Zoning Committee Member Ryan Behring Says Dallas Could Lure More Development With Urban Trees 

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When working on a story recently about a woman in Old East Dallas who wants to protect the shade trees in her neighborhood, I reached out to Zoning Ordinance Advisory Committee member Ryan Behring. 

Behring isn’t your typical “tree hugger.” While he recognizes the environmental benefits of trees, he also heavily acknowledges their economic value. That’s why, since 2016, he’s been encouraging City Hall to use its fledgling Urban Reforestation Program to launch a tree-planting initiative. 

Behring’s comments on the importance of trees for housing and economic development didn’t make it into the story for which I’d planned them — but the topic is worthy of its own deep dive. 

“Street trees should be near the top of the City of Dallas and private development priorities in urban development for the environmental and air quality, let alone the other benefits,” Behring told CandysDirt.com. “There is tons of research on how they enhance real estate value in addition to environmental benefits and quality of air, life, and shade.” 

While the City of Dallas hasn’t made any moves lately to reignite the Urban Reforestation fund, the Dallas City Council voted Wednesday to designate 86 trees “historic,” meaning they can only be removed with City Council approval or due to a dangerous public safety issue.

Trees making the historic cut include the Big Spring bur oak, a grove of trees at Dealey Plaza, a grove of 35 post oak trees at Pioneer Plaza Park, a Cherokee Park tree at Dallas Heritage Village, a California Crossing Comanche Marker tree, and the Moore Park Big Tree Grove.

A Positive, Tangible Difference

While leading the GrowSouth AmeriCorps program from 2015-2017, Behring worked with then-Mayor Mike Rawlings to spark interest in the city’s reforestation program. 

Ryan Behring

“We saw it as a way for neighborhood associations to come together to make a positive, tangible difference in their community — fall Saturday mornings with coffee, doughnuts, and the camaraderie of making a difference,” Behring said. “The reforestation program became a great bonding opportunity for neighborhood associations and something they could be proud of. In all our team planted around 150 trees.” 

Now a managing partner at Re:Studio Architecture, Behring said GrowSouth was initiated as a marketing effort for southern Dallas. 

“It was trying to identify investors who wanted to come to the southern part of the city,” he said. “We were kind of like the boots on the ground, the community liaisons between City Hall and southern Dallas neighborhoods.” 

Through those efforts, Behring met city arborist Phil Erwin and members of the Urban Forest Advisory Committee, which oversees the reforestation program. 

But the effort lost steam over the years. 

“Dallas is always looking for the next big thing, a convention center project or the bullet train, things that are billions of dollars,” Behring said. “This comes up every election cycle, like, ‘What about the potholes?’ That’s where trees are really interesting to me because I think for a $500-a-tree investment, you can plant them, water them for three years, and after that, they’re pretty self-sufficient.” 

Oak Cliff business owner David Spence and other community leaders have been championing street trees and planting them with funding from their own pockets for years, Behring pointed out. Developer Monte Anderson touts a philosophy of investing incrementally, doing a small thing consistently in a small area to produce results. 

“They’re saying the same thing, that it improves real estate value,” Behring said.

Arborist Steve Houser, a former chair of the Urban Forest Advisory Committee, said Dallas can’t address climate change, the urban heat island, or poor air quality unless “we can get more trees in the ground and save more existing trees.”

“I am not sure the parkway plantings were ever formalized into an official program but it seems it should be,” Houser said. “We are currently lobbying to restore the Mowmentum [median planting program] funds which could help to pay for median irrigation systems.”

Bishop Arts District

So what’s needed to fully revitalize the reforestation effort? 

Behring says a consistent, committed public-private coalition of leadership and a “water-tight” vision for maintenance (pun intended). 

“The best method we have found is the bottom-up, people-powered buy-in of adjoining property owners,” he said. “All in, with consistent leadership, I believe the program would take $500 to $1,000 per tree to plant and maintain over the recommended initial three years.”

There already is about $5 million in the city’s reforestation fund, which Behring said hasn’t, to his knowledge, been touched in years. The effort should be focused in urban districts where concrete is abundant and water spigots or hydrants are accessible via private property, he said. 

“With a $5 million investment already there, we could strategically plant between 5,000 and 10,000 trees,” Behring said. 

Trees Lure Economic Development and Housing

Many of the older, most desirable neighborhoods in Dallas are lined with mature street trees, Behring said. 

Behring’s GrowSouth presentation

“I live near Winnetka Heights in Oak Cliff, and often choose to walk those streets in part due to their shade, air quality, human scale of the street, and architectural character,” he said. “Generally, investments in quality of life will yield real estate value. Other desirable Dallas neighborhoods that have this quality are sprinkled throughout Old East Dallas, Uptown, and parts of North Dallas. Many of these neighborhoods have appreciated significantly in value over the last decade.”

 Commercial districts that invest in street trees also tend to see a higher length of shopping time and money spent in the district, according to Behring’s research. A 2013 Wall Street Journal study showed that homes with street trees sold for $7,130 more on average than those without.

“Think of it as the reverse broken-window theory,” Behring said. “Invest in small, tangible-win programs consistently over time — that a community can participate in — and community pride will grow and blight will recede. If nothing else, we’ve made better neighbors of ourselves.”

Bishop Arts District

District 1, where Behring lives, does a good job of maintaining urban street trees. Winnetka Heights is “on the way” to many businesses and shops along the gridded street system of West Davis, Tyler Street, and Kings Highway, he said. 

“As an architectural designer one of the things I look at is the scale of the right-of-way,” Behring said. “Mature street trees make our often large, inhumane streets feel smaller, making the walk and adjacent real estate more desirable.”

City planner and author Jeff Speck shares that an urban walk should have four key elements: be useful, safe, comfortable, and interesting. 

“Mature street trees generally contribute to each of these,” Behring said.

April Towery covers Dallas City Hall and is an assistant editor for CandysDirt.com. She studied journalism at Texas A&M University and has been an award-winning reporter and editor for more than 25 years.

3 Comments

  1. Barbara E. on October 28, 2023 at 11:05 am

    The problem is that, left unmonitored, these trees quickly get out of control, because homeowners and the city do not seem to know that trees need to be pruned to remain attractive and safe.

  2. Douglas Newby on October 28, 2023 at 11:42 am

    April, thank you for writing on the economic and other benefits of trees. We need to keep planting trees. In Munger Place even before it became a Historic District the neighborhood homeowners planted one or two trees on the parkway of almost every home. Now the neighborhood is made up of tree tunneled streets..

    Dallas needs to remember it is even more productive to save neighborhood trees than plant new ones.

    Currently the Dallas Planning and housing departments are calling for ADUs that will deforest our older neighborhoods. Every time a back yard rental house and parking pad are built in a back yard, a mature pecan tree or other trees have to be taken down. ADUs double the cost of affordable homes for first time homeowners and destabilize neighborhoods, but they are an even greater threat to the numerous backyard trees that help define older neighborhoods.

  3. Candy Evans on October 28, 2023 at 9:01 pm

    Oh Doug, AMEN! As you know, we are huge tree advocates. We moved a ranch house off our lot and I spent six hours guarding one of our Live Oaks fearing they would nick it or worse. The thing that infuriates me is this “density” movement to cram people into the city because we need more housing: 25,000 units, I’m told, more or less. Yet Dallas is losing population. I’m really trying to dig to find the source of the proclamation. And then cramming ADUs into backyards, de-stabilizing neighborhoods is basically tearing up the zoning contract under which homeowners purchased their homes. I believe it will be a contract violation. And it’s just wrong.

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