adjacent to the Dallas Cowboys' world headquarters at The Star and will be within walking distance of more than 50 retail, restaurant and entertainment options at The Star and The Hub at Frisco Station, the development's planned entertainment district.

    Frisco Station also is where one of the world's first Skyports to support Uber Air's flying taxis is planned.

  11. Air France plans nonstop DFW-to-Paris flights starting in March

     

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    Air France is saying bonjour to North Texas for the first time in more than a decade, with planned nonstop service between DFW International Airport and Paris set to launch in March of next year.



    The new service will be operated aboard an Airbus A330 with 224 seats beginning March 31 and running through the 2019 summer season. The French carrier said it will operate three weekly flights from March 31 through June 30; and from Sept. 4 to Oct. 25. 

    In July and August, that will increase to five weekly flights, with departures on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.

    It will be the 16th international carrier serving DFW Airport.

    North Texas is home to offices or other facilities of 120 French-owned companies, with France ranking as the 13th largest trade partner for the region, according to Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings. Rawlings, along with Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price, visited France in June along with a delegation of airport and other local officials in a trade mission that included a meeting with Air France executives.



    "Our recent mission trip to France was intended to spark even more corporate activity between our regions," Rawlings said in a statement. "These new flights will strengthen our business ties with France and western Europe and expand our capacity to travel between DFW and Paris."

  12. Dallas' midcentury Casa View Village shopping center gets a major makeover

     

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    Developers and city officials say the commuter consternation will be worth it early next year when a $10 million-plus makeover of the retail crossroads is done.



    Casa View Village was once hailed as "a modern shopping center for one of the fastest growing areas of Dallas." But 60 years on from the grand opening, the retail district in northeast

    Dallas was well past its prime when neighborhood leaders and city planners began crafting a redo.

    Now construction is underway on upgrades for the shopping village that's at the heart of one Dallas' 1950s neighborhoods.

    "We are 30 days into what we believe will be a 6- to 8-month renovation of the buildings at the northwest corner," said Daniel Fuller with Dallas' Shop Cos., which is redeveloping the landmark retail center.

    Originally called Casa View Hills, the retail strips served growing post-World War II neighborhoods where you could buy a new house for less than $8,000. Built with antique brick and decorative wrought iron, the Casa View buildings that Shop Cos. is now rebuilding were described as "New Orleans-style."

    The new owners plan to restore the buildings and bring in new retail and restaurant tenants.

    "There are probably three or four tenants that have been there since 1954," Fuller said. "There is an art and science to merchandising a property that has the history Casa View has.



    "We want to keep some of the tenants that have been there for a long time."

     

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    Award-winning Dallas architect Omniplan — the same firm that designed Liberty Mutual Insurance's huge new Plano regional offices and NorthPark Center shopping mall in Dallas — worked with Casa View's owners, residents and the city on a renovation plan.



    "The neighborhood, you could tell, was once something really fantastic," said Omniplan's Amanda Buckley. "This project is about getting back to what it was.

    "There is a lot of opportunity there," she said. "It's not like a standard suburban shopping center with no character."

    "It's a wonderful eccentric property, and our goal is to do a sensitive restoration," Fuller said. "We want to preserve the original brick with the wonderful patina."



    The storefront canopies will be restored, lights and signage upgraded and the central plaza reworked with new paving and landscaping.

    "We are planting 60 new ornamental and shade trees at Casa View," Fuller said. "I think by year-end it will be quite a lot different."

    Neighbors like what they are hearing and wish it could move even faster.

     

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  13. Cityplace high-rise on the drawing board for original skyscraper site

     

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    Cityplace has asked the city for approval to build a project that is larger than the current zoning allows.

    "It's one of the last two sites we have left," said Cityplace president Neal Sleeper. 



    "We are trying to pump up the density a little bit. We've got all the height we need."

    Sleeper said the planned high-rise for the site would be mostly office space.

    "We are hoping to do a significant office building and a hotel," he said. "That's where the second tower was originally going to be, so we want to have something of prominence."

  14. New industrial park on the way in Southwest Dallas' Mountain Creek project

     

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    A new business park in the works in Southwest Dallas will bring almost 1.3 million square feet of industrial space to the Interstate 20 corridor.



    Investor and developer Liberty Property Trust plans to construct a 2-building warehouse and distribution project in the Mountain Creek Business Park near I-20 and Mountain Creek Parkway.

  15. Baylor Scott & White plans massive office center on edge of Deep Ellum in Dallas

     

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    A new office project coming on the edge of Deep Ellum in Dallas will relocate hundreds of jobs to the area.



    Baylor Scott & White Health plans to build a large office administration complex with more than 600,000 square feet of construction in the 3700 block of Elm Street. 

    The planned office center is just south of Baylor's huge Dallas campus. Building permits value the project at more than $70 million.

    The project will include 300,000 square feet of office space and a parking garage.

    Officials with the Dallas-based hospital and health care firm confirmed they are working on a major development.

    Construction is expected to be completed by late 2020.

  16. Lewisville industrial park will bring four new buildings to market

     

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    A Chicago-based industrial real estate firm is breaking ground on a new business park in Lewisville.



    First Industrial Realty Trust Inc. says it's building an 84-acre warehouse complex at Midway Road and FM 544.

    The first $27.5 million phase of construction will include two buildings with more than 345,000 square feet.

    Called First Park 121, the project will ultimately have four buildings with 727,000 square feet, according to First Industrial Realty.

  17. Garland data center campus growing with $400 million addition

     

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    Developers of a big Garland data center are increasing the size of the project by 50 percent.



    California-based Digital Realty a year ago said it would build a $1 billion high-tech campus near Bush Turnpike. Now the firm has purchased more land for a $400 million expansion of the project.

    The addition of 16 acres will grow the Digital Realty project to five, 2-story data centers on 64 acres, making it one of the biggest such facilities in North Texas.

    The 1.4-million square-foot campus will be built in five phases, each with about 280,000 square feet.

  18. Developer Trammell Crow builds immigration services center at DFW Airport

     

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    The General Services Administration will lease the almost 260,000-square-foot building for the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services' Texas Service Center



    The center will have both office and support space and will be ready in early 2020.

    "By consolidating several locations, the USCIS will be able to more efficiently deliver on their important mission," Crow's Scott Krikorian said in a statement.

    Gensler is the architect and Manhattan Construction Company will is the general contractor for the project. JPMorgan Chase Bank provided construction financing.

  19. Dallas' Paul Quinn College grows with new multipurpose building

     

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    Dallas' Paul Quinn College has broken ground on its first new building in 40 years.



    The historic southern Dallas University is constructing the 40,000 square-foot educational and residential building with the help of $7 million in contributions.

    The multipurpose building will be named after one of the university's biggest benefactors, Dallas businessman and environmentalist Trammell S. Crow.

    RBA Architects designed the new building and Crimson Building Co. and Burchfield & Partners are developers of the project.

    "The Crow Living and Learning Center will be the first of many new structures built on this campus," Paul Quinn College president Michael Sorrell said in a statement.


    The school is the oldest historically African American college west of the Mississippi River.

  20. New apartment and retail project on the way across from Galleria in Far North Dallas

     

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    Developers have broken ground in Far North Dallas near the Galleria on a new apartment and retail center.



    The project by PegasusAblon includes 289 luxury rental units plus the redo of an existing shopping center with an amphitheater and stage, fountains, dining and additional retail. Called Ablon at Galleria Muse, the mixed-use project will be at the northwest corner of Alpha and Noel roads across the street from the Galleria shopping mall.

    Dallas' PegasusAblon and partner Lionstone Investments plan to have the project done by early 2020, said developer Michael Ablon.

    "We wanted to create an urban project that is a complimentary experience to the Galleria mall," Ablon said. "This is going to be the heart of that whole area."

    "We are building on what used to be the parking lot," Ablon said.



    The six-story apartment block will include a parking garage and additional ground floor retail space.

    "Our plan is to re-engage visitors at the street level, creating a destination environment for the community," Ablon said.

     

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  21. Renovation plan would turn 93-year-old West End building into hotel in downtown Dallas

     

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    A plan in the works would convert a historic building in downtown Dallas' West End district into a new hotel.



    The Sanger Brothers garage at 711 Elm St. was built in 1925 as one of the city's first "high-rise" parking garages. The five-story brick building sits across the street from where the Sanger Brothers department store was — now El Centro College.

    Irving-based hotel firm Icon Lodging bought the Elm Street building in April and has been working with Dallas' Merriman Anderson Architects to come up with a plan to redevelop the garage.

    Merriman Anderson recently made a preliminary presentation to the Dallas Landmark Commission, which asked them to go back to the drawing board and rework the hotel proposal. The initial plan would have added six levels of hotel rooms on top of the old parking structure. But commission members and staff weren't fully on board with that plan.


    "Our client wants to find a way to make this happen," Anderson said. "It's a unique and special building.



    "We are working hard with the Landmark Commission, and they have been responsive and understanding."

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