LOVE FIELD PROJECT TO INCLUDE RESTAURANTS, PLANET LINCOLN 24
ParkCitiesPeople
AUGUST 2018 VOLUME 38 NO. 8
“THE BEST COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER IN TEXAS”
PARKCITIESPEOPLE.COM
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Meet Park Cities florist Alicia Rico and 19 others making a difference in the community. B SECTION
AMANDA WEI
SESSIONS, ALLRED WILL FOCUS ON IMMIGRATION ISSUE
DINOSAURS INVADE PEROT MUSEUM
FORMER JAI ALAI STAR NOW RESTAURANT OWNER
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The race for the 32nd District will center on a multitude of topics, but addressing the border crisis could be a key issue for both candidates.
A new ‘Ultimate’ exhibit, which includes several rare skeletons and explores species from the other side of the world, is drawing attention this summer.
After his sport of choice dissolved, one athlete needed a new plan. He turned to the food service industry, and now owns two successful Dallas restaurants.
2 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
FAILING THE ETHICS 101 QUIZ
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’ve seen it suggested on social media that Park Cities People staff members must not know who is ultiW I L L I A M TAY L O R mately responsible for the much discussed ad placed on page 40 of the May issue. At this point, I regrettably must agree. It’s not unusual for a marketing firm or other company to place and pay for advertising on behalf of a client, so verifying the source isn’t as simple as reviewing check stubs. (If you want to know which company paid for the ad, reread last month’s Page 2 column or visit our website). What is unusual is having an advertisement submitted that isn’t clearly marked as an advertisement and then having it go through production only to be caught and mislabeled at the last hour. It’s also unexpected to not be able to get an undisputed answer about who’s responsible for an ad. It’s not lost on us that the ad was presented as an Ethics 101 Quiz and asked readers to make judgements about intelligence and integrity. After having to run corrections and dis-
cuss our processes for dealing with such ads, we are not feeling as smart as we’d like to think we are. I also am somewhat puzzled by the strong rhetoric and condemnation the ad has drawn. Mercilessly questioning the wisdom and motives of elected officials is a long-held tradition in this country, especially when they make decisions with which some may vehemently disapprove. What is over the top is going on social media and likening to Al-Qaeda neighbors who express an unpleasant opinion. Thousands of Americans died on 9-11. Don’t trivialize their deaths by flippantly comparing to terrorists those whose only crime is to express a different point of view – even when shared anonymously. As for that Ethics 101 ad, I sure wish we had refused to run it – not because of its content, but because whoever authored it lacks the conviction to stand up and take credit for it. There’s more than one way to fail an ethics quiz. William Taylor, Editor william.taylor@peoplenewspapers.com
CLARIFICATION Traci Schuh informed the newspaper Neither of them approved nor paid for the that only she and Scott Dabney are au- ad that ran on Page 40 of the May issue of thorized to approve and place advertise- Park Cities People. ments for Concerned Park Cities Citizen.
Contents
Crime ............................ 4 News .............................. 8 Community ................. 14 Real Estate Quarterly .... 16 Business ....................... 34 Sports .......................... 38 Schools......................... 40 Society ......................... 42 Faith ............................ 46 Weddings ..................... 47 Living Well .................. 48 Classifieds .................... 51 20 Under 40 ...... Section B July 4th Special ...... Insert
EDITORIAL
ParkCitiesPeople
Editor William Taylor Assistant Editor Bianca R. Montes Staff Writer Timothy Glaze Sports Editor Todd Jorgenson Production Manager Craig Tuggle
A DV E R T I S I N G
O P E R AT I O N S
Senior Account Executives Kim Hurmis Kate Martin
Business Manager Alma Ritter
Account Executive Rebecca Young Client Services and Marketing Coordinator Kelly Drobac
Publisher: Patricia Martin
Distribution Manager Don Hancock Interns Lisa Darquea Kelly Fox William Legrone
Production Assistant Imani Chet Lytle Park Cities People is printed on recycled paper. Help us show love for the earth by recycling this newspaper and any magazines from the D family to which you subscribe.
Park Cities People is published monthly by CITY NEWSPAPERS LP, an affiliate of D Magazine Partners LP, 750 N. Saint Paul St., Suite 2100, Dallas, TX 75201. Copyright 2018. All rights reserved. No reproduction without permission. Submissions to the editor may be sent via e-mail to editor@ peoplenewspapers.com. Correspondence must include writer’s name and contact number. Main phone number, 214-739-2244
4 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Crime
S KU L D U G G E RY of the MONTH
UNLIKELY TOOLS
Burglars are getting mighty creative in the Park Cities. Apparently, one used a metal foot scraper June 20 to carve a hole in the front door of a home in the 3900 block of Normandy Avenue. The homeowner, who was out of town during the 2:43 p.m. burglary, said nothing appeared to have been stolen but the mail was tossed around.
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CRIME REPORT JUNE 11 - JULY 8 JUNE 11 If identity theft was made into a horror movie, this Highland Park resident’s story would be a great premise. It all started June 1 when Citizen’s One called to inform her that her request for a $5,000 loan had been approved, according to a police report filed at 6:32 p.m. Then, a week later, mail at the home in the 3600 block of Euclid Avenue stopped arriving. Turns out someone had placed a hold on it with plans to collect it – and the several credit cards they’d applied for – at the post office. June 12 Everyone listen: Do not try to change your shoes while driving. A motorist heading southbound at 30 mph in the 4800 block of Armstrong Parkway learned his lesson the hard way by slamming his 2013 Chrysler 300 into a fire hydrant around 8:43 p.m. The driver told police that he took his eyes off the road for just a second. Police issued the driver a citation for not being able to provide proof of insurance and sent him on his way – without his vehicle, of course. June 13 Luggage stuffed with more than $20,000 of jewelry was stolen between 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. from an open garage in the 4100 block of Druid Lane. June 15 While a vacant home for sale might scream, “come on in,” the owners weren’t too pleased when a group of teens were trespassing on the property. Police officers were called out to the home in the 3600 block of Granada Avenue around 5:47 p.m. June 16 This time it wasn’t a rental bike. Around 6:38 p.m., a green and black Hyper Act IV that appeared to have been stolen – a cut bicycle chain was still wrapped around its frame – was left upright on a sidewalk in the 4900 block of Hillcrest Avenue.
About $200 worth of Tide Pods were stolen around 11 a.m. from the CVS in the 3000 block of Mockingbird Lane. We pray the thief isn’t eating them. June 19 A burglar crept through an unlocked sliding garage door and stole a bicycle from a home in the 4200 block of Bordeaux Avenue while the homeowner was on vacation. Video surveillance showed the burglar enter the garage around 7:45 p.m. June 13 and then exit with the turquoise colored beach cruiser with a basket, the homeowner reported to police at 2:42 p.m. June 19. June 20 Kicked in before 8 a.m.: the rear door of a home in the 2900 block of Lovers Lane. Nearly $18,000 of kitchen equipment was stolen, including a $5,000 Kitchenaid refrigerator and $3,000 double over. June 24 A $3,100 set of golf clubs were stolen sometime between 8 p.m. June 23 and 2 p.m. the following day from a 2018 gray GMC Yukon parked in the 3400 block of Colgate Avenue. June 25 Imagine getting a call from your neighbor that a man in a white tank top was ripping your copper downspouts from your home. Crazy, right? Well, that’s what happened for a Park Cities homeowner in the 3600 block of Princeton Avenue. The 1:40 p.m. theft resulted in $751 loss for the resident. But that’s not where the story ends. The homeowner’s daughter, who lives one house west from her parents, also reported her copper downspouts were stolen that same day. A semi truck may have been too big to make a left hand turn onto Mockingbird Lane from Greenway Avenue. The trailer hauling hit a “Do Not Enter” sign. The 6:33 p.m. incident left the road sign bent and pointed in the wrong direction.
There’s a time for marketing your pest control business. Midnight is not it. A homeowner in the 4400 block of Hanover Street reported the “harassing” late night phone calls from a bug slayer to police around 5:21 p.m. June 26 A homeowner in the 4300 block of Arcady Avenue reported that sometime between noon June 24 and 11 a.m. June 26 her copper downspouts were stolen from the side of the garage on the west side of the residence. Police located a blue pair of wire snips below the crime scene. June 27 Multiple parked vehicles and a pole were struck sometime before 5:12 p.m. in the 6800 block of Hillcrest Avenue. The driver apparently left the scene on foot but police were able to locate and arrest the 22-year-old Dallas man. June 29 A garage left open for just a couple minutes in the 3600 block of Harvard Avenue proved too tempting for a thief in a white Subaru SUV. Returning to shut the door, the homeowner came face-to-face with the vehicle at 3:02 p.m. as it was pulling out of her driveway. Sadly, it was too late to recover the stolen Craftsman 3-gallon compressor and EGO power 15-inch, 56-volt cordless trimmer, collectively valued at $280. June 30 About $400 in lawn and garden equipment and $1,500 in recreational sports equipment was stolen sometime between 7 and 7:15 a.m. from a garage in the 4000 block of Bryn Mawr Drive. July 1 Sometime between 12:05 and 1:35 p.m., the window of a 2017 white Lexus GX350 parked in the 4200 block of Grassmere Lane was shattered in order to steal a $150 iPad from inside.
July 3 If you saw a purple Chrysler 300 on fire just before 7 p.m. at the intersection of Airline Road and Mockingbird Lane, then we have a story to tell you. Apparently, the car had fake dealer plates and was assumed to be involved in a series of crimes. While that opinion hasn’t necessarily panned out for police, they did find out that the vehicle was involved in an earlier hit and run case. Unfortunately, the driver and passenger seen in the vehicle fled the blazing scene before police arrived. July 4 A Park Cities resident who returned home on the Fourth of July from vacation was welcomed back by finding his home has been burglarized. Sometime between 3 p.m. June 29 and 2:30 p.m. July 4, the back door of the home in the 4300 block of Lorraine Avenue was forced open and an iMac desktop computer, MacBook laptop, and a 750 ml bottle of Louis XIII Re’my Martin Cognac were stolen. July 5 If you heard gunshots around 5 p.m., they came from a home in the 4100 block of Grassmere Lane. Police report the gun was “accidentally” discharged from inside the residence. July 8 The Shops at Highland Park’s newest tenants had a pretty lousy welcome to the shopping center. Around 2:30 p.m. both a Hush Hush Tan employee and the owner reported to police their vehicles had been burglarized. The front passenger window of an employee’s 2017 Nissan Murano was busted after 12:15 p.m. and two wallets were stolen. The owner of the shop also reported that the passenger door glass from her 2011 Toyota 4-Runner also was busted and her purse was stolen from the front seat.
8 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
News
IMMIGRATION ISSUE COULD IMPACT U.S. HOUSE RACE
Sessions, Allred face obstacles as November election nears
Protestors gathered outside U.S. Rep. Pete Sessions’ Dallas office in June in response to the border crisis.
By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers
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he upcoming race for the 32nd Congressional District seat, which includes the Park Cities, has been called a tossup by several nonpartisan reports, with the recent immigration crisis a key issue for Republican incumbent Pete Sessions and Democratic candidate Colin Allred. Sessions has held the seat since 2002, but the district as a whole voted for Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election – a surprise for
the normally-Republican area that voted for John McCain in 2008 and Mitt Romney in 2012. The slow shift from red to blue in the district has many pundits predicting a close race and, in turn, a chance for Allred, the former NFL player and current civil rights attorney, to take Sessions’ seat. At the center of the race is the country’s immigration issue, which reached a boiling point this summer when images arose of families being separated and detained at the Texas-Mexico border. President Donald Trump signed an executive order to end
the practice of children being separated from their parents at the border, but Allred has continued to push vehemently for immigration reform. Sessions, who is also chairman of the House Rules Committee, said in June he supported Trump’s efforts to keep families together at the border while still working to address the issue. “This is a critical situation that must be dealt with appropriately and immediately,” Sessions wrote on Twitter. “I look forward to working towards a legislative solution to address this important issue.”
WILLIAM LEGRONE
On his campaign website, Allred posted an official statement regarding the border crisis, mentioning how it “hit home” with him as someone who grew up in Dallas schools that were predominantly Hispanic. “Separating children from parents seeking asylum isn’t a partisan issue – it’s about who we are and the values we all share,” he wrote on Twitter. Protestors gathered outside Session’s office in June to protest the treatment of people at the border. Nearly 100 residents showed up with signs and chanted.
Colin Allred
COURTESY PHOTO
Pete Sessions
COURTESY PHOTO
“I think the policy itself is heartless, and an abomination for this country,” said Richard Marcus, a Dallas resident. “The photos of the children in the cages reminded me of what it probably looked like in Nazi Germany 60 years ago.” “What they’re doing at the border is inhumane,” added Daniel Alvarado, an Oak Cliff resident. “I’m about to be 65, and I never thought we would have to put up with stuff like this in this country.” Election Day is November 6. Polls will be open from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m.
10 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Widow of Drowned SMU Officer Sues Highland Park, Dallas, Others The widow of Mark McCullers, the SMU police officer who drowned after being swept away by Turtle Creek floodwaters on July 5, 2016, is suing the town of Highland Park, Mark McCullers the city of Dallas, and the companies responsible for the construction site where her husband was providing off-duty security. In the wrongful death lawsuit, filed July 5 of this year, Tiffany McCullers claims the defendants knew, or should have known, the dangers Turtle Creek could pose during a rain to those at the site where her husband was working. The suit accuses the construction companies of not adequately warning Officer McCullers of the dangers and the municipalities of negligence for not adequately maintaining and developing the property so that it would not pose a danger. The suit also accuses the municipalities of failing to provide adequate warning to the danger and appropriate barriers that
could have prevented the officer’s Dodge Charger from being swept into the creek during the flash flood. Mark McCullers, 46, was sitting in his sedan in the early hours of July 5, working off-duty private security at a Highland Park construction site, when heavy rains caused Turtle Creek to overflow. News coverage described how McCullers called 911 around 1:40 a.m. as he realized rising waters were overtaking and moving his car. Video footage from the Fitzhugh Avenue Bridge shows him climbing out a door. The car was found 13 hours later about a half-mile downstream during a search operation involving Dallas-Fire Rescue, Dallas Police Department, Highland Park Department of Public Safety, Search One Rescue Team, Texas Parks and Wildlife Game Warden’s Office, and University Park Police Department. His body wouldn’t be recovered until weeks later. Sgt. Keith McCain found McCullers’ remains on Aug. 24, 2016 near Oak Lawn Avenue and East Levee Street in a pile of debris at the end of a more-than-milelong drainage tunnel emptying into the Trinity River. — Staff report
Bye Bye, Bradfield Elementary
Workers tear down the Bradfield Elementary School building. The rebuilding of Bradfield Elementary has officially begun with the demolition of the old school building. Highland Park ISD took out a permit after the Highland Park Town Council in late May approved zoning and additional aesthetic enhancements. Demolition began after asbestos abatement, school officials said. Replacing the 92-year-old elementary school will cost $35.3 million. The old school building was located on Southern Avenue, across Douglas Avenue from Highland Park Village. The new school will go up on the same lot, but on the west end of the property near Armstrong Parkway, a move designed to take advantage of the narrow lot’s wider dimensions on that end.
WILLIAM LEGRONE
Rebuilding the school was a point of heavy discussion with concerns raised about the architectural design and plans for a three-story classroom building across from homes on Armstrong Parkway. The new school building is expected to be ready in time for the start of school in August 2019. Reconstruction of Bradfield is part of the district’s $361.4 million bond package passed in 2015. The district also tore down University Park Elementary and is nearing completion of its replacement. The new school will open in August. Hyer Elementary School will be torn down next summer. Its replacement should open in time for classes in August 2020. — Staff report
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14 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Community PEROT MUSEUM UNVEILS THE SUMMER OF DINOSAURS ‘Ultimate ‘ exhibit features rarely seen southern hemisphere species By Bianca R. Montes People Newspapers
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here’s only one place this summer to see 17 rarely seen species – including the world’s most massive land animal, T. rex’s ferocious distant cousin, and a cannibalistic dino – all from the southern hemisphere. The Perot Museum of Nature and Science unleashed its newest touring exhibit in June as a way to kick off the Summer of Dinosaurs. The “Ultimate Dinosaur” exhibit, which runs through Jan. 6, 2019, is a fascinating introduction to 17 dinosaurs that are unfamiliar to most North Americans. Presented by Highland Capital Management and supported by Hilton’s “Explore Like a Local” program, the exhibit tells the story of the breakup of supercontinent Pangaea into today’s continents and the fantastic diversity of dinosaur species that evolved as a result. Highlights include 15 fully articulated dinosaur casts, more than a dozen prehistoric specimens, augmented reality to experience the dinosaurs in the flesh,
“There’s no better way to instill an interest in science to our kids than through dinosaurs.” Thomas Surgent
“Ultimate Dinosaurs” will remain on exhibit at the Perot Museum through Jan. 6, 2019. real fossilized dinosaur specimens, hands-on play spaces featuring miniature dinosaur dioramas, and more. At a preview event in June, Thomas Surgent, the chief com-
pliance officer with Highland Capital Management, said the exhibit made him “feel like a kid again.” “There’s no better way to instill an interest in science to our
IMANI CHET LYTLE
kids than through dinosaurs,” he said. Linda Silver, Eugene McDermott chief executive officer of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science, said the opportunity
to host “Ultimate Dinosaurs” this summer is a lead up to new permanent exhibits at the museum. The museum has expanded the new exhibit up to the fourth floor. Two highlights: an interactive display called “Dancing with Dinosaurs” where you can bust a move with raptors and understand a little bit more about their anatomy and how they move in reaction to you; and Stan. Stan, a life-sized cast of the second most complete T. rex skeleton ever found, sits at the top of the glass T. rexculator (see what we did there) on the fourth floor of the museum. A paleo lab will debut Labor Day weekend on the museum’s fourth floor. The glass-encased permanent exhibit will give guests real-time access to the active dinosaur research of museum paleontologists as they process and prepare fossils fresh from the field. Who knows, you might even witness the unearthing of a new prehistoric species. Labor Day weekend also will serve as the inaugural Dino Fest where dozens of activities, from fossil fun to dinosaur dissection to meteorites and coprolites will take over the museum.
SMU Study: Most Arts Groups Operate ‘Cash-Strapped’ By Bill Miller
Special Contributor When soprano Kathleen Battle came to North Texas in June to sing at the Winspear Opera House, she called upon Dallas Black Dance Theatre to enhance her performance of Underground Railroad—A Spiritual Journey. It was a short-notice request, yet DBDT dancers Lailah Duke and Xavier Mack added a “higher point of poignancy” for the packed house that included former first lady Laura Bush, according to one review. Now in its fourth decade, DBDT, 2700 Ann Williams Way (a street named for its founder), has an “excellent track record of quality,” executive director Zenetta S. Drew said. It’s a major touring company, but it also conducts programs for Dallas schools. Yet despite its acclaimed service to the Dallas art scene and the broader world of dance, DBDT operates with scant working capital. That’s typical of small arts organizations, according to a recent study by the National Center for Arts Research (NCAR) at SMU. Released in May, NCAR’s Working Capital Report found that on average, “the majority of arts and culture organizations are cashstrapped.” “I live in crisis mode every day,” Drew said. “We pay bills with no breathing room. That stress doesn’t allow the board, the staff, or the
dancers to be as efficient as they could be.” The NCAR report found many arts groups, including museums, have about five months of working capital. But for small performing arts groups, like DBDT, the average is “equivalent to fewer than two months” of total expenses. “While few arts leaders wake up with excitement over working capital management, many lose sleep over it,” said Zannie Voss, director of NCAR. The director of the Nasher Sculpture Center, 2001 Flora St., a few blocks away from the dance theatre, understands this challenge. “[We] have high fixed costs, and program costs can not only be high, but they can be lumpy,” said Jeremy Strick, Nasher’s director. “It can be helpful to have a larger pool of working capital.” DBDT, meanwhile, intends to grow resources. Before, Drew explained, much of the funding came through “project” giving for particular performances or visiting choreographers. That money is essential, she said, but more endowments and annual giving commitments will bring consistent funding to help sustain the theatre. Therefore, the staff and board of directors are working to elevate perceptions of DBDT—that supporting it is essential to the arts, not optional. African American arts groups have always faced that challenge,
COURTESY THE DALLAS DANCE PROJECT
Dancers Hana Delong and Sean J. Smith perform for Dallas Black Dance Theatre. Drew said, but her organization strives to overcome it. For example, DBDT, along with other members of the International Association of Blacks in Dance, was recently selected to share a $2.63 million grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
The money will pay for tools and consultants to help improve financial stability, and the theatre is already working with NCAR to do just that, Drew said. All these efforts, she added, boost confidence. “If you identify a problem,” Drew said, “and don’t take steps to solve it, donors step away.”
August 2018 15
Summer Gripes Maybe it ’s the August inferno or the ubiquitous negative news, but even minor LEN BOURLAND nuisances can group up, making life seem like a powder keg ready to blow. It’s just time to vent with summer gripes. For example, seems like the more I buy takeout or take the grandkids to their favorite spots, the more I’m confronted with foil packets of condiments. These gizmos often require your teeth to rip open, resulting in squirts of soy sauce or mustard on your clothes; or there are the plastic mini containers with foil tops that are impossible to peel open without the same result. And pump action bottles. Who invented those? Invariably the hand soap or lotion once transported out of the store will not open, no matter how hard you press and turn resulting in having to unscrew the top and use it like a dip stick. Maybe it’s because they’ve been hauled to the stores in hot trucks, but half the time the plastic caps on water or beverage bottles are melted on. I’ve even resorted to trying to slice open the plastic perforated line, sometimes drawing blood, or trying to microwave the bottle to see if something will yield a turnable cap. Yuk to people who are “special cases” and get in the express lane with an entire cart or try to board planes with three or four items. They try to bring their “comfort” peacock, parakeet, or hamster on the airlines, which are mercifully trying to get out of the Noah’s Ark business. They wear inordinate amounts of colognes, flash their body parts, which would be a kindness to cover, or loudly talk on their cellphones while ignoring their shrieking kids. They text until they get to the front of the line to order food and then take 10 minutes asking those same shrieking kids what they want to eat. They take up two parking places. At filling stations they put in the nozzle then wander into the store for 15 minutes instead of moving their tanked up car. They take babies and tots to R-rated movies. And finally, who is in charge of timing the traffic lights in Dallas? How many times do I sit behind a red light maddenly looking at a green arrow with no cars in the turn lane to the Tollway? Traffic Boss needs a performance review. I hate committees, but that’s one I would volunteer to be on. Harrumpf. Columnist Len Bourland can be reached at lenbourland@gmail.com
16 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Real Estate Quarterly Home Sales Jump In June
Nearly 10,000 sales recorded in DFW By Tim Glaze
People Newspape rs
Second-and third-floor tenants should begin opening by year’s end.
WILLIAM LEGRONE
HP VILLAGE RENOVATIONS TO WRAP UP THIS FALL Building G architecture will match historic look of shopping center By William Legrone
People Newspapers
A
fter more than a year of work, Highland Park Village is nearing completion of the multi-milliondollar renovation of Building G, home to CHANEL, Starbucks, Anthropologie, and William Noble stores. The structure was built in the 1960s and replaced one of the original Spanish Mediterranean-style buildings built in the 1930s. One goal of the renovations: bringing the building’s architectural style in line with the rest of the shopping plaza. “The newly renovated building will fit seamlessly in with the other historic buildings in Highland Park Village,” said Joe O’Brien, president and CEO of A.G. Hill Partners, the trust managing Highland Park Village. “The community will be able to enjoy the iconic architecture that the village is known for, as if it were always there, and also an improved shopping experience in carefully remastered spaces,” he said. The renovations also include the addition of the Park House, the new private social club on the third floor. The club will be 19,036-square-feet and feature outdoor terraces. Valet services are also being improved alongside the construction. Outside the redesigned lobby of the building, the village will have a central
pick-up and drop-off location with a ticketless system to ease traffic flow. Tenants of Building G will remain in the shopping plaza and William Noble will move back to the second floor. The village is planning to announce another tenant for the second floor in the coming months. That tenant will likely open its doors next spring.
“The newly renovated building will fit seamlessly in with the other historic buildings in Highland Park Village.” Joe O’Brien With renovations of Building G finishing by late fall, second and third floors tenants should begin opening for business before the end of the year. “We strive to create not only an exceptional shopping experience, but also maintain a beautiful destination where families and guests from the neighborhood, or from across the world, feel invited to meet, dine, shop, watch a movie, or grab a cup of coffee,” O’Brien said. “The newly renovated building will both visually and logistically serve our customers and community for decades to come.”
Significant changes in median sales prices highlight a busy month of real estate in Preston Hollow and Park Cities. And in Dallas-Fort Worth, as a whole, real estate professionals closed a near record number of sales. A total of 161 homes were closed in June in Park Cities and Preston Hollow – 94 and 73, respectively. In DFW, according to officials from Dave Perry-Miller, preowned sales neared 10,000 in June. “That’s close to an all-time record,” said Marti Voorheis, an agent with Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate. “The misconception is that all price points are moving quickly in all areas. The majority of new home sales are in lower price points, primarily in the growing communities to the north where so many companies have moved to in the last few years.” Indeed, prices continue to impact closings: the median price of homes sold in June in Preston Hollow was almost $1.06 million, up significantly from a few months before.
Park Cities saw a June median price of $1.32 million. That’s $316 per square foot in Preston Hollow and $390 per square foot in the Park Cities. While those numbers may seem high, purchasing a home in Dallas over renting may save residents money in the long haul, according to Caroline Thompsont, an agent with Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International. “The economics make sense to buy over leasing,” Thompson said. “We’re currently seeing the price to lease a residential property ticking up, which encourages and drives individuals to buy.” Thompson also mentioned east Dallas as a hotbed for new home buyers. “That’s one of the hottest and most active areas in DFW,” she said. “New construction by builders is growing out there.” A strong 2018 for realtors came after a market correction. Dallas-Fort Worth experienced a small period of inflation where sellers could name their price. However, buyers are becoming pickier, and there’s less of a need for homes now than at the beginning of the year, real estate professionals said.
PARK CITIE S Month
Closed Median sales price
Price per Sold to Active Days on Months’ sq. foot list price listings market supply
June 2017
94
$1,380,000
$395
96%
393
50
6.1
Sept. 2017
48
$1,229,000
$361
97%
363
78
5.6
Dec. 2017
62
$999,750
$334
95%
223
111
3.4
March 2018
70
$1,448,500
$402
96%
355
61
5.9
June 2018
94
$1,316,680
$390
96%
391
64
6.4
PRE STON HOLLOW Month
Closed Median sales price
Price per Sold to Active Days on Months’ sq. foot list price listings market supply
June 2017
98
$1,046,250
$272
97%
375
50
6.1
Sept. 2017
64
$750,000
$249
96%
354
66
5.8
Dec. 2017
81
$1,178,000
$286
95%
236
94
3.7
March 2018
67
$882,500
$275
95%
321
79
5.1
June 2018
73
$1,058,500
$316
94%
338
53
5.7
Source: North Texas Real Estate Information Systems Inc.
Park Cities People is part of the D Magazine family of publications and as many of you know, to receive a “D Best” is quite an honor. Real estate is an important advertising and editorial category for our newspapers and we appreciate that several of the D Best Realtors (published in the July issue of D Magazine) chose to advertise with us in this Real Estate Quarterly section. For a full list of the D Best Realtors, please go to parkcitiespeople.com.
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Lucy Johnson 214-616-1288 ljohnson@briggsfreeman.com
22 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
HOUSE OF THE MONTH 4321 Southern Ave.
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his stunning like-new-construction spacious home across f rom Highland Park Village and Bradfield Elementary comes with five bedrooms, a media room, six full bathrooms, and one half bath. The home includes a hard-tofind ample sized backyard with a patio
COURTESY ROGERS HEALY
area and outdoor fireplace. Find lots of room for entertainment on the first floor with an oversized kitchen and living area. The first floor also includes a formal dining room, an office, and a guest suite. There’s a bonus game room on the third floor.
parkcitiespeople.com | August 2018  23
Vista Building Unveiled
Maintaining greenspace a priority
COURTESY OF TAMYTHA CAMERON
CC Young president and CEO Russell Crews The Vista, a nine-story Dallas living center under construction and set to open late this year, will transform the view of senior care, said officials from CC Young, the company overseeing design and construction. Russell Crews, CC Young president and CEO, said services for the residents will be consolidated to facilitate the introduction of and support for two residentially scaled, small-house style living environ-
ments on each floor. For exercise, there will also be a 3,500-square-foot indoor pool, a resistance loop for exercise and therapy, workout and swimming classes. There will also be underground parking, a chapel, multi-purpose event area, a meditation chapel and employee center, a volunteer center, and a gift shop to benefit the CC Young Benevolence Fund. — Staff report
24 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Dallas Love Field Redevelopment to Create Braniff Centre
Project includes restaurants, retail, and Planet Lincoln car dealership
COURTESY PHOTOS
“This amazing redevelopment will not only preserve this important piece of Dallas history, but create wonderful business opportunities.” Randall Reed Randall Reed (right) celebrates after breaking ground in June on a new dealership, part of a redevelopment of the former Braniff International Airways site.
By William Taylor
People Newspapers North America’s likely largest Lincoln-branded dealership facility will open at Dallas Love Field next year, bringing with it restaurants, retail, and high-end aviation services to the historic former Braniff International Airways site. The 25 acres, located where Lovers Lane runs into Lemmon Avenue, will also include offices and potentially a hotel as part of a $140-million, multi-partner redevelopment effort that has been in the works for years. “This amazing redevelopment will not only preserve this import-
ant piece of Dallas history, but create wonderful business opportunities that will provide incredible services to our local community,” said Randall Reed, owner of World Class Automotive Group. The new 267,342-square-foot Lincoln dealership will incorporate an existing six-story, 600plus space parking structure. Reed broke ground on the project in June. Reed’s Lincoln franchise will relocate to the new facility and become Planet Lincoln. His Park Cities Ford franchise will remain at 3333 Inwood Road, its home since 1992. The Gravity Company found-
ing partner Michael Graves, who was retained in 2009 to pursue the redevelopment project, discussed the plans during a recent public meeting at the airport. Graves, a former car dealer, told those attending that dealership staff have a plan for keeping test drives off nearby residential streets. “You are still going to have the one or two lazy people going through the neighborhood, but after one or two firings, you are going to get compliance,” he said. The master plan for the project has gone through a number of revisions since 2012 to address concerns of historic preservation groups and neighbors of the project.
“I think that a lot of people were concerned at first with another car dealership going in,” Dallas City Council member Omar Narvaez said. “They wanted to see retail, and they wanted to see restaurants.” Preserving portions of the Braniff facilities also emerged as a priority. The Gravity Company and FRCH Design Worldwide worked with the Federal Aviation Administration, Texas Historic Commission, and the National Parks Service to preserve much of the building and hangers, incorporating them into what will be known as the Braniff Centre. Development partners Lin-
coln Property Co., the Jerry Jones’ family’s Blue Star Land LP, and The Arnold Companies, an aviation company, are working to create a facility that will honor an earlier time in aviation history and recapture the modern jet-setter lifestyle that defined Braniff in the 1950s. “While updating the structure to serve contemporary uses, it was crucial to keep the original designs of William Pereira and Charles Luckman [and Mark Lemmon] and retain the spirit of flight, as seen in elements such as the inverted butterfly roof architecture and the glass curtain wall,” Graves said.
29 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Legacy Midtown Park Work Nears
SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT ELLIOTT & ELLIOTT
New Listing in Highland Park Inpedentant School District Effortless entertaining in this sprawling HPISD ranchstyle property. The four-bedroom home boasts a downstairs second master, updated kitchen with a five-burner range, warming drawer and wine refrigerator, formals, and three additional living areas. Take the party outside to the park-like backyard and make use of the pool and outdoor living area with fireplace and grill. Easy parking with a two-car attached garage and circular driveway. Contact the Elliott & Elliott Group at 214-478-9544.
2707 Lovers Lane - $1,229,000
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN URBAN
The retirement community will go up near Royal Lane and U.S. 75. The Legacy Senior Communities, a Jewish nonprofit, has ceremomonially broken ground on The Legacy Midtown Park, a rental continuing care retirement community on 10 acres between Meadow Road and Royal Lane just off North Central Expressway. Once completed, the $175 million development will create approximately 350 jobs and come with 184 independent-living apartments, plus 50 assisted-living apartments, 36 memory care residences, and 54 suites for short-term rehabilitation or long-term care, officials said. Construction on the community is expected to begin in September with facilities opening in the fall of 2019 and long-term care, short-term rehab, independent living, and other levels of care opening in 2020. “A community is judged by the way it cares for its elders, and it is our responsibility to build a campus that provides a wonderful lifestyle, offers the highest quality of care, and meets the needs of the community,” said Carol
Extensively Renovated West Highland Park COURTESY PHOTO
Aaron, co-chair of the capital campaign committee and chair of the board of directors of The Legacy Midtown Park. The community will include multiple dining options, a fully equipped fitness, aerobics, and aquatic center, and other amenities. The Legacy at Home, the nonprofit’s home health care agency, will care for residents if needed. Project partners include Dallas-based D2 Architecture; Andres Construction Services, StudioSIX5, interior design firm; Talley Associates, landscape architecture; The Belaire Group, development consultant; SunTrust Bank, lead arranger; and Frost Bank. “We are embarking on an exciting new chapter for The Legacy Senior Communities. The Legacy Midtown Park will be a state-ofthe-art retirement community with independent living and all other levels of care on one campus,” said Marc R. Stanley, chairman of the board of trustees for The Legacy Senior Communities. – Staff report
SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE
Jane Gordon markets UP home on cul-de-sac
Conveniently located one block from Burleson Park and SMU, 2824 Daniel Court (2824daniel. daveperrymiller.com) is a three-bedroom, threebath home listed for $882,000 by Jane Gordon of Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate. The spacious formal living room with raised ceiling and white marble fireplace can be closed off with interior French doors. The dining room features wainscoting and a leaded-glass picture window. Another living area overlooking the backyard also has French doors leading to the large, sunny deck. The galley kitchen opens to the breakfast room and is equipped with a farm sink, granite countertops and stainless-steel appliances. The spacious 24-by-12-foot master suite is downstairs and has dual sinks and walk-in closets. A second en suite bedroom is also on the first floor. Upstairs is a private 25-by-12-foot third bedroom with full bath, built-in cabinets and walk-in closets. The home includes additional gated parking and there are options for anyone wishing to add a garage, said Gordon. To schedule a private showing, contact Gordon at 214-478-7099 or janegordon@daveperrymiller.com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate (daveperrymiller. com) is a division of Ebby Halliday Real Estate, Inc., with five locations that specialize in Preston Hollow, Park Cities, North Dallas, Lakewood, East Dallas, Uptown, Oak Cliff and Farm & Ranch properties.
BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
The leader in luxury developments
Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty brings the same exceptional skills and service to developments that it does for houses, ranches, land and commercial properties. Since 1960, no brokerage has sold North Texas developments like Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. Residential buildings, gated communities, districts and neighborhoods: If developers can conceive of it, the firm has the technology, tools and talent to sell it. Just one example? When Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty partners with developers as the exclusive listing brokerage of high-rises, it means high numbers. Museum Tower in the Dallas Arts District is now more than 80 percent sold. Lakeside Tower, which is bringing a new urbanism to Lake Grapevine, is already more than 70 percent sold. The firm is exceptional at targeting buyers. It not only offers its own in-house team of marketing professionals — each one working to maximize a developer’s investment — but also Keystone, the Sotheby’s International Realty® program of exclusive marketing services for developments, including brand identities, websites, floor plans, digital and print advertising and ongoing marketing programs. The firm’s nearly 500 expert agents work together to bring buyers to developments of all kinds. To see all the homes, ranches and land offered by Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty — in North Texas and around the world — go to briggsfreeman.com.
Desirable West Highland Park location and recently renovated, this three bedroom, three and one-half bath home combines the charm and quality of the past with today’s style and conveniences, including all new LED lighting and electrical, plumbing fixtures,gas water heaters
and HVAC equipment. All exterior wood trim on this French inspired brick home has been repainted, along with new gutters and metal coping on the mansard roof having been recently replaced. The redesigned and updated open kitchen features new white cabinetry, counter tops and Bosch appliances and includes a breakfast area. A second formal dining area is complimented by two spacious living areas. Hardwood flooring is featured throughout. A guest apartment is located adjacent the two car garage and includes full bath, sink and refrigerator. The home is built on a pier and beam foundation and sits on a landscaped 80’x129’ lot. For more information please contact Ani Nosnik with the Urban Team of Allie Beth Allman & Associates, 972-896-5432, ani.nosnik@alliebeth.com.
THE PERRY-MILLER STREIFF GROUP
Spectacular Property in Highland Park
This spectacular home in Highland Park is being offered for $1,275,000. This exceptional Highland Park property constructed in 2008 is nestled in a stellar location close to Dallas’ best
BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
March Ranch
March Ranch is listed by Harlan Ray and David Burgher for $7,107,450. Located just 20 miles northwest of San Angelo in southern Coke County, just north of the Tom Green and Coke County line, March Ranch is one of the largest, privately held spreads in West Texas, with 6,769+ acres of hilly terrain overlooking breathtaking hills, native pastures and creek bottoms. Admired as one of the area’s largest cattle operations, March Ranch is a blank slate for a new owner looking to start a ranching legacy or create a family compound from which to witness uninterrupted views of the West Texas sky. The property includes two homes currently being used as hunters’ cabins. A barn and shop are also located at the headquarters as well as a set of working pens. The property is fenced and cross-fenced into several pastures, and several rough-cut roads provide easy access throughout the property. March Ranch has a total of five water wells. Two of the wells are located at the headquarters with three wells scattered throughout the property. The ranch also has more than three miles of frontage on both sides of the West Fork of Grape Creek. Along with its reputation as a premier cattle operation, March Ranch is also a highly sought-after recreational ranch. Recreational opportunities include stalking whitetail, calling up turkey or finding a group of wild pigs. To see ranches and land represented by Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty—in all of North Texas and around the world—go to briggsfreeman.com .
shopping and dining. Located within HPISD, 4527 Fairway offers natural light, an open floor plan, a large master bedroom with fireplace, an elevator and a beautifully landscaped yard with firepit and water feature. The gated entry leads to a private entrance. The first floor offers a beautifully finished space for entertaining as well as everyday living. Double sets of French doors from the living and dining areas open to the stone courtyard and capture views of the landscaped area with fountain. The second level houses the master suite plus two additional bedrooms. The master suite boasts his-her baths plus a large walk-in closet. A 4th bedroom with additional flex living space is on the 3rd level. Please contact Laura Michelle (laura@daveperrymiller. com) for more information or visit DPMFineHomes.com.
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
Preston Hollow Has Spectacular Homes
If you are looking for a larger, well-designed home on a bigger lot, Preston Hollow may have the perfect home for you. Preston Hollow is one of the most soughtafter communities in Dallas. It has easy access to downtown for work and entertainment and boasts some of the best private schools. Allie Beth Allman & Associates ranked number in sales last year in this popular and diverse neighborhood and continues to dominate the Preston Hollow market in 2018 with almost 30 percent of all sales. The five-bedroom estate at 5807 Park Ln. is on a corner lot in the heart of old Preston Hollow with a Santa Barbara-inspired style that brings together the indoor and outdoor living spaces. The first floor has great indoor entertaining space that extends to a large covered loggia with an outdoor kitchen, a pool and beautiful yard. Built in the heart of Preston Hollow, 6739 Meadow Road has an impressive backyard includes a fire pit, pizza oven and a pool with a calming water feature. Downstairs has the master suite, a study and guest bedroom. The home has an open floor plan and well-designed kitchen. To learn more about the firm, visit alliebeth. com.
32 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT EBBY HALLIDAY REALTORS
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
Ebby App Delivers Results Designer Bathrooms and Kitchens Add Great Value
BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
Timeless for Today
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
Allman is Estate Home Leader
The home at 3516 Dartmouth Avenue is listed by Susan Baldwin for $3,350,000. The Ebby Halliday Realtors app utilizes advanced interactive mapping to make home shopping easier, and more fun, than ever. Are you contemplating a new home? Download the Ebby Halliday Realtors app to start enjoying an exceptional online real estate experience with the latest interactive mapping technology. With the Ebby Halliday Realtors app, you’ll enjoy searching for homes using three innovative options: • Journey Search – Shows available properties as you travel through a neighborhood. As with each of the app’s interactive search functions, you may choose to delve deeper into properties of interest by immediately viewing details and interior photos. • Perimeter Search – Allows you to draw boundaries on the map view with a finger, enabling viewing of available homes within the perimeter – and the selected parameters – of your search. • Scope Search – Aim your device’s camera down a street and this innovative augmented-reality search displays available properties. Select any of the properties for details and photos. In addition to location-based search results, you’ll also enjoy many of the functions of the industry-leading ebby.com, one of the most-powerful residential real estate websites in the world. To download the app from the Apple App Store or Google Play Store, search for Ebby Halliday Realtors. To find just the right Realtor for your residential real estate needs, visit the award-winning ebby.com.
BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
Modern Masterpiece in the Park Cities
As interior designers and the knowledgeable associates at Allie Beth Allman & Associates will tell you, kitchens and master baths sell homes faster than any other rooms in most homes. A well-appointed kitchen with great appliances, sparkling countertops and backsplashes, lots of storage and great lighting can increase the value of the home. Similarly a master bath with a soaking tub and separate shower, dual vanities and custom-designed walk-in closets will charm prospective buyers. “Updated kitchens and baths, especially in the master suite, help move a home faster once on the market,” said Keith Conlon, general manager of the Allman firm. “It is also the best place to spend your money to see the best return on your investment.” The master bath in the custom-built home at 6346 Desco Dr. features a marble tub with, a marble shower and a Chrystal chandelier with matching sconces. Between the dual vanities is a blue stain-glass window. On the premier street in Highland Park, 4230 Beverly Drive features a large kitchen with marble countertops, a huge island and Thermador stainless-steel appliances. The refrigerator freezer has a wine column. To learn more about these homes, visit www. alliebeth.com.
Custom built by George Lewis, and extensively remodeled by the current sellers, this 7,365 square foot home is located on an oversized 60’ x 150’ lot on a great block close to the Katy Trail and is a feeder for Armstrong Elementary and HPISD schools. The home at 3516 Dartmouth Avenue beautifully combines timeless design elements—moldings, builtins, French doors—with a neutral pallet and updated finishes. Downstairs spaces are light and open with formals and an updated eat-in kitchen that opens to casual living and a sun room. The walls in the dining room have been hand-painted by a local artist. There are four bedroom suites on the second floor, plus a game room and fifth bedroom suite on the third floor, and additional game room above the garage could be a six bedroom suite with a full bath. The appealing master suite enjoys a sitting area and fireplace, spacious bath with sauna, shower and tub and two walk-in closets. This wonderful home includes six original fireplaces in all the living spaces, dining room and the master suite. Security equipment, sound wiring, and extensive A/V equipment remain. A sparkling pool, patio for lounging and turf grass make this the perfect home for outdoor entertaining. To see all homes, ranches and land represented by Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty—in the Park Cities, all of North Texas and around the world—go to briggsfreeman.com.
VIRGINIA COOK, REALTORS DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE
Rachel Trowbridge offers three-story home in UP
The name Allie Beth Allman & Associates continues to live up to its well-earned reputation as the estate home sales leader. Last month, Allman Associates brought the buyer and represented the seller of the home at 3838 Normandy Avenue, which was sold for more than $4 million. In the first five months of the year, nine homes priced at more than $5 million were sold. The Allman firm handled seven of those sales representing the buyer or the seller. “Our talented and knowledgeable associates are having a great year, especially in estate sales,” said Allie Beth Allman, president and CEO. The Allman firm, known for its high-profile clientele and superior customer service, captured 81.7 percent of the sales of $5 million homes and up. During the first five months of the year, it represented the seller in three transactions, valued at $50,100,000, and four buyers who purchased homes valued at total of $105,250,000. For estates valued at $3 million and up, the Allman firm ranked number one with 45.6 percent of the market. It sold 17 homes. Allman associates represented nine sellers of homes valued at $71,373,000 and eight buyers of homes priced for a total of $70,969,175. To learn more about the firm, visit alliebeth.com.
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN
Greg Pape Offers Elegant Garden Home in Caruth Court Homes in Premier
Neighborhoods Offer Value
The home at 3636 University Boulevard is listed by Caroline Summers for $3,990,000. The Frank Welch and George Woo modern masterpiece at 3636 University Boulevard in University Park features meticulous updates and thoughtful renovations that honor the architects’ spectacular vision, while anticipating the needs of today’s discerning homeowners. This architecturally significant home encompasses 7,442 square feet across three levels. At the center lies a truly modern chef’s kitchen outfitted with commercial grade, stainless steel appliances. The kitchen opens to a comfortable den, convenient wet bar and a two-story dining room with floor to ceiling windows that overlook the patio, pool and beautifully landscaped yard. Exacting attention to detail make this home a rare find among the stunning residences that are renowned throughout the Park Cities. Matchstick rift cut white oak ceilings, an elevator with ipe wood detailing, a new bocce ball court and swimming pool and the most beautiful woodwork craftsmanship and customization celebrate the home’s architectural integrity. The spacious owner’s retreat includes a sitting area and en suite bath with double sinks and vanities, glass shower and soaking tub. Great for entertaining and family living, this light-filled home boasts a total of four bedrooms, five and a half bathrooms, a studio loft, library, game room, and a fantastic outdoor living area. To see all homes, ranches and land represented by Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty—in the Park Cities, all of North Texas and around the world—go to briggsfreeman.com.
Just five houses from University Park Elementary, and a block from the UP Pool, Curtis Park and Snider Plaza is this three-story home at 3453 Amherst Ave. (3453amherst.daveperrymiller.com). Listed by Rachel Trowbridge of Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate, the fivebedroom, five-and-a-half bath home, covering 5,473 square feet (per appraiser), is priced at $1,675,000. Inside the foyer, one of the home’s two staircases divides the formal living and dining rooms. The gourmet eat-in kitchen, featuring stainless-steel Sub-Zero and Wolf appliances and Brazilian Barricato granite countertops, opens onto the breakfast room and family room. On the covered porch is a built-in grill, while the lowmaintenance backyard has a fire pit and water feature. Upstairs, the master bedroom features a coffee bar, fireplace, spacious bath with dual vanities and large walk-in closet. Three additional bedrooms, a utility room and game room round out the second floor. On the third floor is another bedroom with full bath and closet space. To schedule a private showing, contact Trowbridge at 214-395-3702 or rachel@daveperrymiller.com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate (daveperrymiller.com) is a division of Ebby Halliday Real Estate, Inc., with five locations that specialize in Preston Hollow, Park Cities, North Dallas, Lakewood, East Dallas, Uptown, Oak Cliff and Farm & Ranch properties.
A premier location in Caruth Court just minutes from NorthPark Shopping Mall and the utmost in elegance and ease create a wonderful lifestyle at this Dallas home. Peacefully situated on a cul-de-sac, zero-line lot, the home offers HOA security and front yard maintenance. Inside, over 2,400 square feet in a central hall floorplan accommodates gracious entertaining with formal living and dining rooms united by rich wood floors, 12foot ceilings In Living Room and huge windows with wood shutters. The living room also has a beautiful fireplace. The high ceilings and wood floors flow into the center of the home, where the den, breakfast area and kitchen create a comfortable space for gathering and relaxing with views of the charming back patio. The chef’s kitchen features granite/stone counters, a dining bar, Miele gas cooktop, SubZero refrigerator and freezer, and Viking oven. The spacious master suite includes a sitting area, a wall of glass opening to the sunning deck, and luxurious bath with dual sinks and a separate tub and shower. A secondary bedroom also has a walk-in closet and access to another full bath and powder room, while a study/den could serve as a third bedroom. 7814 Caruth Court is Offered at $750,000. Contact Greg Pape at gpape@virginiacook.com, 214-546-4066.
If you didn’t find your dream home this spring, you may be in luck. There are many new homes on the market in the best neighborhoods this summer. The really good news is that some homeowners have lowered their price for a faster sale. “You will usually see a price drop during the summer as the market slows a bit,” said Keith Conlon, general manager for Allie Beth Allman & Associates. “Homeowners are trying to get their homes sold before school starts.” But don’t wait too long. Conlon said prices may rise again in September and October. Here are several exceptional homes with recently lowered prices that Allman associates recommend. The recently updated home at 3709 Hanover Street in the Fairway of University Park has been reduced. It features 10-foot ceilings on the first floor. There are four spacious living areas and four fireplaces. The guest quarters have a kitchenette and a full bath. A four-bedroom home at 3645 Haynie Avenue has also been reduced. On a large lot, the home was updated with a floor plan that has a large master suite on the first level, an exercise room and a 500-square-foot bonus room. To see all homes, visit alliebeth.com.
34 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Business
THE CONTAINER STORE REVEALS FIRST ‘NEXT GENERATION’ STORE
Comings and Goings
New design highlights technology and experience By Bianca R. Montes People Newspapers
T
he nation’s leading storage and organization retailer wants to make shopping a little more personal. The Container Store has reimagined its flagship store in Dallas, recently unveiling a new architectural design, merchandising strategy, and digital resources to make it easier for customers to accomplish their storage and organization projects. The Northwest Highway Next Gen Store was the first to receive an extensive makeover to reimagine the customer experience. While additional space was not added to the 24,500-square-foot storefront, ceilings were lowered to make the store more inviting, rows of shelving were removed to improve sightlines, and new flooring, as well as enhanced lighting, were implemented to create a more approachable and comfortable environment. Merchandise was rearranged and separated out into specific departments (kitchen, office, storage, and closets) to make both the smallest and largest projects easier to imagine. “One of the things we want to do is make our stores more approachable,” The Container Store’s chief marketing officer Melissa Collins said. “We find customers feel overwhelmed and intimidated. They’re not very organized, so they’re thinking, ‘How do I get started?’” The technology components in the store were finalized after many rounds of customer testing, which showed that customers’ most significant hurdle in beginning a project was feeling overwhelmed. The store features 18 digital screens sup-
COURTESY PHOTO
Meal-to-go smoothies-in-a-bowl eatery to open this summer at Mockingbird Station.
MOVINGS
KidBiz and TheBiz Inwood Village After more than 25 years at The Plaza at Preston Center, Dallas’ KidBiz boutique is moving to a larger space at Inwood Village. The move is scheduled for early September followed by a grand opening soiree shortly after.
COURTESY PHOTOS
With a redesigned showroom, The Container Store on Northwest Highway emphasizes the customer experience. porting customers as they shop, featuring everything from inspiration and tips to an interactive design tool and even a new proprietary digital experience called The Organization Studio. The studio allows customers to upload a photo or video of their organizational challenge online, describe the problem, and set an in-store appointment to meet with a store organization expert. “We know that countless retailers are building digital tools and using them to innovate the shopping experience but combining the human element with technology is when things get powerful,” said Val Richardson, vice president of real estate at The Container Store. This redesign features custom closets as a real focal point with higher ceilings anchoring the Custom Closet Studio in the store,
NOW OPEN
Hush Hush Tan The Shops of Highland Park
creating a destination where closet vignettes allow customers to visualize possibilities at every price point. There are also interactive screens at the Custom Design Centers – a tool for the store team and the customers, showing more examples of “real” closet spaces for them to peruse. In addition to the Custom Closets Studio, new merchandising is reflective of a real home kitchen or office space to allow shoppers to get a sense of how products might work in their own homes.
Landis Keeps Howdy Homemade, But Sells Texadelphia By Selby Lopez
Special Contributor When approached about buying Tom Landis’ Texadelphia restaurants, one on Greenville Avenue in Dallas and the other on MacArthur Boulevard in Irving, Ryan Scripps was hesitant. Scripps had no experience in the restaurant business. But Landis viewed Ryan and Nancy Scripps as the right couple and people who would take care of his employees. Ryan Scripps decided to buy the stores after noticing sales were consistent over a long time. He also became more sure after meeting with store managers who wanted to stick around and help grow the business. “It was not completely an
Texadelphia owners Ryan and Nancy Scripps impulse buy,” he said. “But if you asked me 12 months ago if that would be the type of business I would be looking to getting into, I would’ve thought you were absolutely crazy.” With a background in IT and business development, Ryan Scripps will focus more on running the restaurants while
WILLIAM LEGRONE
his wife will manage community outreach and marketing. “Our two talents combined, we could really make this an incredible opportunity,” Nancy Scripps said. “For not just growing the business, but more community awareness and just getting more involved with our community.”
She said they plan to update the stores with paint and furniture, but not change the menu. Ryan Scripps and Landis have known each other for about 12 years, so Scripps said he trusted that Landis wasn’t trying to unload an extra payment on him. Landis sold his stores so he could focus more on Howdy Homemade, his ice cream shop in University Park staffed mostly by adults with special needs. “I’m kind of one of those guys that would like to think he could focus on multiple businesses, you know, like a [Mark] Cuban or something,” Landis said, explaining he needed to be realistic. “I wanted to try and do something that hadn’t been done before, try and create a restaurant that employs people with special needs. In order to do that, you just need to go all in.”
Austin’s premier luxury sunless tanning salon that specializes in customizable airbrush tanning has brought its offerings to the Park Cities. The 1,325-square-foot salon provides clients with a fully customized tanning experience using its all-natural product line. In addition to the custom tanning services it’s known for, Hush Hush Tan will also offer teeth whitening services at its Dallas location.
Wild About Harry’s 4527 Travis St. Whether or not this is a permanent location is yet to be determined, but the uber-popular Park Cities frozen custard shop reopened July 1 just blocks away from the original Knox Street storefront that shuttered its doors in May.
COMINGS
Rush Bowls Mockingbird Station A Boulder, Colorado meal-to-go franchise is expanding its Lone Star state debut with three storefronts in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, including a 1,036-square-foot shop at Mockingbird Station this summer. The concept is pretty simple: It’s a smoothie in a bowl – think Acai 2.0 – crafted from the finest fruits and vegetables, topped with organic granola and honey, and blended with protein, vitamins, and other nutritious ingredients.
Baldo’s 6401 Hillcrest Ave. Coming soon to the Park Cities: A hybrid-style ice cream shop from two SMU graduates. Described as a nostalgic creamery with a twist of discovery, expect to see just about anything on the menu except vanilla ice cream. The new shop, which is slated to open this fall, will offer treats such as signature pairings, affogato creations, and even sorbet swimming in champagne.
38 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Sports
NEW CHALLENGES AWAIT EXPERIENCED LADY SCOTS Volleyball team enters new district with lofty goals H I G H L A N D PA R K S C H E D U L E AUGUST 7 at Red Oak 6:30 p.m. 9-11 *Adidas Turner Classic TBA 14 TC Byron Nelson 6:30 p.m. 16-18 Justin Northwest tourn. TBA 21 at Keller 6:30 p.m. 24-25 **Circle of Champions tourn. TBA 28 Midlothian 6:30 p.m. 31 at Bishop Lynch 4:30 p.m. SEPTEMBER 4 at Plano 6:30 p.m. 7 x-at Carr. Newman Smith 6 p.m. 11 x-Conrad 7 p.m. 14 x-at Bryan Adams 5:30 p.m. 18 x-Carr. Creekview 7 p.m. 21 x-at Carr. Turner 6 p.m. 25 x-at Thomas Jefferson 7 p.m. 28 x-Woodrow Wilson 6 p.m. OCTOBER 2 x-Carr. Newman Smith 5 x-at Conrad 6 at Rockwall-Heath 9 x-Bryan Adams 12 x-at Carr. Creekview 16 x-Carr. Turner 19 x-Thomas Jefferson 20 Arlington Martin 23 x-at Woodrow Wilson x — District 11-5A match * — at Pearland ** — at Plano
CHRIS MCGATHEY
Highland Park will return several players this season after reaching the area round of the Class 5A playoffs in 2017.
By Todd Jorgenson 7 p.m. 6 p.m. 11 a.m. 7 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 6 p.m. 11 a.m. 7 p.m.
People Newspapers
T
he goal of a deep postseason run remains the same for the Highland Park volleyball team — even if the opponents this year will be different. Realignment has placed the Lady Scots in a considerably softer District 11-5A this season after consecutive runner-up league finishes. Plus, there won’t be any November rematches with perennial powerhouse Prosper, who eliminated HP in the second round
of the playoffs in each of the past two years. After winning the Class 5A state title last fall, the Lady Eagles moved to 6A. However, HP head coach Michael Dearman is more concerned about his own team than those of his opponents. And with several young yet seasoned returnees at the varsity level, plus some talented newcomers, the Lady Scots are optimistic. “We have a really talented group that will push each other,” Dearman said. “They’re going to be that much more experienced.” HP lost five seniors to graduation, but re-
turns a handful of players who were part of last year’s regular rotation. Top contributors for the Lady Scots will likely include frontline players Kendyl Reaugh (who is verbally committed to Alabama), Britton Daugbjerg (who missed last season with an injury), Kate Nugent, Anna Claire Nichol, and Avery Hellmuth; along with setters Jeanne Tulimieri and Katherine Edwards, and libero Anna Holder. The new district will see HP facing three Carrollton schools and four from Dallas ISD, none of which won a set beyond the bi-district round of the playoffs in 2017. In nondistrict play, the Lady Scots will play a typically rigid schedule that includes top tournaments in Pearland and Plano. This year, they also have non-league matches against 6A opponents Rockwall-Heath and Arlington Martin on two Saturdays in October. “Most of the teams we’ve never had in our district before. It’s going to be a change,” Dearman said. “We’re pretty focused, and always have been, on getting ourselves ready for postseason. We’ll get a chance to see where we are.” Dearman said HP’s group of returning starters is motivated after seeing successful campaigns cut short by a tough-luck playoff draw in consecutive seasons. “All the work that we put in last year and during the summer is really going to pay off,” he said. “They want a lot longer playoff run. I feel better about how things line up for us this go-around.”
Tex-Mex Proprietor Misses Lost Sport of Jai Alai By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers Fernando Padilla didn’t grow up aspiring to become a successful restaurateur. Rather, he grew up dreaming of superstardom as a pelotari in the finest frontons in his native Mexico. Padilla, who owns and operates two Fernando’s locations in Dallas, was a rising star in the obscure sport of jai alai (HI-uh-LI), following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather. During the 1970s, he earned a spot on the Mexican national team and signed a lucrative professional contract. “That was my main interest,” Padilla said. “That’s what I wanted to pursue.” But Padilla never played a game either for his country or his professional club. A players’ strike lasting more than a decade in Mexico derailed his athletic career and altered
Fernando Padilla (left) displays a 1932 team photo featuring his father (with the mustache). CHRIS MCGATHEY Jai alai is a fast-paced sport rehis career path. He came to Dallas, said. “After many years in the indusmet some people in the food indus- try, I wanted to test the waters and sembling racquetball that originattry, started by cleaning kitchens and try something different.” ed in northern Spain and became tending bar, and gradually worked Some of the decor in his restau- popular in North America during his way up. rant recalls his jai alai past, and he’ll the 20th century. At its peak, it In 2005, after developing a back- always have the memories from a was played professionally in variground in finance, Padilla found the once-proud sport that was decimat- ous sections of the United States, right mix of concept and location ed by financial greed. where it became popular among and opened his eponymous eatery “We were making a ton of mon- gamblers. However, player discontent and on the northeast corner of North- ey playing the game we loved, but it west Highway and Midway Road. wasn’t enough,” Padilla said. “I had other factors led to a gradual decline “It was time for a change,” he no choice. That was that.” in an era of more diverse entertain-
ment options. Only recently have efforts among casino owners and fans led to a mild resurgence in south Florida. And the most prominent facility in Mexico City reopened last year after a 20-year closure. Meanwhile, Padilla hasn’t lost his passion for the game. He has reconnected with some former teammates online, and hopes one day he can retire and become a volunteer coach to help pass jai alai to future generations. But his second choice has worked out great. Padilla’s two restaurants feature a section of the menu devoted to authentic cuisine from Mexico City, along with an extensive wine list and other unique touches. “I wanted it to be good, but I wanted it to be a little different from everybody else,” Padilla said. “There are lots of good restaurants and good operators in town. If you’re not doing it right, you’re not going to be around.”
40 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Schools
BOARD ZEROES IN ON TWO-STORY HYER Coloring Book Winnners
Design committee approves Stantec blueprint
A two-story rebuilding plan for Hyer Elementary, as seen in this rendering, was recommended to HPISD board members.
By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers
N
ow that the Highland Park ISD design and construction committee has recommended plans for a two-story Hyer Elementary, district officials can begin ironing out the finer details for reconstruction of a school that has been a fixture for more than 100 years. A two-story design was recommended to the board of trustees in June, ending a months-long three-story vs. two-story debate. Jonathan Aldis, of Stantec, the architectural firm that will oversee reconstruction of the school – as well as Bradfield, another HPISD elementary – presented both two-story and three-story
blueprints at the meeting, and the design committee eventually recommended the two-story plans. The blueprint shows a Hyer with “pods” of classrooms based on grades, with third and fourth grade on the second floor directly above first and second grade. Final plans include a one-story entry on Caruth, and three 2-story classroom wings facing Colgate Avenue. The layout also includes a kindergarten-specific playground, an outdoor athletic court, a soccer field, and a science garden. The gymnasium is adjacent to the outdoor athletic court. “We’ve talked at length about having symmetry with the new plans, so that’s something that this scheme has,” Aldis said. “This floor
plan is pretty simple and compact.” Superintendent Tom Trigg said plans for the school would continue to evolve. “There’s a great chance that there will be significant changes to what we’re seeing right now [on the blueprints],” he said. “A lot can change.” Once construction begins, Trigg said, students that normally ride their bikes or walk along Colgate Avenue may need to adapt. “Students currently walk and ride their bikes along Colgate, but that will change initially because we’re going to use Colgate as [carpool] lanes,” he said. “But I think once the students return to their original schools [following reconstruction of HPISD schools], and construction settles down, we’ll be
COURTESY PHOTO
able to open up Colgate again for students to walk and bike.” However, the setback would provide approximately 105,000 square feet of active play space, compared to approximately 79,000 square feet currently, district officials said. It would also retain 36 of the 47 trees on site. “This has been a long but extremely important and necessary process,” school board president Jim Hitzelberger said. “Because we are making a 100-year decision, we owed it to our community to thoughtfully consider all options along with diverse community input and opinions and the ramifications of each.” More details on the reconstruction plans are expected to be discussed at a meeting in September.
AGE 1-3 CATEGORY: Wyatt Wilcox, 2 years old
AGE 4-6 CATEGORY: Hannah Vesely, 6 years old
District Moving Forward with Durham Busing service to be used full-time in HP
By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers With the 2018-19 school year approaching, Highland Park ISD can officially welcome a new busing service for students. The district will be using Durham School Services, of Lisle, Illinois, for transporting students with special needs to and from school next year. Durham buses will also be used for field trips and athletic events. Cameras will be required on each bus, officials said. The switch to Durham was prompted by voters’ decision last year to shut down Dallas County Schools, the previously-used busing service that faced allegations of financial mismanagement and late buses. The HPISD school board voted unanimously for Durham at an estimated price of $434,654.80 per year. Four regular routes are expected, with the district listing its special education population as less than 24 students. The traditional home-toschool service will cost approximately $278,000, while the extended year service costs an additional $31,736. HPISD services less than 7 square miles, ac-
AGE 7-10 CATEGORY: Walker Fitzgerald, 10 years old
Highand Park ISD will use Durham School Services for busing in 2018-19. cording to district documents. Previous years saw buses responsible for five routes instead of four, but fewer special needs students are expected this school year. HPISD spokesperson Jon Dahlander said the process “went well” to determine a new busing contract. Eight services were contacted by the district, Dahlander said, but Durham was the only one to respond with a bid and proposal. The number of students in the district requiring transportation could impact the number of routes driven in 2018-19, Dahlander said. “If ridership increases to a point where it in-
COURTESY PHOTO
creases the number of hours needed, then our cost will increase,” he said. “We don’t anticipate that happening, but we’ll monitor it.”
DURHAM BY THE NUMBERS 16,300-plus school buses operated 400-plus school districts served 31 states with Durham customers 3 buses when the company started in 1917 in California Source: durhamschoolservices.com
AGE 11-14 CATEGORY: (Grand Prize Winner) Bridget Stammel, 14 years old
parkcitiespeople.com | August 2018 41
Caniac Football Supper Scheduled for Sept. 7
COURTESY PHOTO
Annual fundraiser supports Scots freshman, junior varsity, and varsity teams. Highland Park Football’s fifth annual Caniac Football Supper and Silent Auction will be held before the Mesquite Horn home game on Sept. 7. For $10 per ticket, the team will serve a Raising Cane’s Chicken dinner from 5 to 7 p.m. in the high school cafeteria with take-out available from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. There will also be a DJ, cotton candy, and a great silent auction.
For the silent auction, the Forever Dream Foundation has donated an exclusive meet and greet with Rafa Nadal for two people. Contact JoAnne Pettijohn at 214-642-0282 or pettijohnjo@sbcglobal.net. The money raised will benefit the freshman, junior varsity, and varsity football squads. Contact Adina Smith at adinaandharry@ sbcglobal.net for tickets. — Staff report
42 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Society
PARTNERS CARD KICKS OFF BRAND NEW SEASON
Paige and Randy Flink with Emily Maduro
Max Trowbridge and Britt Harless
Gay Donnell and Dean Driver
Ann Nordin, Kris Ammon, and Lyn Skibell
Julianne Davis, Kimberly Greer, and Molly Barns
Andrea Cheek, Leigh Danley, and Diane Fullingim
McKenna Gannon, Grace Dewar, and Emily Roberts
Lauren Lamp and Jane Rozelle Melissa Sherrill and Regina Bruce Holly Bond and Ashley Biffel
Francisco Diaz, Rhonda Sargent Chambers, and Julian Leaver
Megan Robson and Caroline Cook
Elizabeth Dacus, Debbie Munir, and Jennifer Tobin
Meredith Cummings and Jaycee Hawes
Michael Digiette and Kelly Cleaver
PHOTOS BY GEORGE FIALA
The Family Place raised a glass to the start of its signature fundraiser, Partners Card. The non-profit agency, celebrating its 40th anniversary this year, kicked off festivities for the 26th annual Card at upscale Oak Lawn boutique Nuvo. The Family Place CEO, Paige Flink, was joined by board members, family, and supporters. The crowd enjoyed bites from Parigi and watched esteemed artist, Kris Ammon, of KCA Design, paint an assortment of items purchased by patrons. Partners Card is set for Oct. 26 – Nov. 4.
44 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
DSOL INTRODUCES DEBUTANTES
Eve, Samantha and Travis Sullivan
Front Row: Samantha Sullivan, Elizabeth McIlyar, Aliz Lippincott, Lauren Schnitzer, Mindy Osler, Coco Murchison, Nicole Smith, Savannah Crow, Carly Cooper, Cassandra Polley, and Mary Margaret Jaynes. Back Row: Kate Gioldasis, Kathleen Gamso, Ava Wall, Avery Davis, Emily Stone, Anna Robertson, Megan Molthan, Sally Wade, Elizabeth Reid, and Natalie Groves.
Todd, Natalie, Claire, and Shelly Groves
Jennifer, Elizabeth, and Stuart McIlyar
Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller Kevin, Alix, and Laurie Lippincott
PHOTOS BY JAMES FRENCH AND DEBORAH BROWN
Jonathan and Carla Leffert with Lisa Loy and Kendall Laughlin
The Dallas Symphony Orchestra League introduced the 201819 debutantes during Announcement Weekend festivities May 31 - June 2. The weekend marked the official start of a season of events culminating with the 33rd Presentation Ball, which will be held Feb. 9, 2019. The honorary chairs are Ann and Gabriel Barbier-Mueller.
Jennifer, Emily, and Taylor Stone
UNDER THE STARS KICK OFF PARTY
Travis Williams, Jeromy Fielder, and James Darby
Bill McNamara, Angelique Hamilton, Heather McNamara, and Jeny Thomas
Kathy Fielder, Ashley Berges, and Regina Bruce Cindy and Charlie Feld Jennifer Haggar, Joe Haggar III, and Jessie Haggar Dudney
Pennie and Alan Marshall with Abra and Robert Garrett
Holly and Doug Brooks
Sarah and Chris Williams, Jeff and Tracy Cummins, and Duke Tran
Lea Fisher and J.D. Miller
Bob Manzano and Keetha Hanlin
PHOTOS BY KRISTINA BOWMAN
St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital announced the Kick-Off Party for the 2018 St. Jude Evening Under the Stars Party and Golf Classic on May 31 at the Samuel Lynne Galleries. This year’s Party and Golf Classic will take place on Nov. 3 (Party) and Nov. 5 (Golf Classic).
46 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Faith
SLIM MAJORITY BELIEVE IN GOD OF THE BIBLE
Pastors face challenges countering Internet-spread theology By Bill Miller
Special Contributor
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lergy aren’t surprised that most Americans, according to a recent study, believe in a higher power, but not necessarily the God of the Bible. Such reports regularly pass the desks of the Revs. Jeff Warren, senior pastor at Park Cities Baptist Church, and William B. Lawrence, of SMU. The above-mentioned report from Pew Research Center says about 90 percent of U.S. adults believe in a higher power, with 56 percent ascribing to the Bible’s account of him and 33 percent saying they believe in another type of higher power or spiritual force. Consequently, Warren said, many people lack a biblical worldview and misunderstand the Gospel message of God’s love for them. “That is,” he explained, “that I can enter into a life and love others and not expect anything in return because all the love I need is in him.” The Pew study, “When Americans Say They Believe in God, What Do They Mean?” also notes generational differences. It reports young adults (in their 30s and 40s) “are far less likely than their older counter-
“You never really argue anyone into heaven. You love them there.” The Rev. Jeff Warren parts (age 50 and older) to say they believe in God as described in the Bible.” That’s quite a contrast from the late 1950s when former GIs pushed church attendance to an all-time high, said Lawrence, dean emeritus at SMU’s Perkins School of Theology. “The percentage of Americans who attended worship once a week in the 1930s was about 32 percent,
CREATIVE COMMONS
I S G O D I N C O N T R O L? • 48% of U.S. adults believe God determines what happens to them most or all of the time. • Nearly 8-in-10 think God or a higher power has protected them • 2/3 say they have been rewarded by the Almighty. • 4-in-10 say they have been punished by the deity in which they believe. Source: Pew Research Center study conducted Dec. 4-18, 2017
but 59 percent in the ‘50s,” said Lawrence, whose field is American church history. “It’s understandable,” he added. “The people had just endured a decade of depression and five years of war. Draftees in World War II and perhaps Korea were looking for stability, and that took people back to church life. But during the 1960s that dropped off. “Civil Rights and Vietnam created an enormously divisive spirit within the country. A lot of churches were working for desegregation, while others openly opposed it; the same with Vietnam.” Baby Boomers subsequently lost
faith in institutions, including government and churches, Lawrence said. A new generation, the Millennials, reached adulthood without knowing a time when there was no Internet. The web, Lawrence said, churns “unfiltered” information on theology that’s open to any interpretation. Thus, Warren said, many people see Christianity as a works-based “beat down.” Also, the term “evangelicalism” is thought to be a rightwing voting block—confrontational and judgmental—not the tradition that proclaims the Gospel. Warren noted, however, that some people also see the Internet as a “black hole of futile vanity that’s not helping them at all.” Their hunger for truth brings opportunity to teach by example. “Every believer needs to look hard to see if we’re truly living out our salvation in everyday life,” he said. “There’s a big difference between going to church every week and following Jesus every day. “The primal trait of the believer is love. And the actual church itself is a community of believers loving each other as Christ loved us. “You never really argue anyone into heaven. You love them there.”
HP Presbyterian Church Renovation Moving Forward By Bianca R. Montes People Newspapers
University Park City Council members are scheduled to consider a detailed site plan in early August that could propel Highland Park Presbyterian Church’s 15-year in the making renovation project to the next step. The city’s planning and zoning commission unanimously approved in July a detailed site plan that would allow the church to demolish a structure on its University Boulevard property to construct a three-story building above an underground parking lot that will hold 135 parking spaces. Preliminary site plans, which were highly contested among neighbors who feared the redevelopment would overstep the church’s footprint and demand the closure of a popular thoroughfare street in the neighborhood, underwent several revisions over the years to get to this point. The preliminary plans were approved by council in June.
The city’s attorney said he and church officials are hashing out a developer agreement that will include information about the closure of Shannon Lane for the duration of the proposed 24-to30-month project, utility line upgrades, and a host of other housekeeping details. Currently, it is unclear who will pay for utility line upgrades, but Steve Mace, the city’s communications director, said the 45-year-old lines have experienced multiple failures over the years. Mace added that a need to replace the main had been identified by staff. A parking lot on the east side of the church’s property near Williams Park will serve as a construction staging area. The detailed site plan notes that one tower crane will be housed next to the soon-to-be-demolished Hunt Building located on the corner of Shannon Lane and University Boulevard.
parkcitiespeople.com | August 2018 47
Wedding
EMILY EARLY & RYAN REKIETA
Anna Smith Photography
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mily Elizabeth Early and David Ryan Rekieta were married Saturday, April 28, 2018 at The Lone Star Mansion in Burleson, Texas. Trey Russ, the couple’s brother-in-law, officiated their ceremony. A reception of dining and dancing with a scrumptious cake modeled after the couple’s English bulldog followed, also at The Lone Star Mansion. Emily and Ryan chose “Feet Don’t Touch the Ground,” by Stoney Larue for their first dance as man and wife. The parents of the groom hosted a rehearsal dinner at Reata in Fort Worth, Texas on Friday night. The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John Stockton Early of University Park. She is the granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kniffin of Tyler, Texas, and Mr. and Mrs. John Pohanka of Washington, DC. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. David Rekieta of Bremond, Texas. He is the grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Stewart of Bremond, Texas and the late Mr. and Mrs. Stash Rekieta, also of Bremond, Texas. The bride was presented in marriage by her parents. She was escorted down the aisle on her father’s arm. Emily wore a stunning David Tutera ivory modified A-line gown with lace bodice and buttons down the back. She paired it with a custom Toni Federici chapel-length veil. Emily carried a bouquet of peonies, with maroon and ivory roses.
Assisting the bride as maid of honor was Camille Driver. Her bridesmaids included Alexandra Spiller, Summerlin Northrup, Catherine Taylor, Katie Cane, and Emily Rekieta. Among the members of the house party were the bride’s cousins: Christina Wheaton, Ivy Sudduth, and Crista Hall. Attending the groom as best man was Corey Rekieta. His groomsmen included Johnathon White, Dylon Lindley, Rane Riley, Chris Grigg, Josh Gadbois, and Jeffrey Drymalla. Serving as ushers were John Jenkins, and the bride’s brothers: Nick Early and Zach Early. Lincoln Russ was the ring bearer. The bride is a graduate of The Cambridge School of Dallas. She received a Bachelor of Science in nursing from Baylor University where she was also a member of Delta Delta Delta sorority and Sigma Theta Tau honor society of nursing. Emily is a registered nurse in the operating room at Texas Institute for Surgery. The groom is a graduate of Bremond High School in Bremond, Texas. He graduated Cum Laude with a Bachelor of Science in healthcare management from the University of Texas at Dallas. Ryan is director of recruiting at Afferent Provider Solutions. Following their honeymoon in Grenada, the couple have made their home in Dallas.
48 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Living Well PATIOS MADE FOR DRINKING
HENRY’S MAJESTIC 4900 MCKINNEY AVE.
T
here’s nothing like a refreshing drink to make Texas summers a little more manageable. Pour in a bit of alcohol and a covered patio, and it’s basically an excuse to grab your friends and spend the evening al fresco at one of Dallas’ premier hot spots. We’ve spent the past few weeks tirelessly tasting the libation menus at some of our favorite locations in the Park Cities and Preston Hollow, and have compiled a list of not only great patios to relax on, but also cool drinks to beat the summer heat. - Compiled by Bianca R. Montes and Imani Chet Lytle
UP ON KNOX
3230 KNOX ST. While the cocktail build is pretty simple at this semi-new eatery in the heart of the KnoxHenderson, both the flavor profile and aesthetic surrounding its five-drink menu are total standouts. Trust us, there is not a drink on that menu that doesn’t deserve it’s own Instagram
If there were ever a patio made for day drinking, this would be the one – and not just because happy hour begins at 11 a.m. Tuesday through Friday. The McKinney Avenue hot spot features a spacious, dog-friendly patio full of lush greenery, and most importantly, covered, fanned, and full of misters that we promise will keep you fresh. While the drink menu is abundant enough to hold just about anyone’s interest, our patio favorites include a smokey Mezcal Honey Dew, Honey Don’t (see left) and or our personal favorite, the Watermelon Swizzle (if you follow this article online we’ll even give you the recipe).
moment (see below). Whether it’s the Dani’s Garden – a gin forward drink with a hint of citrus and herbaceousness from a simple syrup infused with basil – or the bubbly Rose Royal with fragrant hints of warm floral notes, the cocktails are the perfect accessory for a late lunch or happy hour date on the brasseries quaint enclosed patio.
LE BILBOQUET 4514 TRAVIS ST.
There is no better place to be seen drinking a glass of refreshing rosé than the outdoor patio or indoor garden room at Le Bilboquet. The French American fusion eatery hosts a casual, yet elegant atmosphere that easily transports diners from Travis Walk to Saint-Germain-desPrés. Whether dining from a luxe menu complimented by a hand-selected French/American wine list or enjoying a delectable weekend brunch – think butter lobster rolls and creamy hollandaise accompanied by mimosas, Bellini’s, and Aperol Spritz – there’s always a good time to sit down for a drink.
C H E C K O U T T H E F U L L L I S T O F PAT I O S O N PA R KC I T I E S P E O P L E . C O M
Former First Lady Attends Parkinson’s Event Nonprofit raises $650,000 for speech therapy By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers
PARKINSON VOICE PROJECT/PLINY GALE
FROM LEFT: Parkinson Voice Project board chairman Bart Bartholomew, former First Lady Laura Bush, Parkinson Voice Project CEO and founder Samantha Elandary, and Parkinson Voice Project honorary board director Nancy Clements Seay.
The people of Parkinson’s Voice Project put their money where their mouths were following a well-attended symposium for three days in June in Richardson. The nonprofit organization, dedicated solely to speech therapy for Parkinson’s patients, awarded $650,000 in training and therapy sessions to various speech-language pathologists at the event. The first-ever symposium for PVP included a question-and-answer session with former First Lady Laura Bush, who is in-
volved in volunteering and raising awareness for the Parkinson’s community. Bush also led an education seminar on PVP’s mission during the symposium. “[PVP workers] give their patients something to look forward to each week,” she said. “I’m grateful for your important work.” First lady from 2001 to 2009, Bush has been involved in raising money and awareness for education, early childhood development, teacher treatment, and breast cancer research. She testified before the Senate Committee on Education in 2002, calling for higher teachers’ salaries and
better training, and she created the “Ready to Read, Ready to Learn” initiative during her first term. Her presence at the event was a hit among the pathologists, many of whom had never seen or met Bush in person. “Mrs. Bush reinforced that it is important for all of us to use our voices to help those in need,” said Samantha Elandary, PVP chief executive officer. “She recognized that the field of speech-language pathology requires empathy and patience, and she encouraged these professionals to serve as advocates for the Parkinson’s population.”
parkcitiespeople.com | August 2018 49
Good Skin Health: The Bad, The Good, The Great “Our skin serves a critical function in protecting our muscles, bones, and internal organs.”
A Personalized Approach to Hearing Healthcare
THINKSTOCK.COM
Did you know we are made up of 70 percent water, and without our skin, we would not be able to survive? Our skin synthesizes critical vitamins, such as vitamin D and B; however, most people vastly underestimate the importance of good skin health. Our skin serves a critical function in protecting our muscles, bones, and internal organs. It’s the most fascinating insulator as it A . J AY B U R N S M D regulates our body temperature and allows us to sense the outside world. Here in Dallas, as in all sun-drenched climates, our skin protects us from ultraviolet rays, which damage our DNA. This harm causes inflammation, redness, uneven pigmentation, brown spots, thin skin, and loss of elasticity. For most women, increased pore size and uneven texture is particularly troublesome. By now you are probably asking, what can I do to protect my skin? Sun avoidance would be ideal, but extremely impractical and absolutely no fun at all. It is important to note that in the United States we receive 80 percent of our sun damage between the ages of 18 and 25. Ironically, these are the years our skin appears as perfect as it will ever be, so we can become overconfident. It is critical for our children and really, all of us, to use sunscreen every day as we get bombarded with damaging rays, even when driving our cars. Sun protection embedded in hats and clothing is helpful as well.
For those of us who missed the memo on sun protection in our youth, the damage is done. That is the bad news. The good news is, today we can reverse those changes to a variable, but significant degree in most cases. I recommend starting with a comprehensive skin care plan, based on your own skin characteristics and preferences. Today, there are “med spas” seemingly on every corner due to the widespread nature of sun damage, but they are not all created equal. It is critical, in my opinion, to make sure a physician who is trained and dedicated to quality skin care solutions is directing the treatments. It has been proven and published in the Journal of Scientific Dermatology that a specific light-based therapy, “Broad Band Light” or “BBL, used three times yearly, produces not only a clearly improved skin appearance, it actually changes your DNA to a more youthful expression. That is great news. This light therapy reduces unwanted red and brown age spots and improves texture as well as pore size. Other outpatient treatments such as the Halo laser can improve mild to moderate wrinkles. More aggressive treatments are recommended for severe sun damage or deep wrinkles, but excellent results can be achieved even in these advanced cases. Now you’ve heard the bad, the good, and the great. I hope this information is useful in spurring you on to great skin health. Dr. Jay Burns, a board-certified plastic surgeon, has practiced plastic surgery in the Park Cities and Dallas for more than 30 years. Visit drjayburns.com.
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214-363-4955
6160 Sherry Lane, STE 100 • Dallas, TX 75225 mcleanhearingcenter.com Find us on Facebook & Google
50 August 2018 | parkcitiespeople.com
Turn Peaches, Other Summer Fruits into Pies, Tarts, Cobblers Does the thought of a homemade peach pie with melt-in-your CHRISTY ROST mouth crust HOME + KITCHEN make you weak in the knees? I love making pies and tarts all year, but during the summer when stone fruits such as peaches, plums, and nectarines are juicy and fragrant, I can’t resist encasing these stars of summer in buttery pastry. Warm from the oven, and served with a scoop of vanilla ice cream or a swirl of whipped cream, it’s hard to beat the flavor of a homemade peach pie, cherry tart, or deep-dish plum cobbler. I started making my own pie pastry while I was in high school. My grandmother Henrietta was a gifted baker, but it was her piecrusts that particularly intrigued me. They were always light and flaky, and she had a well-practiced knack for fluting the edges. Eager to learn her secrets and techniques, I asked my grandmother to teach me the art of pie pastry. It doesn’t matter how good a pie filling is, if the pastry is dry or tough. The secrets to making great pie pastry are ice water, cold butter, and a minimum of handling.
Pastry Ingredients:
• 2 cups flour • ½ cup sifted cake flour • 2 tablespoons sugar • 1 teaspoon salt • 3/4 cup cold unsalted butter, cut into 1/2-inch cubes • 6 tablespoons ice water
Filling Ingredients:
All-American Peach Pie Tiny bits of ice-cold butter in the pastry make a crust tender and flaky. When butter is fully mixed into the flour, the result is a tough piecrust, so keeping the butter cold is essential. I use a food processor, and in less than 10 minutes, the result is pastry that’s easy to handle and doesn’t split when I roll it. Another valuable tip from my grandmother – use a pastry cloth to roll out piecrust. Once a pastry cloth is dusted with flour,
CHRISTY ROST
the days of pie dough sticking to the kitchen counter are over. This month’s All-American Peach Pie combines juicy peaches, a touch of cinnamon and nutmeg, and a buttery top and bottom piecrust no one can resist. It’s easy to make, so get out the flour, chill the butter, and prepare to become the best pie baker on your block. For more recipes and entertaining tips from PBS chef Christy Rost, visit christyrost.com.
• 7 large, ripe peaches, about 2 ½ pounds • 3/4 cup sugar • 2 tablespoons flour • 1/2 teaspoon Saigon cinnamon • 1/8 teaspoon freshly grated nutmeg • 1 egg, for egg wash • 1 tablespoon water, for egg wash • Sparkling or granulated sugar, for garnish
Directions
Combine flours, 2 tablespoons sugar, and salt in a food processor and pulse several times to mix. Add butter and pulse until the butter is pea-size. Add 5 tablespoons of water and process at low speed until the pastry forms a meal. If the mixture feels dry, add the remaining ice water and process just until the pastry begins to form a ball. Remove pastry, divide it in half, wrap each half in plastic and chill 30 minutes.
While the pastry chills, bring a large pot of water to a boil. A few at a time, drop peaches into boiling water for 45 seconds to soften the skins, transfer them to a bowl of ice water, and set them aside. Peel and slice them into a large bowl, discarding the pits. In a small bowl, stir together sugar, flour, cinnamon and nutmeg; pour the mixture over the peaches and toss gently to mix. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Unwrap one of the pastries, roll it out on a floured pastry cloth or counter, and transfer it to a 9-inch pie plate. Spoon the peach filling into the crust. Roll out the remaining pastry, place it on top of the filling, trim the edges of both crusts, and crimp them to seal in the peaches. Cut vent holes in the top crust with a sharp knife. In a small bowl, whisk egg and water together with a fork to form an egg wash. Lightly brush this over the pastry and sprinkle with sparkling sugar. Bake 40-45 minutes, or until the pastry is golden brown and the filling is bubbly.
Yield: 1 9-inch pie
parkcitiespeople.com | August 2018 51
Lighten the Load and Live Your Best Life Now Your mother’s vintage china that the kids don’t want. His bowling shoes. How long ago did he quit the league? The old filing D I N A T AY L O R cabinet full of warranties for products replaced long ago. These are only a fraction of the contents of our garages, spare bedrooms, and closets, and now the time has come to downsize. Where did it all come from? Time marches on, we remodel rooms, the kids move out, we inherit Aunt Sally’s antiques, and we can’t bear to part with those sentimental knickknacks gathering dust and sending pangs of guilt every time we think of disposing of them. We all have too much stuff, and when it’s time to downsize, it simply won’t all fit. Postponing the purge — a tempting yet ineffective decision — results in overflowing, unsightly garages or offsite storage units sitting idle for years and costing a small fortune.
Before downsizing, we must ask ourselves some important questions: Do we really need all this stuff? Have these items outlived their purpose? Can I really afford to postpone dealing with treasures that are transforming to burdens? Am I comfortable with family members — or even strangers — going through my things in the event that I am one day unable? And here’s an important question: Is now the time to break free—free of all this stuff? It’s time to be good to yourself. It’s time to take action, to make the decision to cut the ties and free up our time, money, and energy so we can enjoy today without the burdens and clutter of the past. Inaction and indecision take an emotional toll. You deserve your best life now, without all the excess stuff. Dina Taylor, owner of Easily Organized in Dallas (easilyorganized.com), works with clients in Texas and Florida.
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20 Under 40 | People Newspapers | August 2018 3B
PEOPLE NEWSPAPERS DEBUTS 20 UNDER 40
I
n this 20 Under 40 special section, People Newspapers highlights young adults in the Park Cities and Preston Hollow who are making a name for themselves and a difference for their community. During a month-long nomination process, we solicited recommendations from our readers, and through an editorial process, considered career accomplishments, community ties, and philanthropic work to
Matt Renna
determine the final 20. A few standouts helped to widen our scope and led to the creation of the Power Couple and Teens to Watch honorary sections. We find our 20 Under 40 to be exemplary models of what it means to be a Dallasite, and we hope to continue highlighting you, our readers, for years to come. - Bianca R. Montes, assistant editor
35
CREATIVE Company: Boulevard East Education: Cox School of Business (SMU)
The most critical lesson Matt Renna learned from a mentor happened to be the key to being a good businessman: Make a good first impression. Renna turned that lesson into his own personal philosophy, “Start with the relationship - it is the most important thing.” A commercial banker by day, Renna also embodied the “follow your journey” motto to pursue a lifelong passion by opening Boulevard East, a leather goods store in a Knox-Henderson garage, which also sells at DLM Supply. In his free time, Renna volunteers with United Way, Hearts & Hammers, and Habitat for Humanity.
Q: A:
What was your first summer job?
My First Job Ever - selling baseball cards at Left Field (an old shop in Snider Plaza in the ‘80s).
Brittany Underwood
ALICIA RICO CREATIVE Company: Bows & Arrows Education: TCU
By Bianca R. Montes People Newspapers
A
s a florist, gracing the front cover of Martha Stewart Weddings is the pinnacle of success. For Alicia Rico, a Dallas-based florist with a romantic flair for gardenesque designs, that aspiration has already been de-pinned from her vision board. While landing that “best floral designer” cover has been a significant highlight for the Bows & Arrows coowner, it isn’t the only one. Rico and her husband and business partner, Adam, have a growing following of more than 165,000 on Instagram, have been featured in Harper’s BAZAAR as “best florist,” and showcased their work on the tables of several Dallas events, including Texan By Nature, Fiesta de las Seis Banderas, and the Dallas Arboretum Artscape. It all began when the couple – both native southerners; him Georgia, her Texas – left Brooklyn to make Dallas their home. “One of the reasons I wanted to start my business in Dallas is that I felt there
COURTESY PHOTO
36 was a need for my aesthetic and style,” the Park Cities mother of two said about her move back to the Lone Star State to be closer to her family. “In New York City there were tons of great florists and creatives,” she continued, and “I felt like the Dallas art scene was really growing – I felt there was a place for me.” While at first, Rico said Dallasites weren’t ready for her designs, which she describes as garden imitating nature with a romantic, painterly twist, today she’s a trendsetter in the community. That community, she said is what makes the Park Cities her home. Today, Rico said she’s now replaced her vision of landing a Martha Stewart cover with finding a little more balance between her work and home life. “I’ve been doing so many destinations, which I love to do,” Rico said about the work that sends her to some of the most beautiful wedding locations. “But, I do want to do a lot more in Dallas and get more involved with its activities.” Spending more time giving back to
Dallas charities and supporting local businesses that cater to her two Bradfield Elementary school children are at the top of the to-do list. Whether it’s the musical theater and dancing opportunities her eldest daughter loves, such as at DAMPA, Preston Center Dance, and Park Cities Ballet, or educational tutoring at Hola HP and Mathnasium of Highland Park, Rico said she’s a fan of all the opportunities the community offers her family. That and the fact that she can walk across the street to the Highland Park Village movie theater to catch a flick anytime.
Q: A:
What did you learn from your best boss or mentor?
My father is my business mentor, and he has always encouraged me and never looked down on me. He listens to all of my crazy ideas and never shuts me down! He is a hard worker and makes things happen!
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CREATIVE Company: Akola Project Education: SMU
Brittany Underwood has transformed the lives of more than 600 Ugandan women since starting the Akola Project in 2004. During her sophomore year at SMU, she met a Ugandan woman who had taken 24 street children under her care. Inspired by this woman, Brittany set out to provide a means of income for women who had no such prospects in their communities. Since then, the project has expanded to the Dallas area to help women in poverty earn a regular monthly wage through handcrafting jewelry, which is carried at Neiman Marcus.
Q: A:
What do you want your last meal to be? Fasting and praying.
4B August 2018 | People Newspapers | 20 Under 40 “The focus is going to be on one Japanese dish. It’s something that people love, but people aren’t used to having it the way that they will be enjoying it at Namo.” With the idea to provide Dallas with a unique high-quality food experience, Cohanim traveled to Japan in June where he spent hours at the fish market speaking with fishers and farmers to strike import deals. To Cohanim, it was not only essential to give Namo an extra level of authenticity in the dishes but to form relationships with his suppliers. This approach to business emphasizes his philosophy that no one should know more about his restaurants than him.
Q:
BRANDON COHANIM BUSINESS Company: Pok the Raw Bar Education: SMU
By William Legrone
People Newspapers
F
or 21-year-old Brandon Cohanim, his first foray as a restaurateur began under the dim halogen lights of his college dorm room. Between classes and school work, and often in the middle of the night, Cohanim began forming a plan on how to start and
run his restaurant. The plan came to fruition in 2017 when his poke restaurant, Pōk the Raw Bar, opened its doors in West Village. Originally from Los Angeles, Cohanim came to Texas in 2015 for his undergraduate work at SMU. He is studying economics, a degree he said goes hand in hand with his ambitions.
COURTESY PHOTO
21
how they can make small meals out of what they have,” Cohanim said. Among his incredibly busy schedule, Cohanim is working on his second restaurant concept. The eatery, called Namo, will feature a trademark Japanese dish as its primary claim to fame. “It’s a completely different direction from Pōk, and it’s going to look so different,” he said.
the Food Network’s Guy’s Grocery Games – her second run will be Aug. 8. A staple in Dallas’ vegan community, the Boom Juice founder and her husband Davio were behind saving Be Raw, the city’s only raw restaurants in 2016. Beyond food and reality television, Ventouras is a proud Armstrong Elementary School volunteer. She’s also served as a grant writer for an anti-poverty think tank helping feed people and prevent food waste in landfills.
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BUSINESS Company: Be Raw, Boom Juice Education: Cooper Institute Since 2013, Jessica Ventouras has brought refreshing health-focused trends to the Dallas area. Some say you can thank her for Dallasites sipping on rose water and turmeric milk. Her innovative approach to food has landed the mother of three on
Q: A:
What is your business philosophy?
It can be better. Forever tweak and improve.
Q: A:
My philosophy is to know every single little thing about your business no matter what it is. No one knows more about my business than I do.
Q: A:
What is your proudest career accomplishment and why?
when beginning your career?
Jessica Ventouras
My grandfather told me “watch your overhead, watch your overhead, watch your overhead.” He was right.
of two children, two dogs and a hamster named Cutie Tickles, is actively involved with Operation Kindness, the Children’s Advocacy Center, and volunteering at his children’s schools.
: What is the best advice you received
I’m very fortunate to know three leaders in the Dallas restaurant scene, their advice is gold: Gene: Don’t work with your spouse. If you do, try to remember you’re on the same team. Shannon: Trust your gut and “to Hell with” (PG version of what he said) everyone else. Dick: Everyone is stealing.
A:
What is your business philosophy?
Among those ambitions is his desire to teach people how to live sustainably. Cohanim recently spent some time in Haiti working with the Children’s Nutrition Program of Haiti, a non-profit organization committed to fighting malnutrition in the Caribbean country. “We went from village to village communicating with mothers and community leaders about
Q A:
What is the best advice you received when beginning your career?
Jim Mueller
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LEGAL Company: Verner Brumley Mueller Parker Education: SMU Dedman School of Law
Jim Mueller has already earned membership in the prestigious American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers at an age decades younger than most of his fellows. He was also selected for inclusion in Texas Rising Stars and then for Texas Super Lawyers, both published by Thomson Reuters in Texas Monthly Magazine. The father
I am most proud of being inducted in the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers at such an early point in my career. Being included among such incredible family law attorneys across the United States is very humbling.
Q: A:
What do you love about your community?
I love the fact that, in University Park, you can’t walk down the street without running into 10 people you know. It truly is a neighborhood where I feel that my family is safe and cared for by more than just my wife and me.
20 Under 40 | People Newspapers | August 2018 5B
Daniel Terrell LEGAL Company: Stream Energy Education: LSU Law School
39
Daniel Terrell may have grown up in Louisiana, but he’s made a significant impact in Dallas. A chief legal officer at Stream Energy, Terrell bases his philosophy on performance and integrity while striving to be a trusted counselor and company leader. Outside of the office, the single father of three boys spends time with Genesis Heroes, a group dedicated to creating safe homes and communities for domestic violence survivors. He’s also a part of Stream Cares Foundation, which supports charities in North Texas. Stream Cares is partnering with Hope Supply, which provides items for homeless children.
Q: A:
If you could tell 16-year-old you any thing, what would you say?
Build a mindset prepared for challenges and adversity. They are a part of your natural environment, so encountering them should be expected, and overcoming them should be in your nature.
Chip Brooker
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We couldn’t just stick to adults when it came to rising stars in the community. These two teens enbody the purpose of 20 Under 40 and deserve an honorary mention. unlike the golden ticket from Willy Wonka. As an added benefit, Truman partnered with Vogel Alcove to donate a portion of each sale towards helping homeless children on the road to recovery.
LEGAL Company: Law Offices of Frank L. Branson Education: SMU Dedman School of Law
What do you get when you combine a love of sports, a passion for mentorship, and a yearning to help those in need? Chip Brooker. As a trial lawyer with the Law Offices of Frank L. Branson, his work has been recognized in The Best Lawyers in America, Texas Super Lawyers and D Magazine’s Best Lawyers in Dallas – just to name a few. When Brooker’s not helping resolve catastrophic personal injury claims and complex business disputes, he serves on the Operation Underground Railroad host committee, a worldwide anti-human trafficking organization, and coaches children’s bantam lacrosse in Highland Park.
Q: A:
What would your superpower be and why?
As a trial lawyer, telepathy would be the ultimate superpower. It would be invaluable to know what the jurors are thinking.
Q: A:
What is your business philosophy?
Truman Wilson
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ENTREPRENUER Company: The Truman Factory Education: Highland Park Middle School
Truman Wilson started his children’s lifestyle company, The Truman Factory, in 2017 with the goal to create a place where children could decide what they wanted to do and how they could go about it in the most fun way possible. Working alongside other children in what the company calls the “Epic Team,” the Truman factory gives its customers the chance to win cool prizes via a candy bar with a code inside, not
I wanted to build a business by kids and for kids that was focused on what kids love most – gaming, tech, clothes, collecting, and candy. I also wanted to do something that gives back to my local community. I want to give kids an epic experience.
Q: A:
What would your superpower be and why? Teleportation so I won’t be late to meetings.
able for all skin types. Not stopping there, Stener partnered with Cool Earth, an organization dedicated to preventing global warming, to help fight the destruction of rainforests across the globe.
Robert Thetford
35
Holly Rampy Baird
LEGAL Company: ONDA Education: Texas Tech School of Law
Growing up an Eagle Scout helped shape Highland Park High School and SMU jurist doctor graduate Robert Thetford into who he is today – an enthusiastic lawyer who believes in family values, undeniable effort, and being prepared. Farley works to advance solutions-oriented conservatism and effective conservative leaders who get results for our community, region, and state. Along with his wife, Staci, Thetford serves on several boards at University Park United Methodist Church, including the church council.
Baird was named one of D Magazine’s Best Lawyer’s Under 40 and one of the top lawyers in the state by Thomas Reuters. She’s also been named one of the top up-andcoming attorneys in Texas by Reuters. As an attorney with the Park Cities-based boutique family law firm Orsinger, Nelson, Downing & Anderson, Baird works with clients in Highland Park, University Park, and Preston Hollow who find themselves facing a divorce.
Q: A:
What fictional world or place would you like to visit?
The Wall from Game of Thrones. During the Texas summer, it’s nice to know that winter is coming.
A
If you could tell 16-year-old you anything, what would you say?
38
LEGAL Company: Private Practice Education: SMU Dedman School of Law
Q:
Q: A:
What is your business philosophy?
: To offer the highest level of representation possible to each client, while always being mindful of the emotional and financial needs of the family, as well as the efficiency of the path being taken.
Sophia Stener
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ENTREPRENUER Company: Mali Mali Education: The Episcopal School of Dallas Sophia Stener suffered from sensitive skin growing up, often resulting in hives whenever she would try on clothes or walk through a supermarket. Although there were solutions out there, many of them had adverse side effects. After finding no answers to the problem, Stener decided to do her research by studying substances used for medicinal purposes by cultural groups – while still in high school – and developed the brand Mali Mali. Her company makes plant-based skin cream and lip oil suit-
Well, that was just two years ago, but I would probably suggest being more open to vulnerability. At first, I would shy away from embracing my fears and going out on my own and selling. I have learned in these past few years just how important and valuable it is to put a face behind a brand to drive sales and pique interest.
Q:
Where is the best place for a business power lunch in the Park Cities or Preston Hollow and why?
Royal Blue Grocery! Far and away, Royal Blue is the best place to grab lunch or coffee for work. The atmosphere and vibes are incredible and fun.
A:
6B August 2018 | People Newspapers | 20 Under 40
Alex Perry
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REAL ESTATE Company: Allie Beth Allman & Associates Education: SMU
Real estate agent Alex Perry, an SMU graduate with a real estate finance degree from the Cox School of Business, made his way to Texas by way of Los Angeles and Rhode Island. He has been honored as one of D Magazine’s Best Real Estate Agents five years in a row, and is part of the top producing group at Allie Beth Allman & Associates – all while volunteering at Big Brothers of Texas, St. Jude’s Underwriting Committee, and Habitat for Humanity. When he actually takes time off, he enjoys hitting the links at Dallas’ Brook Hollow Golf Club.
Q: A:
What is your proudest career accomplishment?
KELLY CARDEN BUSINESS Company: Cryo1one Education: Boston University
By Tim Glaze
People Newspapers
W
hen Kelly Carden left her corporate job to start her own cryotherapy business, the dubbed “cold therapy” was relatively an unknown way to fight inflammation. At the time, there were only 30 therapy stations in the whole country. Now, three years later, the Preston Hollow resident is about to open her third spa in north Dallas. The 32-year-old is the owner of Cryo1one, located in the Preston Royal Village shopping center. There is also a Cryo1one on Cedar Springs Road in Dallas, and a soon-to-be location at The Shops at Legacy in Plano. Multiple centers were necessary after the benefits of cryotherapy spread like wildfire, Carden said. “Starting Cryo1one three years ago and seeing it expand to more locations is by far my proudest moment,” she said. “I absolutely love seeing all of the people we have helped with chronic pain and inflammation through the business. I also enjoy seeing the culture and Cryo1one community we have created, which sets our business apart from our competitors.” Cryotherapy originated in Japan as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis in the late 1970s, and was popular in Europe for decades before its demand in the United States.
BIANCA R. MONTES
32
Carden said she’s seen near-immediate improvement in some patient’s ailments after as little as one treatment. “I’ve had people come up to me after their very first session, and they can’t believe how much better they feel already,” she said. While in the sauna, temperatures can drop to as low as -202 degrees, Carden said she hasn’t tried that level. “I’m good with the [first level], the -167 degrees,” she said. “I’ve been doing cryotherapy for three years and I still can’t do -202.” Besides cryotherapy, Carden is also passionate about helping animals. She adopted her dog, Bella, ten years ago, and has volunteered at Artists for Animals and Operation Kindness. Carden and Bella are nearly inseperable, with the dog often visiting the Preston Hollow location - to the delight of the customers. Carden has also created a company called Fixin’ To Save, which offers free spaying and neutering to pets of low-income families. “We have prevented over 1 millions unwanted births in Dallas-Fort Worth, which has greatly improved the animal overpopulation epidemic that this area experiences,” she said. Whether it’s helping animals or improving the lives of people through cryotherapy, Carden has called Preston Hollow home for her endeavors - even though she lives in Dallas. “While Dallas is my city, Preston Hollow
Becoming a well-respected agent in the market with my peers. Having the respect of the people you work with every day allows you to grow in the business you are in and gives you the confidence to reach any height.
Nina Sachse for sure is my home,” she said. “I have met the most interesting and nice people the last three years owning a business at Preston Royal. “Everyone is so supportive of Cryo1one and is genuinely excited for the businesses success. Although it may be a big neighborhood, it feels very well connected.”
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REAL ESTATE Company: The Rhodes Group at Compass Education: SMU
Q: A:
What is your fondest Park Cities or Preston Hollow memory?
Bringing puppy yoga to Dallas and being able to see over 200 Park Cities/ Preston Hollow residents come together for such a worthy cause.
Q: A:
Where is the best place for a business power lunch in the Park Cities or Preston Hollow and why?
TJ’s in Preston Royal. I love supporting my fellow business owners who equally care about customer service and quality like I do.
After attending school at SMU, Nina Sachse couldn’t imagine leaving her adopted hometown. So, she stayed and went on to become an indelible member of the Park Cities and Dallas communities and business world as a real estate agent where her approach to service mirrors her approach to her work as a real estate agent: energetic, innovative, diligent, and focused. Her philanthropic work includes chairing the Cattle Baron’s Ball, and she has been a member of the Junior League of Dallas since 2009.
Q: A:
Where will we find you enjoying your hard-earned time off?
You will find me at home with my family, on the Katy Trail, and at The Pilates Barre.
20 Under 40 | People Newspapers | August 2018 7B – she is heavily involved at her children’s schools as a room mom, vice president of fundraising, and even the chairman of the school’s carnival. Cocotos began her career in medical sales at a Fortune 500 company before moving into real estate where she’s continued her education by obtaining her Texas Real Estate Broker License, graduating from the Metrotex Leadership Program, and obtaining her GRI Certification.
Q Kimberly Cocotos 39 A :
houses in three different states. A Park Cities native, Thompson attended The Episcopal School of Dallas through sixth grade before heading off to New Mexico, and then California. The third-generation real estate professional loves to give back to her community, and is involved in the Junior League of Dallas, the Dallas Cotillion Club, and the Slipper Club of Dallas. She also is an active volunteer at the Perot Museum.
which one would you choose?
REAL ESTATE Company: Virginia Cook, Realtors Education: Texas Tech University
Kimberly Cocotos wears many hats, and she wears them all well. Besides being selected as a D Magazine “Best of D” in the real estate category and a top producer at Virginia Cook, Realtors – a goal she set for herself and achieved in five years
Rogers Healy
38
REAL ESTATE Company: Rogers Healy and Associates Education: SMU
Southern Charm, the cast always knows how to enjoy the southern culture.
Q A:
: What is your proudest career
accomplishment?
The first time I was a top producer. I had set my goal of hitting it before my fifth year in the business. I had a baby during that time, which made it a little hard, but it all worked out.
Taylor Gromatzky
29
REAL ESTATE Company: Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate Education: Texas Tech University
Q: : A 30
What is your proudest career accomplishment?
: If you could be on a reality TV show,
Caroline Thompson
REAL ESTATE Company: Jobst Randall Group at Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty Education: University of Arizona Caroline Thompson ended up in Dallas as an up-and-coming real estate agent, but her path to North Texas wound through 18
Ace Lahli
Real estate has so many victories, like negotiating the best outcome for your client, and making both parties have a win-win experience. But the biggest yet was selling over $3.5 million in properties in a week.
Q: A:
What did you learn from your best boss or mentor?
Get creative in order to get things done, and never taking no for an answer.
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REAL ESTATE Company: Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate Education: UTD
FOLLOW MORE ON
SOCIAL MEDIA Rogers Healy’s ties to the special needs community in the Park Cities and North Texas run deep. The SMU and Highland Park High School alumnus is involved in Autism Awareness, Miles for Mazy, and a laundry list of other organizations and nonprofits. He enjoys spending time assisting at Operation Kindness. His company, Rogers Healy and Associates, eclipsed the $1 billion sales mark a short while ago. Healy is also a proud dog-dad father of three – Amigo, Batman, and Coach.
Q: A:
What did you learn from your best boss or mentor?
My dad’s selfless approach to every aspect of his life has led to his success, which has nothing to do with finances. In 1995, my parents decided to move us to the Park Cities from South Texas, just so we could attend the schools. To me, a mentor is someone you want to be like because you have the opportunity to be like them. I’ve wanted to be my dad for my entire life, and I’ll always chase that dream.
A lifelong member of Highland Park United Methodist Church and avid volunteer with longtime Dallas nonprofit Hope Cottage Pregnancy and Adoption Center, Taylor Gromatzky’s passion for community and generous attitude off the clock mirrors her role as a real estate agent. She has been a top producing agent at Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate five out of the past six years where she and her mother, Kim, work as a team. When she’s not treating clients to brunch at Hillstone, the Dallas native is either traveling or relishing in Park Cities traditions, such as sitting at the corner of Preston Road and McFarlin Boulevard to watch the Park Cities Fourth of July Parade – just like she did as a child.
Q A:
: What do you love about your community?
I love the way the community comes together whether something not so good or something great has happened.
Q: A:
What did you learn from your best boss or mentor? Patience is key. And, to always be able to laugh at yourself.
Ace Lahli used to drive through the Park Cities as a child, staring in amazement at the large, beautiful houses that are synonymous with the area. Now, he’s selling those very homes. In two years as a real estate, agent Lahli sold almost $20 million in volume while dealing with units ranging from condos to mansions. He’s a member of the Dallas Millennial Club and participates in countless volunteer opportunities through his firm, Dave Perry-Miller. As a resident of Uptown, Lahli loves being able to walk everywhere, and he’s a big fan of the beach, steak, Game of Thrones, and the television show Million Dollar Listing: LA.
Q: A:
What inspires you?
Knowing that people trust me with the biggest asset they have, whether it is a $150,000 condo in Uptown or a $4.5 million estate in Preston Hollow. Having that trust and confidence put in me lets me know that people believe in me, which in turn helps me believe in myself. The more I do that, the more I realize that any goal I set forth can be achieved.
Follow 20 Under 40 online at parkcitiespeople.com and prestonhollowpeople.com to view extended Q&As of those features. • Make sure to head over to our Instagram page @peoplenewspapers to watch video interviews, as well. • Like and share the content using
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8B August 2018 | People Newspapers | 20 Under 40 Drawing on her experience as an athlete, Collins, who serves on the SMU Athletic Forum Board, continues to pursue that dream in full force but also has learned that weathering the ups and downs has helped her succeed in reaching her goals and be happier with the work she is doing.
a lesson that has played no small part in her rise to leading the Day School. In her off time, Good loves to hang out with her husband and two boys at parks, zoos, and wherever else nature can be found.
Q: A:
If you could tell 16-year-old you anything, what would you say and why?
Sarah Good
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EDUCATION Company: Highland Park Presbyterian Day School Education: Dallas Baptist University
A former teacher and currently the executive director at Highland Park Presbyterian Day School, Sarah Good has dedicated the past eight years of her life to educating children in the Dallas area. During that time, Good has run into her fair share of work related dilemmas, but through those trials she has learned the importance of standing up for what’s right,
16 wasn’t an easy time for me, but I wish I would have known that many of the hard things weren’t significant in the long run. I would tell myself to focus on being the truest me I could be, and to keep my head up. That everything was going to be alright, and that my story takes a happy turn!
Q A:
: What would your superpower be and why?
I wish I could automatically and clearly see what’s going on in someone’s heart when they bring their issues to me. Then, I could always respond with empathy and with understanding, and better meet their needs.
Q: A:
What do you love about your community?
Genevieve Collins
I love that Dallas is a city of optimists who dream big and accomplish even bigger goals. I love that people here are friendly, honest and thoughtful. Dallas is one big, small town... despite all its glitz and glamour - it is a place where people strive to be and do good.
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EDUCATION Company: Istation Education: SMU
Q: A:
Looking toward the future of education, Genevieve Collins dreams of better educational infrastructure for generations of incoming and current students. Last year, the Highland Park High School alumna took that dream to the White House, pitching Vice President Mike Pence on how the United States can improve the educational system.
Where is the best place for a business power lunch in the Park Cities or Preston Hollow?
Sevy’s. Great food, fast service, easy parking.
While many of our 20 Under 40 are rising stars in their own right, The Hammel’s follow-your-dream story made them the perfect couple to highlight in an honorable mention.
Scott Company: Atlas Wealth Advisors Education: University of Texas
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Q: A:
If you could tell 16-year-old you anything, what would you say?
Allow the journey to unfold in its own time, it’s easy to be impatient, especially in business. Some of the best moments came after I stopped pushing so hard.
The Hammel’s love for giving back has manifested itself into a new career for GeeGee and a slew of volunteer work for Scott. It’s just the way they want it to be. The couple attends Highland Park United Methodist Church along with their two children, Hadley and Hayden. GeeGee Hammel is the accounting and finance director for HPUMC (she also teaches Sunday School). Scott Hammel, who runs his financial practice, is a member of an HPUMC small group, volunteers at the church’s cafe, and is scheduled to go on a mission trip soon to the Dominican Republic. All of this wasn’t possible for the Hammel couple until they made drastic career moves: Both left their jobs. GeeGee dove headfirst into volunteer work at her church, and Scott became his own boss – and gained plenty of extra time with his family – by opening Atlas Wealth Advisors. Both Scott and GeeGee said that quitting
GeeGee
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Company: Highland Park UMC Education: University of California Santa Barbara
Q: A:
What did you learn from your best boss or mentor? She taught me to “dig in, roll your sleeves up, and figure it out.”
their other jobs and pursuing their passions was life-changing. “Quitting my job in 2007 to start a financial planning practice is the proudest moment of my life,” Scott said. “GeeGee and I moved from San Diego, and she had no job, and we had virtually no money. We had to live very, very frugally, and we love to reminisce about it because it really brought us closer and helped us define who we did and did not want to become if we ever became fortunate enough to have any kind of wealth.” Also, for GeeGee, choosing to focus on her family and faith was an easy decision. “My family is the reason I decided to leave my corporate career to find more balance in my life and to give back to my community through my gifts and talents,” she said. The power couple even has a weekly lunch date at Below 40 Poke House. “That’s when we discuss important business matters, like our marriage,” GeeGee said.
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Known for his integrity, Mueller stands out as a respected and dedicated attorney in the courts and among his peers. He has been recognized time and time again as a top lawyer locally and nationally. Mueller has also been elected President by the National Advocates Top 40 Under 40 and recognized in Best Lawyers in America and Texas Super Lawyers. Not only is he passionate about his work, but the Dallas community as well. He serves Operation Kindness, Jonathan’s place and the Akola Project with his family and firm. Mueller is inspired by his wife, Olivia, and two children, Leisel and Boone, as well as his clients. “I truly want to make my family proud and help my clients get to a point where they are happy, supported, and confident in themselves and their future.
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ParkCitiesPeople
PHOTOS BY WILLIAM LEGRONE, IMANI CHET LYTLE, AND CHRIS MCGATHEY
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A SPECIAL THANK YOU
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ark Cities People staff appreciates the enthusiastic welcome our float received as well as those who visited our booth in Goar Park, children who entered our coloring book contest, and sponsors who helped us participate. Thank you also to readers who submitted photos for last month’s parade history section: Patricia Anderson, Brad Bradley, Kirk Dooley, Mary Meier-Evans, Cecy Feld, Ericka Hefner, Casey Herren, Winifred Mundinger, Kay Neve, Douglas Scott, and Tricia Stewart. Regrettably, a technological mishap omitted photo credits as the section went to press. Find a corrected version online. Participation in the parade is its own reward, but some earned special recognition. Daniel J. Drabinski reported 60 bicycle decorating contestants and well more than 100 riders. The winners: under 8 boy, Layton Thomas, first; Liam McCulloch, second; under 8 girl, Margot Mundinger, first; Ellery Thomas, second; over 8 boy, Gavin Thornfield, first; John Drabinski/Taylor Mackey, tie for second; over 8 girl, Rebecca Maddox, first; Katelyn Richard, second; family, Wightman family, first; Malone/ Longiro families, tie for second; best overall, Cathryn Wisley and family. In the float competition, the Patriots Cup again went to Balloons Everyday. Second place: Cotton Bowl of Dallas. Third place: The Neuoff Family. Fundraising for the North Texas Food Bank was approaching $31,000. The David M. Crowley Foundation will match most of that, Rotary Club of Park Cities reported. – William Taylor
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