This Story Is About a Home But It’s Also About the Nostalgia of Lochwood Shopping Center

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For most home listing features I write, I search the web and the Dallas Morning News archives for historical insights about the home or neighborhood. Just something that’ll give me an interesting hook to build my story.

For this week’s very meta Inwood Home of the Week, sponsored by Inwood National Bank, I discovered a treasure trove of articles. A few about the Lochwood Addition, this East Dallas neighborhood of reasonably-priced post-war homes, where you’ll find this week’s featured home at 11630 Saxon Street listed by Jenny Capritta of RE/MAX DFW Associates. But the lion-share of newspaper articles, personal blogs, and Dallas historical forums were about one place at the corner intersection — Lochwood Shopping Center (now known as White Rock Marketplace). See, I told you Lake Highlands is sentimental about their local landmarks.

Located at the crux of Garland Road and Jupiter, Lochwood Shopping Center first opened in 1957 to news coverage and much fanfare. This place was a big deal because it was masterplanned for development WITH the Lochwood Addition of homes.

Credit: Dallas Morning News archives April 1955
Credit: Lochwood Shopping Center Facebook Page

Developer W. H. Cothrum envisioned three distinct sections of Lochwood: Single-family residential, multi-family homes, and retail shopping. The shopping center, which had two main buildings that face an open air pedestrian mall, would be the largest in the Southwest and could park 4,000 cars at one time. Needless to say the shopping center was a regional attraction and made homes in the Lochwood Addition hot commodities.

That brings me to this lovely 1955-built home. (I could go on but I feel like I’m headed for level two rabbit hole status, as a colleague would write.) Lochwood is highly sought-after still today for its lush creeks and rolling hills that create an urban oasis like no other, says listing agent Jenny Capritta.

This three-bedroom, two-bath home has 1,912 square feet on a .17 acre lot with the healthiest-looking grass I’ve ever seen.

Inside you’ll find delicious hardwoods (yep), freshly painted walls, and plenty of natural light that permeates throughout. There’s a formal living area with dining room adjacent and the kitchen just behind that wall.

The remodeled kitchen has granite countertops, subway tile backsplash, stainless appliances including a duel fuel range and an adorable built-in work station.

The large family room has a fireplace equipped with gas logs and French doors to the tranquil backyard with a pergola-covered flagstone patio. A huge one car garage with extra space for workshop is ideal for the DIY’er, Capritta points out.

The home is zoned for Reilly Elementary, Robert Hill Middle, and Bryan Adams High School in DISD. It’s minutes from White Rock Lake and of course, White Rock Marketplace. You can get a Goff’s Burger like the old days but there’s a Flaming Burger and a plenty of convenient shopping. Indeed, the original mixed use development.

Jenny Capritta of RE/MAX DFW Associates has listed 11630 Saxon Street for $549,999.

Shelby is Associate Editor of CandysDirt.com, where she writes and produces the Dallas Dirt podcast. She loves covering estate sales and murder homes, not necessarily related. As a lifelong Dallas native, she's been an Eagle, Charger, Wildcat, and a Comet.

3 Comments

  1. Jack Grady Harris Jr on August 2, 2022 at 12:08 pm

    Hi,
    I enjoyed reading you memory of the shopping center and the real estate developments that my father ended up becoming part of, building some of the very homes people live in today. My father owned and operated the Lochwood Barbershop before becoming a builder/developer, working with the the FGirst Citizens Bank and W.H. Cothrum and others back in the day.

    My father passed away just this last month. Here is his obituary.
    https://obits.dallasnews.com/us/obituaries/dallasmorningnews/name/jack-harris-obituary?id=35973075

  2. Kevin Faulkner on September 20, 2023 at 1:42 am

    I was taken by my mom a few times to that barber shop, I believe, it was the early 70s, I was quite young.

  3. Dallas Cothrum on February 4, 2024 at 9:12 am

    W.H. Cothrum was my paternal grandfather. He developed the center and offices there for decades at First Citizens Bank. I recall walking with Mr. W.H., as he was known, to Luby’s with his trusted colleagues for lunch.

    My father and late aunt named most of the streets in the subdivision, including Farrar Street. Boyce Farrar was my maternal grandfather. Other street names were those of their friends.

    The family also donated the site to the YMCA of Metropolitan Dallas, where as a child I played football games on Cothrum field. The Lochwood Branch Library is now located there.

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