Candy Evans

Candy Evans, founder and publisher of CandysDirt.com, is one of the nation’s leading real estate reporters.

Inman: Compass Won’t Be Expanding Markets, Dallas a Most Successful Launch

By Candy Evans / January 31, 2019 /

Inman Connect is happening right now in New York City, if any of you are there please ping me. I couldn’t attend this year. But we are watching! Apparently Robert Reffkin sat down Tuesday with Brad Inman for an “invite-only” chat, where Robert revealed that Compass won’t be expanding into any new markets this year, and…

Dallas Builders Association Presents DISRUPTION! I Will Be There…

By Candy Evans / January 30, 2019 /

I did not make it to Inman Connect NYC this week, but I am following. And it’s a doozy! But we are going to have our own Inman-style panel right here in North Texas next week. Get the inside scoop on DISRUPTION!, which is happening in the real estate industry faster than ever. How are…

NYT Publishes Emily Summers’ Highland Park Preservation Home & Design Book!

By Candy Evans / January 29, 2019 /

They got a few real estate numbers wrong, but what does it matter? It’s the New York Times, right, and they got the design story spot on. Check out this splendidly glowing write up on Emily and Steve Summer’s house (with a well-deserved plug for her forthcoming book, “Distinctly Modern Interiors,” ) in the “affluent Dallas…

Scholarship Fund at UTA College of Architecture Created for Tom Greico

By Candy Evans / January 29, 2019 /

Memorial Services for Tom Greico are Wednesday, January 30th at 2:30 p.m. Restland Funeral Home, 13005 Greenville Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75243 Tom Greico Memorial Scholarship Established Tom Greico’s legacy to North Texas is felt not only in the aesthetics of the many Dallas homes he designed and built, with the signature modern style he created,…

Fabulous Fort Worth: Where You Will Be Drinking Wine This Weekend

By Candy Evans / January 25, 2019 /

Man and the land. One of the most wonderful things about living in Texas is, I believe, the fabulous access to land we have in our outlying communities. Sure, we are getting ever more vertical in our urban cores — and that’s great — but then sometimes, some of us want to go home, put…