ericthegardener wrote: Artists and musicians go in and make a crappy part of town cool but are eventually run out as the rents raise so they go to another part of town and the process starts over again. My worry is that we are running out of run down parts of town for artists to inhabit.
LongonBigD wrote:I read a story this week (Dallas Voice, perhaps?) that said the Artisan Collective was closing next week because the rent was jacked up and they wouldn't be able to afford the next increase since they opened there about 10 years ago.
I just wanted to say that if Bishop Arts can't figure out a way to keep "art" in the neighborhood, what is the point? They might as well be Bishop Uptown or The Shops of Legacy on Bishop. Maybe they would prefer the name Bishop Knick-Knacks. This is an age-old problem, the area becomes so trendy that the people/shops that made it a destination can no longer afford to remain.
I hope Artisan Collective can find a way to resolve this issue and remain. I have always enjoyed shopping here. If I am honest, this store is the main reason I go to Bishop Arts.
lakewoodhobo wrote:The first of the Exxir Bishop Arts development buildings, at Bishop and Melba, look like they've been there for decades. Seems like they're making an honest effort at quality and not just slapping some brick paneling on particle board.
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ericthegardener wrote: I'm way more interested in the potential of Bishop Arts, Deep Ellum and The Cedars to become true walkable neighborhoods than I am in the latest high rise going up in Downtown or Uptown (though I am interested in those neighborhoods too).
dzh wrote:Not really sure where else to put this but...has anyone else been on the Exxir website and seen the project they have for Carlisle Street in Uptown? It looks incredibly fascinating.
dzh wrote:Not really sure where else to put this but...has anyone else been on the Exxir website and seen the project they have for Carlisle Street in Uptown? It looks incredibly fascinating.
dzh wrote:Not really sure where else to put this but...has anyone else been on the Exxir website and seen the project they have for Carlisle Street in Uptown? It looks incredibly fascinating.
ericthegardener wrote:I'm way more interested in the potential of Bishop Arts, Deep Ellum and The Cedars to become true walkable neighborhoods than I am in the latest high rise going up in Downtown or Uptown (though I am interested in those neighborhoods too).
Tnexster wrote:I can see high rises along Zang, especially about where El Fenix is located and down closer to the gateway and the river but Bishop Arts? Isn't that capped out at midrise level?
Dettmann1 wrote:Tnexster wrote:I can see high rises along Zang, especially about where El Fenix is located and down closer to the gateway and the river but Bishop Arts? Isn't that capped out at midrise level?
You are correct. I believe the Oak Cliff Gateway rezoning only allowed for high rises close to the river on and near the Dairies site and Zang triangle. It then steps down from there to 5-8 stories along Zang and then eventually I believe to 5 stories by the time it gets to Bishop Arts. Pretty sure we won't see any additional upzoning in the neighborhood along that corridor for a very long time.
Jefferson is a different story however as I believe its zoning allows taller buildings as well.
lakewoodhobo wrote:These plans are impossible to read, but it looks like the Cuellars are requesting to combine the lots surrounding El Corazón (El Chico building) into one big lot. That is sounding an awful lot like a tear-down in the works. Page 34 of the CPC docket: http://dallascityhall.com/government/me ... .pdf?Web=1
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If you look closely, you can see "Orange Bishop Arts LLC, an Alabama LLC." Looks like it was formed last November: https://www.bizapedia.com/al/orange-bis ... s-llc.html
dch526 wrote:Based on the size of the lot this will most likely be a retail development (probably 1 story based on the larger streets surrounding it). Hopefully they don't put in a large surface parking lot with it and orient the building to the streetcar.
Tnexster wrote:nexster » 04 Apr 2017 22:51 That used to be where Tejano's was located?
p0nyfan wrote:Pretty sure Orange Dev out of Alabama develops CVS's.
Dettmann1 wrote:If it is indeed Orange Dev, then what people are saying is correct. They mainly do CVS work, so it wouldn't surprise me that if they have it under contract, that is what it would be. Definitely a shame since I love that restaurant!
tamtagon wrote:Dallas has a work group tasked with identifying and correcting quality of life disconnects like this, City Design Studio. Even though this work group was initiated to further the likelihood of the Trinity Trust Foundation's Trinity River Tollway
tamtagon wrote:While these drugstores are reviled for the auto-centric housing disconnected from the pedestrians' neighborhood and taking part of the profiteering of the prescription drug racket, they have also turned into an interesting combination of corner grocery store and Five & Dime....
At strategic intersections across the country, pantry staples are frequently less expensive at the drugstore on one corner than the supermarket across the street. Guiding the corporate giants to house these business - neighborhood amenities - in neighborhood friendly structures should not be a difficult task.
The idea that Bishop Arts (or Deep Ellum or Fair Park or Oak Lawn) would be tainted by corporate chain stores may be unsavory, but it's a reality.
Dallas has a work group tasked with identifying and correcting quality of life disconnects like this, City Design Studio. Even though this work group was initiated to further the likelihood of the Trinity Trust Foundation's Trinity River Tollway, a corner drugstore along a streetcar route in Bishop Arts is the most obvious call.
tamtagon wrote:While these drugstores are reviled for the auto-centric housing disconnected from the pedestrians' neighborhood and taking part of the profiteering of the prescription drug racket, they have also turned into an interesting combination of corner grocery store and Five & Dime....
At strategic intersections across the country, pantry staples are frequently less expensive at the drugstore on one corner than the supermarket across the street. Guiding the corporate giants to house these business - neighborhood amenities - in neighborhood friendly structures should not be a difficult task.
The idea that Bishop Arts (or Deep Ellum or Fair Park or Oak Lawn) would be tainted by corporate chain stores may be unsavory, but it's a reality.
Dallas has a work group tasked with identifying and correcting quality of life disconnects like this, City Design Studio. Even though this work group was initiated to further the likelihood of the Trinity Trust Foundation's Trinity River Tollway, a corner drugstore along a streetcar route in Bishop Arts is the most obvious call.
eburress wrote:I think you're missing peoples' points ... potentially plopping a suburban-style retail development down is a massive step in the wrong direction
...Plug a CVS into the ground floor of an urban, mixed-use, pedestrian-friendly development and it becomes a complete non-issue.
eburress wrote:tamtagon wrote:While these drugstores are reviled for the auto-centric housing disconnected from the pedestrians' neighborhood and taking part of the profiteering of the prescription drug racket, they have also turned into an interesting combination of corner grocery store and Five & Dime....
At strategic intersections across the country, pantry staples are frequently less expensive at the drugstore on one corner than the supermarket across the street. Guiding the corporate giants to house these business - neighborhood amenities - in neighborhood friendly structures should not be a difficult task.
The idea that Bishop Arts (or Deep Ellum or Fair Park or Oak Lawn) would be tainted by corporate chain stores may be unsavory, but it's a reality.
Dallas has a work group tasked with identifying and correcting quality of life disconnects like this, City Design Studio. Even though this work group was initiated to further the likelihood of the Trinity Trust Foundation's Trinity River Tollway, a corner drugstore along a streetcar route in Bishop Arts is the most obvious call.
I think you're missing peoples' points. The issue isn't that it's an "unsavory" corporate chain store or that people don't think drug stores address a need. The issue is the suburban, car-centric style in which these CVS stores are developed -- AND -- also that the density of these plots was increased, so potentially plopping a suburban-style retail development down is a massive step in the wrong direction.
Plug a CVS into the ground floor of an urban, mixed-use, pedestrian-friendly development and it becomes a complete non-issue.
Tnexster wrote:That's a neat building, sad it has to go.
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