Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Home Building Ensues

Dallas homebuilder starts McKinney project

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Grenadier Home's new houses range in size from 1,259-to-1,693 square feet. (Grenadier Homes)
A Dallas-based homebuilder is starting work on the second phase of a McKinney townhouse development.
Grenadier Homes said Monday that it’s begun construction at its Villas at Willow Grove community near Eldorado Parkway in McKinney.
The project will have 57 townhomes priced starting at close to $200,0000. The first houses will be ready this summer.
“We’ve had a great response from customers on the Villas at Willow Grove,” CEO John Egnatis said in a statement. “We built 100 homes in phase one, all of which have been sold, and we’ve already sold more than 50 percent of the homes in phase two.
“This level of pre-sales prior to the actual home construction is unusual in our industry, and it’s a first for us.”
The two- and three-bedroom houses range in size from 1,259 to 1,693 square feet.

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Lady Scots Have More Goals After 20-4A Title

Sara Summers and the HP girls soccer team will start the playoffs on March 24 against Paris.

Sara Summers and the Highland Park girls soccer team will start the playoffs on March 24 against Paris.
Having already clinched another District 20-4A title, the Highland Park girls soccer team won’t bring much drama to Tuesday’s regular-season finale.
After a week off for spring break, the Lady Scots (15-4-1, 7-0) will look to stay sharp and keep their momentum from a seven-game winning streak that dates back more than a month.
HP has outscored its opponents in seven league games by a combined 33-3, and has not allowed more than one goal in any game since a 4-0 loss to Wylie East on Jan. 21. The team has developed a balanced offensive attack led by Lauren Echols, Sara Summers, Hope Hyde, and Savanna Jones.
Tuesday’s contest against Carrollton Newman Smith — which is battling for one of the district’s final playoff spots — should provide a nice tuneup for the Lady Scots before the start of postseason play. In the bi-district round, HP will meet Paris at 5:30 p.m. March 24 at Royse City.


Read more: Park Cities People http://www.parkcitiespeople.com/#ixzz2wQEMJRa3

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Highland Park Village courting 'unique, rare' boutiques


 A year after a new generation took possession of Highland Park Village, the upscale shopping center is aggressively seeking the most exclusive boutiques eyeing Dallas.





Deno's shoe repair, Starbucks, Tom Thumb supermarket and a four-screen theater already make it a daily destination for residents of the affluent neighborhoods surrounding the location at Preston Road and Mockingbird Lane.
But this 80-year-old national historic landmark, boasting the region's only Harry Winston, Beretta Gallery and Christian Louboutin (opening in September) stores, has always been more than a community center. Its Chanel and Hermès boutiques are celebrating 25 years, and its Tory Burch and Ralph Lauren locations are among each designer's biggest-volume stores.
Highland Park Village came with a pedigree and a formula to create an even more productive property, said Stephen Summers, partner and director of leasing.
"It's hard to re-create this center. It's a shopping destination for people who live in 12 to 15 surrounding states," he said. "There's nothing like it unless you live in New York, Los Angeles or South Florida. People don't have these options."
The Chanel store has the highest percentage of domestic tourists among all its U.S. stores, and the recently remodeled Jimmy Choo shoe boutique boasts the designer's top customer.
"She lives in Arkansas, and she shops our store," said Summers, who with wife Elisa and developer and restaurateur Ray Washburne and his wife, Heather, acquired the center for $170 million a year ago from the extended family of Henry S. Miller Jr. and investors from New Orleans. The Miller family bought Highland Park Village for $5 million in 1976.
When Summers didn't renew Banana Republic's 5,300-square-foot lease at the end of last year, he caught some flak.
"That's one retailer that is readily available all over Dallas," he said. "We're turning the space into unique, rare shops. We're not looking for mass market."
Opportunities
The new owners "spent a lot of money" to buy HP Village, said Jeffrey C. Paisner, a retail broker at Ripco Real Estate in New York who represented the Christian Louboutin shoe boutique in the recent lease negotiations. "As leases come up, they are starting to look at other opportunities."
Tory Burch sells more than $5 million a year out of 1,600 square feet, "proving that women in Dallas love to wear dresses," said Paisner, who is also representing Diane Von Furstenberg. The designer known for her wrap dress since the 1970s is moving into the old Banana Republic space. The store will be one of fewer than a dozen in the U.S. and her only Texas store.
The vacated Banana Republic space, which is being carved to accommodate as many as five storefronts, is also getting French men's swimwear brand Vilebrequin this month as a one-year lease.
An undisclosed Italian boutique is scheduled to take up a portion of the former Harold's space. So far, 11 stores and restaurants have been added or renovated in the last year, and Summers is busy with more. That includes the renovation of the Village Theater and addition of the Marquee restaurant to the theater, which will include private screening rooms and dinner when it opens this fall.
Fashion destination
At 200,000 square feet, Highland Park Village will never replace Dallas' regional upscale mall NorthPark Center, which is more than 10 times its size. But the two definitely serve the same customers, Paisner said.
"We understand that some stores prefer the outdoor shopping center environment to the enclosed center," said Chris Szalay, director of marketing at NorthPark. "We all benefit if we can attract all the desirable retailers to Dallas. If they don't fit in NorthPark, we still want them here to keep Dallas a strong fashion destination."
Some boutiques don't want to position themselves as mall-based, Paisner said. "Tenants that aren't going to have many stores and are going to wholesale their brand to the upscale department stores have to be careful where they locate in a city."
Giorgio Armani will close its 5,300-square-foot store at NorthPark on Sunday, less than three years after it opened as part of the mall's redevelopment with an impressive lineup of luxury tenants. The Armani store is just down the corridor from NorthPark's Neiman Marcus, which has always had Armani shops in its men's and women's departments.
The Armani space has been leased to Gregory's, an independent designer boutique that operates a store at Galleria Dallas. Gregory's Galleria lease is up in early 2011, and it's not clear whether Gregory's will operate in both malls.
"Today, malls have to bring in fresh new names and concepts to keep your center interesting for shoppers," said Angie Freed, general manager of the Galleria.
BCBGeneration recently opened at the Galleria and is one of only eight stores in the U.S. Its contemporary clothes are designed by Joyce Azria, daughter of BCBG founder Max Azria.
Luxury leather handbag and accessories maker Brahmin, opening this month, and Shasa, a fast-fashion chain from Mexico City that's beginning its U.S. expansion, are exclusives to the market, Freed said.
Highland Park Village, NorthPark and the Galleria are all looking to attract tourists, especially with the approaching Super Bowl 2011 at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington.
Hanna Struever of Retail Portfolio Solutions in Laguna Beach, Calif., is working with Highland Park Village on its leasing strategy.
"Dallas has a substantial out-of-town shopper base," she said. "And you know, many of them can go anywhere in the world to shop."

Hundreds of apartments in works near Dallas Farmers Market

Two developers are tying up land near the Dallas Farmers Market to bring hundreds of new apartments to the southeast corner of downtown Dallas.
Apartment builder Wood Partners has contracted to purchase an almost 4-acre tract on Cesar Chavez Boulevard just east of the farmers market.
The vacant property has long been owned by Houston-based Camden Property Trust, which built the adjoining apartments.
“We are looking to do in the neighborhood of 300 units and plan to start in the first half of 2014, if possible,” said Wood Partners’ Ryan Miller.
Wood Partners is already one of central Dallas’ busiest apartment builders. The developer is building about 200 units in the Sylvan Thirty project on Fort Worth Avenue in West Dallas. Wood Partners has a second development site a few blocks away on West Commerce Street.
On Maple Avenue in the Medical District, Wood Partners is building 249 apartments next door to a light rail station.
Along with Wood Partners, another major apartment builder, Alliance Residential, is negotiating to buy a farmers market development site.
Alliance is in talks to acquire the property just north of the farmers market that floral and landscaping companies occupy.
A consortium of developers and investors won approval late last year from the city of Dallas to revamp the decades-old public produce market at Pearl Street and Interstate 30.
They plan to build 240 apartments on Pearl and replace underused old produce sheds with housing and retail space.
Adding in Wood Partners and Alliance Residential’s plans, as many as 800 apartment units could be coming to the district, which has been one of the last areas of downtown Dallas to redevelop.
InTown Homes also is building more than 100 townhouses on Cesar Chavez at Marilla Street.
“We are excited about the additional residential development occurring with the redevelopment of the farmers market,” said John Crawford, CEO of the economic development group Downtown Dallas Inc.
“This will serve as an additional catalyst for this part of downtown, which is beginning to come into its own.”

The Owners of Uncle Uber's Are Opening a Restaurant at the Dallas Farmers Market

Excellent news for the Dallas Farmers Market: It's getting a new restaurant venture calledGreen Door Public House, brought to you by Uncle Uber's Sammich Shop owners Bryan and Kathy Crelly.
Rather than build from the ground up, the Crellys are making use of a historic building that was already there — well, sort of. They're moving the historic two-story Liberty Bank building from its original location at Elm and Cesar Chavez Streets to a spot right behind Ruibal's, the lush nursery that greets farmers market visitors on Harwood Street, to create what a press release describes as "the only free-standing restaurant in the Farmer's Market ... highlighted by a 1,200 sq. ft. patio with unobstructed views of downtown."
The release further promises a "come-as-you-are environment" and a menu that will include grass-fed burgers, steaks, seafood, and blackboard specials incorporating ingredients from the farmers market (naturally), plus local beer and craft cocktails.
It's a very bright spot of news for the Market, which is of course losing its star tenant Pecan Lodge to Deep Ellum sometime this year. For more details, scope out the full release below:
THE GREEN DOOR PUBLIC HOUSE WILL BE FIRST TO OPEN AS PART OF FARMER'S MARKET REVITALIZATION
After moving the historic Liberty Bank building from its former location at the corner of Cesar Chavez and Elm Streets to 600 S. Harwood, directly behind Ruibals nursery, the husband and wife team behind Uncle Uber's in Deep Ellum will open Green Door Public House. It will be the only free-standing restaurant in the Farmer's Market, conveniently located a few short blocks from the heart of downtown and Deep Ellum, and highlighted by a 1,200 sq. ft. patio with unobstructed views of downtown.
The Green Door Public House will occupy the first floor of the two-story brick building built in the late 1800's. Its history includes four saloons during the early 1900's and was remodeled and occupied by Liberty Bank in the 1920's when prohibition began.
During prohibition, speakeasy owners would paint their doors green to alert customers that they had the "goods." Guests will feel immediately welcomed by the intimate décor and come-as-you-are environment. This new refuge for food and spirits will not only appeal to our urban neighbors but also to those visiting the Farmer's Market.
The menu will range from a ½ lb. grass-fed burger to fresh-cut steaks to seafood and will feature rotating blackboard specials with ingredients sourced directly from our neighbors at the Market. Serving local beers and creating hand-crafted cocktails inspired by a time when bartending was not just a profession but an art form. It will be a place to step out of modern life for an afternoon or evening and unwind with great conversation and friends. The Green Door Public House will embrace that nostalgia and charm, fortunately without all the annoyance of periodic police raids.
Bryan and Kathy Crelly and longtime business partner Ken Rothman's restaurant resumes include the following original concepts: Uncle Uber's-Deep Ellum 2011, Rockwell's Neighborhood Grill-Chicago 2004, Fat Ted's-Deep Ellum 1997, and the original Uptown Bar & Grill on Fairmount Street in 1995. The Green Door will swing open in early summer 2014-follow our progress on Facebook!

Thursday, March 6, 2014

Hunter, Stephanie Hunt to turn downtown Masonic Temple into center aimed at solving Dallas’ ‘biggest challenges’

Hunter and Stephanie Hunt with, at right, Geoffrey Orsak, formerly the dean of SMU's Lyle School of Engineering
After a month spent wondering who purchased the Masonic Temple on Harwood Street in downtown Dallas, the wait is over: The building has been purchased by Hunter and Stephanie Hunt, who plan on turning the 73-year-old, 43,000-square-foot temple into “a hub of creativity and collaboration.”
That’s the phrase used by one of their key collaborators, Brent Brown, founding director of the Dallas City Hall-based CityDesign Studio and bcWORKSHOP, which aims to rebuild and reconnectneighborhoods.
During an interview with The Dallas Morning News in March, Stephanie Hunt, a Dallas native, said she was eying downtown locations to build the Urban Innovation Lab for Youth, which would serve as “an open-access space where kids can collaborate or experiment together in solving problems — a place where they can feel safe to fail, iterate and evolve their thinking.” The lab will now be just one component of the building’s makeover, says Brown.
Click to enlarge: The Masonic temple on Harwood has looked more or less the same since it was built in 1941.
The Hunts now envision the space as “a building that could serve as a collaborative space for multiple nonprofits,” says Brown. “It could be individual nonprofits, academic organizations. But it’s going to deal with solving urban problems. This building adds a mix of the creative: How do we solve some of the biggest challenges in our city, and not just from a charitable standpoint? How do you create viable marketplace solutions?”
Brown is quick to note that the purchase of the building is just the beginning of what could be a six-month-long (or longer) process defining its ultimate use. The Hunts, both in their mid-40s, have been looking for space for more than a year — in East Dallas, the Cedars, the West End. When the Masonic Temple became available, they bought first with the intention of filling in the blanks later. After all, Brown reminds, they have the money, the patience and the vision. Hunter, after all, is president and CEO of Hunt Consolidated Energy and the son of oilman Ray Hunt. He and Stephanie also established the Hunt Institute for Engineering & Humanity at SMU’s Lyle School of Engineering in 2009, which hosts the annual Engineering and Humanity Week on the Hilltop.
They settled on the temple, says Brown, because of its location near the Dallas Farmers Market (which is under the auspices of private owners planning a $64-million redo), 508 Park Avenue (which the First Presbyterian Church is turning into the Museum of Street Culture) and several older buildings, including the Lone Star Gas Lofts, being transformed into residential spaces. “Change is happening” in that part of downtown, says Brown, so what better place to put an endeavor devoted to it? And, it’s an enormous space with myriad possibilities — everything from office space to performance space. But it needs work, which buys them the time to define its use.
“We gotta find it,” says Brown. “Stephanie and Hunter have chosen to make an investment and are considerate of the evolutionary nature of this effort. You can’t bake it. You can’t will it. You have to have dialogue, and sometimes things present themselves in a different order. The building became available, and they were forward-thinking to want to invest and then think about how to fill it. That’s one of the great things about visionary Dallas leaders and philanthropists: They make the space to do what’s best for our city. This is something that will be evolving over the next few months. And the building needs improvements — the basic kind, and the kind that will make it a more public building.”
In March, Stephanie Hunt told The Dallas Morning News that Southern Methodist University, Paul Quinn College, bcWORKSHOP, the University of Oxford and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees had signed on as project partners. Brown said the building will consider and welcome all comers, suggesting it might become something like The Meadows Foundation, but with its sights aimed squarely at solving some of what ails Dallas — “from job creation to affordable housing to food distribution systems,” says Brown. “For starters".

Wednesday, March 5, 2014

New home sales unexpectedly climb to 5-year high in January

David Woo/Staff Photographer
An airplane flies over homes under construction in Southlake near Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport.
Sales increased 9.6 percent to a 468,000 annualized pace, exceeding the highest estimate of economists surveyed by Bloomberg and the most since July 2008, figures from the Commerce Department showed today in Washington. Demand improved in three of four regions.
Home remodeling companies such as Mohawk Industries Inc. remain upbeat about the market’s prospects for 2014 as property values climb and the economy improves. Nonetheless, limited housing supply, rising borrowing costs and still-tight credit conditions are preventing the industry from making even bigger strides.
“Overall, despite the weather, consumer confidence is holding in OK,” Jim O’Sullivan, chief U.S. economist at High Frequency Economics in Valhalla, New York, said before the report. “We’ll start to see home sales trend up again.”
The median forecast of 82 economists surveyed by Bloomberg called for 400,000. Estimates in the Bloomberg survey ranged from 380,000 to 442,000. December sales were revised up to 427,000 from an originally reported 414,000 pace. For all of 2013, demand jumped 16.3 percent to 428,000, the most in five years.
The median sales price rose 3.4 percent last month from January 2013 to $260,100, today’s report showed.
Regional Breakdown
The Northeast led the advance last month with a 73.7 percent surge, the biggest jump since July 2012. Sales climbed 11 percent in the West and 10.4 percent in the South. They dropped 17.2 percent in the Midwest.
Inclement weather also might have weighed on the housing market as frozen ground kept builders from starting work and buyers from shopping for properties. Last month was the coldest start to the year since 2011, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
The months’ supply of homes declined to 4.7, the fewest since June, from 5.2 in December. There were 184,000 new houses on the market at the end of January, the same as in December.
New-home sales, which account for about 7 percent of the residential market, are tabulated when contracts are signed, making them a timelier barometer than transactions on existing homes.
Housing starts fell 16 percent last month to an 880,000 annualized rate following December’s revised 1.05 million, the Commerce Department reported last week. The decrease was the biggest since February 2011.
Fewer Permits
Permits for future projects showed a smaller drop in the report — a sign activity may stabilize as the weather improves.
Transactions for previously owned homes also weakened in January, declining for the fifth time in six months, figures from the National Association of Realtors showed last week. Purchases decreased 5.1 percent to a 4.62 million annual rate, the fewest since July 2012. Sales fell in all four regions of the country, indicating unusually frigid temperatures were only partly to blame.
Higher mortgage rates are limiting affordability for buyers, with borrowing costs climbing since mid-2013. The 30- year fixed mortgage rate averaged 4.33 percent in the week ended Feb. 20, up from 3.35 percent in early May 2013, according to data from Freddie Mac in McLean, Virginia.
February Weather
The weather might be weighing on the market more heavily in February. Builder confidence also slumped in all four regions this month as potential buyer traffic and sales slowed, the National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo sentiment gauge showed last week.
The measure slumped to 46 from 56 in January, the biggest decline since monthly record-keeping began in 1985. Readings less than 50 mean more respondents reported poor market conditions than good.
Executives at Mohawk Industries in Calhoun, Georgia, which makes residential and commercial flooring, still see strength for the industry in the year ahead.
“Our future optimism is supported by a number of leading indicators that anticipate continued improvement in new construction and remodeling,” Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Lorberbaum said on a Feb. 21 earnings call, citing an NAHB remodeling index that has held at its highest level in 10 years in the first quarter this year.
“The improvement in remodeling is being driven by an improving economy, higher housing prices as well as growing sales of existing homes,” Lorberbaum said
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