Dallas
This home is just epic-level cute. If you’ll recall, we heard from one half of an Oak Cliff power couple that there are few, if any, affordable homes left in this burgeoning urban ‘burb. Well, that’s not the case! A lovely Dave Perry-Miler Realtor, Eric Holmes, sent this to us and let me say that…
Missy Woehr is just about as Dallas as Dallas gets. But would you believe that this dynamic agent not only hails from Tulsa, but made her way to Dallas to see a golf tournament? Woehr has made a name for herself as someone with a wealth of information about Uptown, and is a key member…
I stumbled across this interesting bit of news that a new development just west of Houston in Katy will put 440 new tract homes on top of a 242-acre golf course.
Sacrilege? Considering the dearth of available land in the tony suburb, perhaps not.
I stumbled across this interesting bit of news that a new development just west of Houston in Katy will put 440 new tract homes on top of a 242-acre golf course.
Sacrilege? Considering the dearth of available land in the tony suburb, perhaps not.
When I was a member of the Urban Acres Co-op, our pickup was at Promise of Peace Garden off East Grand Avenue. That was when I met Elizabeth Dry, the founder of the garden. At that time, the DISD teacher told me that she was looking to relocate the garden to Casa Linda park, which sits between Casa Linda Estates, a railroad track, and Little Forest Hills. That plan went bust, though.
A few weeks ago I heard stirs that the huge piles of mulch that had materialized on Old Gate and Diceman, across the street from White Rock United Methodist Church, were to form the new home for Promise of Peace. While I may not live in Little Forest Hills, many of my friends do, and some live within startling proximity of the garden’s new location.
What residents say is that, although there was a community meeting regarding the garden, far more people disapprove of the garden’s proposed location than have been reported. In fact, they’ve surveyed nearby residents and at least 20 of them are against Promise of Peace moving in. Truly, this controversy has nothing to do with the Methodists giving the Catholics at St. Bernard of Clairvaux a place to park. It has everything to do with a poorly planned community garden right next to an established neighborhood, and the severe lack of communication between the Methodist church and those neighbors. In fact, the homeowners directly adjacent to the garden’s proposed location were never contacted, were never asked for input or permission of any kind. Galling, I know.
For the full response from one neighbor uncomfortably close to the situation, jump.