Historic Preservation

The 1916 Beaux Arts Cox Mansion is Gone, and Rumors Are Flying

By Karen Eubank / August 23, 2024 /

UPDATE 8/23 11 p.m.: An eagle-eyed resourceful reader sent us the demo permit, issued on August 1, for the Cox Mansion. It was demolished on August 23. We’ll continue to follow up on this story. On the corner of Preston and Beverly Drive sat the most astonishing mansion Dallas has ever seen. Most people knew…

Preservationists Win First Steps to Saving Oak Cliff United Methodist Church

By Karen Eubank / August 22, 2024 /

Saving historic buildings like the Oak Cliff United Methodist Church requires a head for business, a depth of experience, and a tenacity to persevere in the face of great adversity. But what it requires, more than anything, is heart.  You must have a heart for preservation because, to put it plainly, it’s hard. Fortunately, Dallas…

The Good Knight and the Glory Days of the Belmont Hotel 

By Karen Eubank / August 15, 2024 /

The Belmont Hotel is turning heads again. The 64-room hotel and bar at the corner of Fort Worth and Sylvan avenues was recently reinitiated for historic designation. While we await the new draft designation report and the next incarnation of this historic hotel, let’s look at the glory days in Belmont Hotel history. Renowned Dallas…

We Are Mad for The Madison Hotel, Proxy Properties’ Latest Oak Cliff Restoration

By Karen Eubank / August 8, 2024 /

A.J. Ramler sees beauty and possibility where others see only dilapidation and devastation. His company, Proxy Properties’ latest project is The Madison Hotel. It is another example of his company’s continuing core mission of redevelopment and adaptive reuse projects that contribute to the community. Ramler’s Proxy Properties is quite honestly changing the face of Oak…

Easton Place: A Secret Enclave of 1970s Shed-Style Homes in a Wooded Oasis

By Karen Eubank / August 1, 2024 /

There is no place in Dallas like Easton Place. If you don’t know where it is, that’s by design. This East Dallas gem is easy to miss because it’s in a rather small, heavily-wooded neighborhood on a cul-de-sac off Easton Road, so it’s not going to be found easily by people driving by. David Bush…