DallasMan wrote:Have we seen this drawing for the North End next to Victory?
clcrash19 wrote:Probably not going to happen unfortunately. Not enough demand to build all of that anytime soon.
Tnexster wrote:So that would be the potential replacement for the Northend Apartments?
clcrash19 wrote:Probably not going to happen unfortunately. Not enough demand to build all of that anytime soon.
eburress wrote:Tnexster wrote:So that would be the potential replacement for the Northend Apartments?
Lol, how crazy would it be if that rendering became the next step in the evolution of this piece of land; from garden-style apartments to THAT?!?
willyk wrote:Chipotle under construction.
DallasMan wrote:Have we seen this drawing for the North End next to Victory?
lakewoodhobo wrote:willyk wrote:Chipotle under construction.
Update from today
Tivo_Kenevil wrote:I went to Chipotle yesterday. Line was out the door. There needs to more fast casual in the area. Jimmy John's is still there; but it's Jimmy John's... I'd like to see maybe a Torchy's or something along those lines.
Warrior2015 wrote:Tivo_Kenevil wrote:I went to Chipotle yesterday. Line was out the door. There needs to more fast casual in the area. Jimmy John's is still there; but it's Jimmy John's... I'd like to see maybe a Torchy's or something along those lines.
How was the foot traffic overall in that area when you went?
Aqua S originated in Sydney in 2015 and has stores across Asia as well as in Virginia Beach, Virginia, and Houston, where it debuted in 2018.
It's being brought to Dallas by a franchisee, Minh Yam, and will open in Victory Park, at 2375 Victory Park Ln., #140, a couple doors down from Mesero and almost across from Tristan Simon restaurant Billy Can Can.
“We can now begin planning a fabulous hotel, conference center and other entertainment-related opportunities that may arise,” he said. “This will only enhance the great experience all AAC’s patrons have when they attend building events.”
Northland Properties bought the land – almost 2.5 acres – from Hillwood, the original developer of the 75-acre Victory Park project.
Currently the blocks are used for surface parking.
homeworld1031tx wrote:Lot F is the almost exclusively handicapped spot lot. I wonder what the implications of removing those dedicated spots are.
Cbdallas wrote:I would have never thought we would be looking at most of Victory Park being built out at this point. Very exciting especially with lower Uptown bumping up next to all of this with even more high rises and hotels.
Warrior2015 wrote:Cbdallas wrote:I would have never thought we would be looking at most of Victory Park being built out at this point. Very exciting especially with lower Uptown bumping up next to all of this with even more high rises and hotels.
Yeah and it would be nice if those apartments across from the union and next to Perot museum get bulldozed and turned into a mixed use development better connecting VP with lower uptown.
jetnd87 wrote:Stars' owner acquires two tracts of land from Hillwood adjacent to AAC to develop a hotel, conference center, and other entertainment / retail options.
https://www.dallasnews.com/business/rea ... tory-park/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northland_Properties
Northland Properties owns all four home arenas for their sports teams: the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Dr Pepper Arena in Frisco, H-E-B Center in Cedar Park, and Sandman Centre in Kamloops.
tamtagon wrote:jetnd87 wrote:Stars' owner acquires two tracts of land from Hillwood adjacent to AAC to develop a hotel, conference center, and other entertainment / retail options.
https://www.dallasnews.com/business/rea ... tory-park/
I was wiki-reading about Northland Properties, to shape a sense of what might get built next to the arena and this stuck out as untrue:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northland_Properties
Northland Properties owns all four home arenas for their sports teams: the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Dr Pepper Arena in Frisco, H-E-B Center in Cedar Park, and Sandman Centre in Kamloops.
whatever
Image search of Sandman hotels showed some uninspired snapshots, but maybe Dallas will be start of compelling architecture; the location certainly has strong attributes.
CTroyMathis wrote:North End would've fit a pro baseball park nicely (outfield west) as well with a lot of quirky extra space to spare for high-rise action to block evening sun if you think a little outside of typical ballpark structures and where the mid- or high-rises are actually a part of the ballpark and not separate. Even more, what if the whole field was elevated 50-100 feet above ground to allow for oh, all sorts of things year-round below it at street level. . . Crazy talk.
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