WHY A PRESTON CENTER APARTMENT PROPOSAL ISN’T DEAD AFTER ALL
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MAY 2015 I Vol. 11, No. 5 prestonhollowpeople.com facebook.com/phollowpeople @phollowpeople
Model Student
R E A L E S TAT E St. Mark’s grad urges readers to bring history into home building 22
HOCKADAY STUDENT HAS BRAINS TO GO WITH BEAUTY ON THE RUNWAY 42
COMMUNITY School spirit: T-shirt idea helps students foster DISD pride 43
SOCIETY Is this the craziest hat from this year’s Arboretum Mad Hatter’s Tea? 37
E D U C AT I O N
Greenhill raises the curtain on new arts center plans 4
BUSINESS
Feet first: Roma Boots donates footwear to stomp out poverty 16
COMMUNITY
Can Edwin Flores regain his seat on the DISD school board? 41
2 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM OYSTER PERPETUAL COSMOGR APH DAY TONA
CONTENTS LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
You’ve Got Mail, Just Not As Much
O
ur publisher, Pat Martin, ran a column last month about the delayed U.S. Postal Service delivery of our March issue due to winter weather and other factors. Reaction was strong on both sides. Here’s a sample.
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Dear Editor: Your piece about the USPS was not exactly fair. Because the USPS has to go to Congress to make many of its changes, the USPS is not a common business. It is subject to different rules that prevent it from being able to go forward on its own with any plans to generate more revenue and therefore have more funds to improve services, as another completely private businesses would be able to do. The USPS does generate its own revenue and is not government funded as some people think. And as you may have heard, the post office has been forced to close some of its facilities that might have sped up the process because they are required by our Congress to pre-fund 5.5 billion a year in health expenses for future retirees, which other private businesses are not required to do. I can understand your frustration, but I certainly didn’t blame you for the delay in your newspaper’s reaching me, and, in fact, I didn’t even notice that it was late. Thank you for your hard work! — Jane Hoffman
MORE ON THE WEB
Read extended versions of these letters on our blog.
Dear Editor: Don’t let up on the U.S. Post Office. Their performance is absolutely horrible and it doesn’t take a snowstorm for them to earn that reputation.
My zip code is 75220, and the main post office for our neighborhood is on Northwest Highway. It doesn’t take a snowstorm for us not to get mail. On several occasions this past summer, we went two or three days without mail. I personally visited the Postmaster and all he could say was, “Yeah, we’ve had some problems in that area.” I even asked for his logic — why if the last part of a route had to be cancelled for whatever reason, why they didn’t start the next day where they left off rather than start from the beginning of the route, therefore leaving some of us without mail for two or three days at a time. He tilted his head as if this were rocket-science thinking, and said something like, “Oh yeah, I guess we could try that, but it would really be confusing for our delivery force.” As for the snowstorm, it’s interesting that cities like Boston and elsewhere never suffered a day without a mail delivery. Yes, they have more snow-removal equipment, but let’s be honest. We didn’t get that much snow, and most of it melted later that same day, leaving plenty of time to complete most routes. — Robert Schuetz
EDUCATION ��������������������������������������������������� 4 SPORTS ............................................................. 9 CAMPS . ............................................................ 11 BUSINESS........................................................ 16 REAL ESTATE QUARTERLY...................... 21 MOTHER’S DAY GIFTS ������������������������������ 29
LIVING WELL ����������������������������������������������� 32 FOCUS ON PHILANTHROPY................... 36 SOCIETY ......................................................... 37 WEDDINGS �������������������������������������������������� 40 COMMUNITY ����������������������������������������������� 41 CLASSIFIEDS ����������������������������������������������� 44
Publisher: Patricia Martin
EDITORIAL
O P E R AT I O N S
A DV E R T I S I N G
Editor Todd Jorgenson
Business Manager Alma Ritter
Senior Account Executives
Assistant Editor Sarah Bennett
Distribution Manager Don Hancock
Kim Hurmis Kate Martin
Art Director Elizabeth Ygartua Assistant Art Director Curtis Thornton Consulting Editor Jeff Bowden Interns Paige Kerley Mackenzie Cimala
Intern Andrea Miranda
Account Executives Clarke Dvoskin Geraldine Galentree DeeAnna Thompson
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4 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
E D U C AT I O N Greenhill Arts Center Takes Center Stage By Meredith Carey
Special Contributor For students enrolled in the Greenhill School’s film classes, the new fine arts center can’t come soon enough. Students taking the most sought-after elective in the upper school with film teacher Corbin Doyle are limited to using computers on alternating days. But by the end of 2015, everything will change. The opening of the Marshall Family Performing Arts Center, scheduled for late 2015, will mark a milestone for the school’s fine arts program. With a 600seat auditorium, a 150-seat studio theater, a dance and choral hall, video and production classrooms, and galleries, the center will impact each student’s daily life. “This center will transform the campus and its mentality,” said Michael Manes, Greenhill’s head of fine arts. “Our current space was built in the 1970s, but the school was small. Now, we have more than 1,200 students, and this will change the entire complexion of what we do.” With more than 75 productions each year, between lower, middle, and upper schools ranging from band concerts to musicals such as the most recent “Addams Family,” the school will finally have sufficient space to house them all. “We have had practice space for the band but we perform concerts in the gym,” said Brian Donnell, middle and upper school band director. “The gym is great for basketball but isn’t exactly a great performance hall.” But the space won’t only serve students dedicated to fine arts. Scott Griggs, head of school, explained that with the addition of the 600-seat auditorium, each school will have an area to meet as a group. “We have school meetings each week,
C O U R T E SY R E N D E R I N G S
Renderings of Greenhill’s future Marshall Family Performing Arts Center help visualize the complex. with faculty and student speakers, so every student in middle school will be in the Marshall Family Performing Arts Center once if not twice a week, in addition to classes,” Griggs said. Students are already excited for the opportunities that will be newly available in the space, according to their fine arts teachers. “In the new studio theater, we’ll have fly space, something we’ve never had before. They’ve all studied it in books and I’ve explained how it works in professional theaters but the students are so very excited to see and use it all for themselves,” said Michael Orman, technical theater director. For first-year Greenhill Upper School theater teacher Catherine Hopkins, the new space has already allowed for new
creative experiences for students. The building has allowed for the creation of the Greenhill Theater Company, which will include aspiring designers, playwrights, actors and directors in a single classroom, working under conservatory-style instruction. “The new space has completely facilitated building this company,” Hopkins said. “We train students to be artists on every front, and this just explodes those possibilities.” Students in 9th through 12th grades at Greenhill are required to take at least one elective credit in an arts class, but nearly every student exceeds that requirement, according to Griggs. “It shows how much the students value the arts,” he said. “We’ve always had an emphasis on the three As: arts, ac-
ademics, and athletics. We are totally committed to being excellent in all three areas. This facility will only enhance that goal.” The building is part of the school’s most ambitious financial campaign in its 65-year history. The campaign raised $40 million as of early April, with still more money to raise. The funds cover the Marshall Performing Arts Center as well as redesigned cafeteria spaces, including the repurposing of the existing Zale-Fields Theater as an extension of the Crossman Hall dining facility. “When I was hired 15 years ago, they were already talking about the need for a new fine arts center,” said Griggs. “Now, we’re looking forward to building an award-winning, iconic building on campus — one that stands out in Dallas.”
Jesuit Festival to Showcase Budding Student Filmmakers By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers You won’t find any future Hollywood blockbusters at the inaugural Jesuit Film Festival, but that’s not the point. Instead, you might see some early works by some future stars of the silver screen. The festival is slated for May 8-9 on the Jesuit campus, and it won’t just include short films from budding teenage filmmakers on the Preston Hollow campus. Rather, organizers have opened it up to any high school students worldwide. The result has yielded a pool
S AV E T H E D AT E WHEN: May 8-9 PARTICIPANTS: Entries include those from student filmmakers at Jesuit, Ursuline, St. Mark’s, Greenhill, Highland Park, W.T. White, and many others. MORE INFORMATION: jesuitcp.org/filmfestival.
of more than 50 submissions, mostly from area schools such as Highland Park, Greenhill,
St. Mark’s, Ursuline, and W.T. White. But there also are hopefuls from as far away as Ohio, New Jersey, Vermont, and even Denmark. “We just put it out there on social media to see what we could get,” said David Myers, co-chair of the fine-arts department at Jesuit. “It’s been coming along nicely.” An alumni jury will narrow the pool down to about 2025 films for public presentation prior to the festival. The grand-prize winner will get a Black Go-Pro 4K camera, with other awards slated for acting, screenwriting, and editing.
Jesuit already boasts some noteworthy alumni ties to the film industry, including the late writer and actor Kit Carson (Paris, Texas); comedian Wyatt Cenac; film executive Tom Bernard; Chris Cantwell, creator of the AMC series “Halt and Catch Fire;” and actor and stuntman James Logan. The idea for the festival made sense for Myers and his colleagues as Jesuit introduced a filmmaking program to its arts curriculum for the first time. The school opened a new 1,500-square-foot film lab with state-of-the-art equipment this year.
“The film festival is kind of the natural culmination of all this work,” Myers said. “The quality of films we’ve received is outstanding.” Myers said whether or not Jesuit students win prizes for their work isn’t as important as the experience the festival should generate. “The idea is to try and get the best films shown on our campus so our students can be exposed to that,” he said. “Hopefully it makes them better just seeing what’s out there.” Email todd.jorgenson@ peoplenewspapers.com
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E D U CATI O N
W.T. White Celebrates 50 Years of Spirit
S T U D E N T A R T O N D I S P L AY A T D M A
E L I Z A B E T H YG A R T U A
Greenhill seventh and eighth-graders created these glazed ceramic bowls with mirrored centers.
C O U R T E SY P H O T O S
W.T. White High school students, teachers, and alumni gathered on the weekend of April 11 to celebrate and reminisce about 50 years of Longhorn pride. The festivities to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Preston Hollow campus included an alumni golf tournament, class reunions, and an all-class reunion at Brookhaven Country Club. Perhaps the biggest highlights were the alumni tours, which allowed former students and community members to see how the school has evolved over
the years, and an assembly in the school auditorium that featured groups of graduates from each of the school’s first five decades. There were plenty of opportunities to recognize faculty members for their service, but perhaps nobody was cheered as much as David Shepherd, the school’s baseball coach for more than three decades who received a blanket made by Darlene Morley, a 1976 graduate. Shepherd led White to 33 straight playoff appearances before retiring in 2014. — From staff reports
Hockaday School’s 10th through 12th grade Dallas Museum of Art hosted young artists from area schools on April 1 for a reception for its “The Young Artists Program: Self-Portraits” exhibition. Every year, the DMA asks students at participating schools to study a selected culture, artistic period, artist, or theme and create pieces based on that study. The cost of materials is funded by the program. This year, students focused on studying artist self-portraiture.
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PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 9
SPORTS Alcuin Brings Hawk Pride to TAPPS School hopes to grow athletics in upper school
McKinney Helps Keep Owls Afloat in Rowing By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers
By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers If participation numbers are any indication, then the high school athletic program at Alcuin School has hit the ground running. Granted, it’s a small sample size, but eight of the 11 students in the school’s first freshman class are participating on the track and field team, with hopes of representing the Hawks at the TAPPS state meet this spring. With the addition of a ninth-grade class this year, and students in grades 10 through 12 slated for each of the next three years, joining the Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools was the logical next step, according to Alcuin athletic director Kay Herndon. “TAPPS has a lot of variety in competitive activities,” Herndon said. “Along with all the sports we could want, they have things for all the students in the school.” Alcuin has been competitive in a variety of sports at the middle-school level for the past eight years, including soccer, volleyball, basketball, tennis, and track. The Hawks are in a league with several other private schools in the Dallas area. In addition to athletics, Alcuin also has joined TAPPS for such activities as speech, art, music, drama, and debate. For now, the Hawks compete in the smallest enrollment classification in TAPPS. That should change in the next
C O U R T E SY P H O T O
Alcuin ninth-graders Spencer Saada and Pax Wilbur represented their school for the first time last fall at a cross country competition. couple of years as the student body grows. Alcuin also doesn’t have a district affiliation yet, since it doesn’t offer any team sports. Still, the Alcuin runners have already participated in several meets and will be eligible for regional and state competitions in May, with a chance to make history in the process. “It gave us a chance to compete as individuals immediately,” said Andy Silverman, Alcuin assistant athletic director, about the decision to join TAPPS. Herndon said Alcuin likely will add varsity teams in basketball, volleyball,
and other sports depending upon interest. On the other end, the school also recently expanded its athletic program to the fifth and sixth-grade levels. Perhaps the early success on the track isn’t a surprise, considering the coaching involvement of former nationally ranked long jumper Kevin Dilworth and Olympic bobsledder Johnny Quinn. “They’ve been training several days a week,” Herndon said. “They’re ready to start competing. This will be a little bit of an introduction to high school athletics.” Email todd.jorgenson@ peoplenewspapers.com
The Temple University campus is only a couple of miles from the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia, home to some of the most prestigious youth regattas in the country. So how does a scrawny kid from Hillcrest High School wind up emerging as a top freshman on a college program in one of the nation’s crew hotbeds? It might be a combination of luck and good timing. Collin McKinney competed in high school for White Rock Rowing, a club team from East Dallas that hasn’t traditionally been on the recruiting radar for major college teams. Even when he teamed up with Robert Bolt to win the club’s first national title in
CONTINUED ON 10
C O U R T E SY P H O T O
Hillcrest grad Collin McKinney is a freshman rower at Temple.
Rangers Put High School Hockey Competitors On Ice By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers As high school hockey continues to grow in Texas, Jesuit continues to skate ahead of the pack. The school that won the first title 18 years ago in what is now the AT&T Metroplex High School Hockey League claimed another crown this spring, with a lengthy run of success in between. So what’s the secret to building a hockey powerhouse at a Dallas private school? It turns out there are many factors. “We’ve been fortunate to have consistency and talent,”
C O U R T E SY P H O T O
Jesuit won city and state championships again this season. said Jesuit head coach Kevin Smith. “It’s a lot of time and effort from the coaching staff, but
sometimes it’s a bit lucky in the kids you get to work with.” Those kids include Nolan
Descoteaux, who played college hockey at the Rochester Institute of Technology and this season played in the minor leagues as the only Texas native on the Allen Americans roster. Another former standout, Will Leedy, is playing for Connecticut College. The Rangers (23-4) capped the 2014-15 season with a 2-0 win over Frisco in the Metroplex City Championships title game. They also qualified for the USA Hockey National Championships in St. Louis, where they narrowly missed advancing to bracket play. Two players, Vili Lappalainen and George McBey, won individual league awards.
“There’s a lot of tradition that’s been passed through our program,” said Smith, who just finished his ninth year overall with the program, and third as head coach. “We get a lot of support from the school.” Despite the success, Smith said students don’t come to Jesuit just to play hockey, and that’s how it should be. “If we could get a couple of kids who can get college educations not just because of academics, but because of their hockey skill set, I think that would be great,” he said. “Pick Jesuit because of the academics and what it stands for. Hockey is the icing on the cake.”
10 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
SP O RTS CONTINUED FROM 9
WE DON’T CLAIM TO BE THE BEST HOSPITAL IN DFW. U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT DOES THAT. For the 22nd straight year, Baylor Dallas was the #1 ranked hospital in Dallas/Fort Worth and was nationally recognized for excellence in six specialties, including: Diabetes & Endocrinology, Gastroenterology & GI Surgery, Nephrology, Neurology & Neurosurgery, Orthopedics and Pulmonology. It’s our belief that the best is yet to come.
pairs last summer at the USRowing Youth National Championship in California, that didn’t change. But McKinney was determined. “That was a big thing when choosing colleges,” he said. “I wanted to come in here and make an impact and help the team.” You could forgive the Temple coaches if they didn’t feel the same way. They were trying to rebuild the program after it was briefly shut down in the middle of the season in January 2014 due to financial cutbacks in the school’s athletic department, only to be reinstated about a month later. That caused some recruiting turmoil. “We were essentially dead for most of the year,” said Temple assistant coach Brian Perkins. “Then they reinstated the program, but I was way behind my competitors.” Perkins said he got a call from a colleague in Texas who told him about McKinney, and that he was already coming to Temple. “If was absolutely fortuitous,” Perkins said. “We had no idea he was out there. Collin committed to us before we knew who he was.” McKinney starting in rowing just five years ago, when the 130-pound freshman wrote his name on a sign-up sheet at Hill-
crest. He had played basketball growing up, but wanted to try something different. This season, McKinney has made an immediate impact as the only Texan on the roster for the Owls. He has been rowing in a Varsity 8 boat while most other newcomers are in freshman novice boats. “He’s got a great attitude,” Perkins said. “He’s very good in small boats. If you take guys who can row a pair well, and put them in a bigger boat, it makes it go very fast.” As for the Temple program, the future is looking bright. Meanwhile, McKinney continues to put muscle on his frame. He now weighs almost 180 pounds. “I’ve learned a lot about rowing since I’ve been here. There’s a whole culture around it,” McKinney said. “If you would have asked me five years ago if I would be rowing in college, I’d have thought you were crazy. It’s definitely been a journey. I’ve come a long way.”
“ W E HA D N O I D E A HE WA S OU T T HE R E . C OLL I N C OM M I T T E D TO U S BE FOR E W E K N E W W HO HE WA S . ” C OAC H B R I AN P E R K I N S
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CAMPS
Show Your Pride
P Y R A M I D : Virginia Turner, Clark Turner, Daniel Turner, Alexandra Yeager, Ashley Turner, and Lauren Bailey DON JOHNSON
Each camp has special memories By Sarah Bennett
People Newspapers Ahh, summer camp: the sunburns, the campfires, and the fellowship. Every family has its favorite camp — many classics are out of state such as Kanakuk and Camp Ozark — but we’ve taken a peek at a few of Texas’ favorite summer camps to learn what makes each one special.
SKY RANCH Sky Ranchers, rejoice! The summer camp is celebrating its 60th anniversary this year with a “remember, rejoice, and respond” campaign. The faithbased camp started with 66 campers its first summer and now boasts more than 60,000 — split up among Texas, Oklahoma, and Colorado locations, of course. According to the website, the idea for Sky Ranch got started when Mel and Winkie Brewer were exchanging letters during Mel’s military service in World War II. They independently wrote to each other about a vision for a Christian children’s camp, and when
they received one another’s letters, they knew it was fate. An anniversary luncheon will be held at the Omni Hotel Dallas on Oct. 23. CAMP MYSTIC Many a girl has built memories at “the camp on the Guadalupe River” since its founding in 1926 by a University of Texas coach. Campers are famously split up into Kiowa and Tonkawa tribes, marked by their blue and red colors respectively. The camp began with only one session per summer, but eventually grew to three. It’s been in continuous operation except for 1943-1945, when the federal government leased it as
a rehabilitation and recovery camp for army air corps veterans, Mystic counselor and SMU graduate Sydni Hagens said. The camp is now in its third generation of operation. CAMP LONGHORN Tex and Pat Robertson founded Camp Longhorn in Burnet in 1939. Campers are filled with “attawaytogo” spirit and told that “everybody is somebody.” The camp opened a second location in 1975 and plans to open a third in 2016. All attendees can choose from more than 30 activities, but we have one question … who can tell us what pickleball is?
CAMP BALCONES SPRINGS This camp nestled away in Marble Falls is one of the younger ones, with its founding year of 1993. But it’s already established traditions in that short amount of time. This co-ed, faith-based camp splits boys up into two groups, the Texas Rangers and the Rough Riders, and girls are split up into Silver Spurs or Lone Stars. Like many camps, Balcones Springs ends each night with activities including round-ups and movies nights, and even some novelties such as “I Love the 90s” — guaranteed to make campers’ older siblings feel old. Oh, to be young again.
12 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
CAMP S
DCC Camp Gives Girls Something to Cheer About
W
hat does DCC mean to you? It could be your initials. It could mean Dallas Country Club. It could mean Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader. But if you ask a young camper on day three of summer camp with the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders, she will say that it means dedication, commitment, and confidence. That’s definitely something to cheer for! I’ve had the honor of being a Dallas Cowboys Cheerleader for the last three years, and some of my fondest (and sometimes most hilarious) memo-
JACIE SCOTT ries come from working with our youth. During the summer months, we host youth camps for participants aged 6-16 via our DCC Academy program. These three-day camps give us a chance to share our passion for dance and our team with campers by mixing dance
and pom technique with fun, team-building activities. There are no prerequisites. You don’t have to be a dance protégé or the next cheer celeb, and that’s one of the things that I love about these camps. You see girls from varying backgrounds come together to learn, have fun, and grow as individuals. On day one, we introduce dedication. To be specific, dedication to your craft, whatever that may be. Campers are learning fun, energetic pom and jazz routines, as well as tips for technique. The goal
C O U R T E SY P H O T O
Jacie Scott leads campers in some sweet dance moves.
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isn’t to master it in day one, but to simply focus on improving. The next day is commitment. Yes, that’s very similar to dedication, but our focus is commitment to your community and those around you. We incorporate team-building games and activities to instill these values. What have you done to help your campmate today? How can you make Susie smile today? Seeing what they come up with takes the cake. (This has definitely taught me that kids say and do the darndest things.) Lastly, confidence. Day three is their time to shine. We hold a showoff for parents to see what the campers have learned over the course of camp. You’d be surprised what three days can do. The shyest one has completely shed her shell or the one with minimal technique has mastered her high kick. Each camper will receive a certificate at the end of the performance and, of course, that’s where all the pictures are taken! The experience is just as special for us as it is for them. We have the chance to watch them grow in camp, whether it’s in dance technique or in confidence, then they have the chance to showcase it on a grander stage: a preseason football game at AT&T Stadium! Space is limited, so I recommend signing up today! There are five camps between the months of June and July. Visit dallascowboyscheerleaders. com for full details and pricing. Jacie Scott is a People Newspapers contributor and Dallas Cowboys cheerleader.
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14 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
CAMP S
Tech Camps Keep Aspiring Engineers Plugged In By Sarah Bennett
People Newspapers What comes to mind when you think “summer camp?” Is it a three-week, sleep-away camp with log cabins and dining halls? Maybe the term evokes sports day camps for baby cheerleaders or other athletic hopefuls, or even a summer reading program at the local library. But for plenty of kids, summer camp is a way to get up on the latest technology. Campers, schools, and camp sponsors alike
are seeing a surge in tech-based camps, be it robotics, coding, or video-game building. SMU’s Lyle School of Engineering hosts three different engineering camps in July, broken up by grade level: one for seventh and eighth grade, one for ninth and 10th, and one for 11th and 12th. The camps include hands-on experience in electrical, mechanical, civil, and environmental engineering for your would-be engineer. “The curriculum is designed by the engineering school itself
and run by engineering school staff, so we refer to it as ‘authentically Lyle,’” Lyle program coordinator Christie Pearson said. “For seventh through 10th grade, we do several small projects just to introduce what engineering is and what engineers do. With the older camp, we give the students a challenge or a project, they take it and create their own idea, and then present it to their parents that Friday afternoon.” SMU also hosts iDTech camps, a national program hosted on campuses across the coun-
try. With sessions in June and July, it focuses on STEM skill development through activities like game design, app development, web design, and robotics. But tech camps are taking place across a much greater radius than just the Hilltop. Robots-4-U in Mesquite and Kids Robo Tech Club in McKinney are also in on the action. “What we‘ve done is design a program for kids between seven and 14 for hands-on learning that really focuses on STEM,” Robots-4-U president Michael
Hayes said. “What I tell parents is different from what I tell kids. The reason I make the distinction is children don’t want to know they’re learning. Kids hear ‘play,’ and parents hear ‘experiment.’” No matter which camp kids and parents choose, Hayes feels that technology-based experiences are important elements to incorporate in summer plans. “Every child is affected by technology. They need to build up an understanding of where it came from,” Hayes said.
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Club Scientific’s summer camps introduce children, ages 4-13, to the mysteries of science through engaging, make-and-take projects & experiments. With 21 unique camps to choose from, there is a camp designed for every child’s interests. Camp themes include experiments and projects in topics such as, LEGO® Robotics, Forensics, Veterinary Medicine, Paleontology, Video Game Making, Engineering, Chemistry and many more. Camps run M-F from 9AM-4PM (Pre & Post Care Available). Learn more about Club Scientific at: www. ClubScientificDallas.com or call 214-5305979.
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16 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
BUSINESS Shop Owner Hopes to Give Poverty the Boot By Paige Skinner
Special Contributor It was a gloomy Christmas Eve day in Romania when Samuel Bistrian unloaded a van full of rain boots for children living in poverty. “There was no indication that it was Christmas Eve,” Bistrian said. “Kids were on the street. You could hear a dog barking, or see smoke in the distance, with slush and mud everywhere, and I’m like, ‘There are kids at NorthPark mall right now, probably my kids, looking forward to Christmas, and these kids have no idea. They’re in flip-flops in this mud.” A few years prior to unloading a van full of rain boots, Bistrian was unloading boxes from a truck every morning as a worker at Neiman Marcus. Before that, he was one of the kids living in poverty in Romania under Communist rule, where he would harvest fields only to see that harvest go back to the government. “I remember going to bed hungry many times,” he said. He grew up with 11 siblings, and when he was 8 years old, his parents moved their family to Chicago. After high school, he relocated to Texas to attend Dallas Baptist University, where he met his wife and the mother of his two daughters. He graduated with a communications degree and started working for Neiman Marcus — first to unload boxes and then as a manager. “I [wanted] to be able to do something more. So I just quit,” he said. He took a year to soul-search and decided to help the children of Romania. But when the economy collapsed in 2008, he went back to Neiman’s and met Blake Mycoskie, the founder of Toms shoes, which gives a pair of shoes to a child in need for every shoe they sell. Bistrian admired the idea but knew Toms’ canvas shoes wouldn’t hold up in Romania.
Founder Samuel Bistrian delivers rain boots to children in Romania.
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C O U R T E SY R O M A B O O T S
In 2010, Bistrian left Neiman’s again on his 28th birthday and started Roma Boots — Roma being “amor” spelled backward. The company gives a pair of rain boots to a child in need for every pair they sell. Alejandra Bistrian, Samuel’s wife and a teacher’s assistant at Preston Hollow Presbyterian School, said she had concerns when he first began the project. “I was happy that he wanted to do something different and serve people, but as a wife, you have children and concerns, being financially tied — and we were financially tied for awhile,” she said. “But at the same time, he was just so happy and so fulfilled. At his old job, he didn’t find much fulfillment, so that made a difference.” While he was boarding a flight to China to see and pay for the boots he designed,
he knew he was short of money. Even after selling his car and the watch off his wrist, he needed more money for the boots. “I still needed $25,000 for the 10,000 boots,” he said. “I kid you not, I’m in Detroit boarding this flight, and I get this call from an uncle in Chicago who had no idea I was boarding this flight, and he’s like, ‘Hey, I need your account number because I’m going to wire that $25,000 that you need.’” After that phone call, Bistrian said he knew Roma Boots was something he was supposed to do. “‘I grew up in a village like yours. I was in your shoes, or lack of shoes, 20 years ago,’” he tells the kids. “And when I tell them that, ‘Every time you wear these boots, just think, one day you can be doing what I’m doing,’ their faces beam.’”
Time Out Tavern Owner Passes Baton to Longtime Barkeep By Meredith Carey
Special Contributor When Aaron Saginaw moved back to Dallas after graduating from the University of Missouri, he thought he’d start working as a copywriter. Today, he owns Time Out Tavern. “I decided to regroup and take a job in the service industry,” he said. “I though it would be for just one year, and I stayed as a bartender at Time Out for nine years.” In January, Kevin McCormick — then owner of the bar on Lovers Lane — retired and sold the company to none other than his
former bartender. In between his nearly 10 years behind the bar, later stint as manager, and his new ownership, he took time off to learn the business side of the industry while working at other Dallas bars such as Whiskey Cake and Glazer. “I think he saw a lot of himself in me,” Saginaw said. “He’s not really a big, direct-advice guy, but he showed me everything I know about running a bar.” The bar — one of only two stand-alone bars in the entire Park Cities — is a relaxed spot, with ticket stubs and sports paraphernalia on the walls, indoor
picnic tables, and a working jukebox. “People in this neighborhood especially need a place where it’s not ‘the place to be,’ where there’s no pretense, where they can relax and not be ‘that guy.’ It’s not just a dive bar, it’s not just a sports bar — it’s for everybody,” Saginaw said. Stacey Chamberlain, Saginaw’s first hire, came in with no bartending experience while going back to school. Now, at the bar on her day off hanging out with regulars, she’s become a fixture on her own. “Everyone is just here to come in and drink beer. Demo-
graphics don’t matter here. You try Time Out once and you’re guaranteed to try it again, and Aaron is a very big part of that,” Chamberlain said. “He’s very hands-on, making sure everyone is having a great time.” Saginaw said the 26-year old bar may undergo a few changes like new TVs and updated seating, but nothing drastic. “This building has been a bar since the 1950s, I’m not looking to tamper. Time Out has a history you can’t replicate and there’s no other bar like it,” the Dallas native said. “I’m just humbled to be living the dream here. Come in and have a beer with me.”
LAURA BUCKMAN
Aaron Saginaw now mans the bar, surrounded by sports paraphernalia.
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 17
BU S I N E S S
Apartments Cater to Luxury Living Lang Partners to develop on Lovers Lane
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Lang Partners plans to start construction later this spring on 52 units near Lovers Lane and Preston Road in University Park. reached an agreement to redevelop the property. “It’s been under-utilized for a long time. It’s a very old property that really needed to be updated,” said Lang Partners president Dirik Oudt. “The Park Cities is sorely lacking for quality rentals.” The units will have more of a townhome appearance, with three stories at an average of about 2,200 square feet, thereby
reducing the density by about 40 percent from the Park Lane complex. The developer also plans to widen the existing alleys and preserve several older trees on the site. The University Park City Council approved the site plan in April. With the previous apartments already razed, construction should start this spring.
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18 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
BUS I N E S S
Developer Trying Again With Preston Center Neighbors By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers Transwestern has resurrected its plans to build a luxury apartment complex at the northeast corner of Preston Road and Northwest Highway. The developer, you might recall, took its plans for the same property off the table last summer following a wave of neighborhood opposition about the proposed height and density of the project. Now the company has scaled back the size of its plans in its latest concept, and Transwestern officials are cautiously optimistic about the response. “It was really clear that we weren’t getting any traction for the density or height we were looking for. So we had to step back,” said Mark Culwell, Transwestern managing director of multifamily development. “We developed a concept that we thought would be much more agreeable to the neighbors.
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Culwell said the smaller complex is economically feasible because Transwestern renegotiated the purchase price of the land this winter, and because the market allows the company to focus on 2-3 bedroom units and increase its rental rates by 10-12 cents per square foot. For its new proposal, Transwestern would require a zoning change from the city of Dallas for a one-floor variance on the southern half of the 3.5-acre
property (south of Averill Way). Current zoning allows for just three stories and 120 units. In March, Culwell once again solicited feedback from Preston Hollow residents, claiming their support will be critical to the project moving forward. “We’ve been encouraged by the response,” Culwell said. “This feels like there’s a broader acceptance.” However, Ashley Parks, past president of the Preston Hol-
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low East Homeowners Association, said a recent poll revealed that 80 percent of the group’s members would like to see a task force trying to shape future development in the Preston Center area complete a pending landuse study before any zoning issues are considered. That study could take more than a year to complete. “These are things that really need to be done in a thoughtful way,” Parks said. “We really would like to wait and see this land-use study so we can really look at the entire area and see what’s best for the neighborhood.” Both neighbors and developers agree that the corner needs a fresh start, but finding a mutually acceptable solution could take some time. “It’s one of the great locations in all of Dallas,” Culwell said. “It’s been a good process. We’ve heard some good suggestions. I think the end result is something everybody can be proud of.”
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PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 19
BU S I N E S S BUSINESS BRIEFS HOSPICE CENTER GETS LANDSCAPE AWARD PRDG architects and MESA Design Group landscape architects were honored with two national awards for their design of the T. Boone Pickens Hospice and Palliative Care Center. The awards were presented at the Environments for Aging Conference on April 18 in Baltimore. The Pickens complex, built around a 5.4-acre lake, will include five integrated centers for inpatient care, hospice education, spiritual care, counseling, and outdoor reflection. BALTIMORE HIRED AT GRACE PRESBYTERIAN Preston Hollow resident Darrell Baltimore has been hired as executive director of Grace Presbyterian Village, part of the faith-based
nonprofit network of retirement communities in the Dallas area. Baltimore has 14 years Darrell of experience Baltimore in senior living, and has a gerontology degree from the University of North Texas. He is also a licensed Texas Nursing Home Administrator. METHODIST NAMES 3 NEW BOARD MEMBERS John Collins of Highland Park has been named chairman of the Methodist Health System board of directors, while Clint McDonnough of Bluffview is a new board member along with Ruben Velez. Collins, a partner at Haynes and Boone, has been on the board for almost 15 years. McDonnough is
retiring in June after a 38year career at Ernst & Young. He is a longtime Dallas civic leader. RIT TO HONOR LATORRE WITH ALUMNI AWARD Robert Latorre of Bluffview is the recipient of a 2015 Rochester Institute of Technology Distinguished Alumni Award. Latorre, who graduated from RIT in 1975 with a degree in photography, Robert designed and Latorre built the Big Freeze camera array system. The system, which produces a cutting-edge frozen effect, earned him an Emmy nomination and a Clio award for special effects. He is the founder of Big Fish Films, a TV commercial film company in Dallas.
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PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 21
R E A L E S TAT E Q U A R T E R LY 2
3
MEDITERRANEAN MANOR
1
While maintaining its archtectural history on the exterior facade (1), the estate at 4412 Lakeside Drive in Highland Park has indoor and outdoor patio space (2) to go with an extensive indoor recreation room with wooden ceiling beams (3).
Lakeside house upgrades original Thomson design
A
s it approaches 100 years, the house at 4412 Lakeside Drive in Highland Park has found a balance between architectural integrity and modern convenience. Preserving some of the exterior elements of the 1918 design by Hal Thomson — best known for a series of Mediterranean mansions that line Swiss Avenue — has been integrated into both a 2002 remodel down to the studs, and upgrades since then by current owners Jim and Mitzi Lucas. “It has the same feel. The quality just got elevated,” said Jim Lucas, who bought the home in 2008 for $11.6 million. “People want the old look but they want all the modern appliances and gadgets.” In its early days, the property for many years was the home
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of local real-estate legend Henry S. Miller. And recent times have brought neighbors including Troy Aikman and Jerry Jones — appropriate considering its abundant recreational space. The five-bedroom, five-bath home on 0.6 acres includes 9,035 square feet of living space split among three levels. It’s got a fully equipped guest house, a three-car garage, extensive indoor and outdoor patios, a pitched slate and lead-coated copper roof, arched windows, and wood sliding doors. There are European influences in the fireplaces, which were reclaimed from France and reassembled, and in an authentic Italian bocce court in the backyard with an LED lighting system. — Todd Jorgenson
4 After deciding to put their house on the market, owners Jim and Mitzi Lucas replaced a batting cage with an authentic Italian court for bocce, or lawn bowling (4). The house, which was once the home of renowned realtor Henry S. Miller, includes two stories with abundant windows and interior balconies (5), and a swimming pool and outdoor bar area next to a completely renovated guest house (6). C O U R T E SY P H O T O S
5 6
22 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
R E AL E STAT E QUARTERLY
Author: New Homes Can Have Old Souls St. Mark’s alum preserves history in modern houses
EXCERPT
By Sarah Bennett
People Newspapers Brent Hull grew up with a love of English, history, and working with his hands. As an adult, those passions combined into a love of old homes and woodworking. “Houses tell stories,” he said. “What we build matters. You’re creating the narrative of the home.” The St. Mark’s alum got his undergraduate degree from Baylor University, and then moved on to the North Bennet Street School in Boston to hone his craftsmanship skills. Today, he runs Hull Historical, a general contracting company that specializes in residential and historic preservation, from a 1920s building in downtown Fort Worth. The former Nabisco distributing center provides the perfect venue for millwork and consulting with clients. But Hull wears yet another hat in addition to craftsman and businessman: author. His third book, Building a Timeless House in an Instant Age, is geared toward homeowners looking to create something that evokes a bygone era in home building. “The truth is, good design doesn’t have to cost more,” he said. “You make decisions that are cohesive so the details come together.” His first two books, he admits, were more for other preservationists. But with his third, clients have become readers, too. Sarah Robb has hired Hull for resto-
C H R I S M C G AT H E Y
Brent Hull’s office, built in 1921, houses his extensive book collection on preservation. rations to her Charles Dilbeck-designed home in Fort Worth — a house whose twin sits on Shenandoah Street in Dallas. During the project, she’s also read Hull’s book to further understand his vision of the process. “He has a unique perspective on wanting to preserve the characters of old homes — that’s a passion for him,” she said. “You want your home to be a character and extension of yourself. It’s like a person that ages — you don’t need to fix all the wrinkles, but you want to show the character.” Hull does historic preservation and restoration in addition to new construction that calls up the craftsmanship and intention of builders in the past.
No surprise, then, that his book has caught the attention of other preservation lovers in the area. “Hull adds skilled storyteller to his background as an expert on molding, trained hands-on preservationist, and builder of new houses,” fellow author and history lover Virginia McAlester said in a review. Hull often gives talks on “building homes with character,” as he says, to industry-related organizations across the country. But his expertise is just as impactful to his clients right here at home. “It’s a unique experience when you go home. It’s not a box — it’s fun and homey,” Robb said. “It’s a dog, cat, kick-off-yourshoes kind of place.”
“I remember inspecting a 1918 bungalow for a friend and feeling completely disconnected when I walked from a charming dining room into a kitchen with walls wrapped in glossy, stain-grade kitchen cabinets. I was suddenly disconnected and disoriented. I remember thinking, ‘What are these new kitchen cabinets doing in this historic home?’ The high-gloss kitchen cabinets were inappropriate for the historic house because they were telling a different story.” — Chapter 1, page 8
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Affordable Tricks For Achieving Luxe Look
C
outure style with high-end fabrics and material finishes can get costly for any client. Materials and finishes can be the easiest way to trim the budget and save money. Reusing existing case goods with the application of beautiful metallic and high-gloss finishes give a very high-end look with substantial savings. Printed fabrics have become more and more popular. Manufacturers now have the capabilities to maintain a great hand and texture while keeping with the design of the pattern. Printed fabrics can cut cost significantly and add an unique touch to your design. Here are some other tips: n When coming up with less costly options, always remember to keep your design in-
SARAH PICKARD
C O U R T E SY S T E V E H I N D S A N D S A R A H P I C K A R D
tent clear. Most manufacturers now have many more capabilities than they used to, and they
can help you get the design you want at a fraction of the cost. nMurano glass and luxuri-
ous fabrics used to display art are indeed stunning but can be expensive depending on the size
of your project. Acrylic lighting solutions have become more and more popular when trying to find more cost-effective solutions. When used creatively, it also has the possibility to create a more attention-grabbing design than the original fixture that was twice as expensive. n Embossed patterns with viscose and crushed velvet blends always add luxury to particular fabrics but are expensive as a result of the production process. Although this may be a great option for a smaller space, the same look and hand can be achieved with similar patterns without the complicated fabrication process. Park Cities native Sarah Pickard is the president of Pickard Design Studio in Dallas.
Dallas’ Finest Agents Networking for you
Premier Million-Dollar Service in Every Price Range RE PR ES EN TE D
BU YE R
The House Condominiums $340K to $1.1M 28 story high rise, skyline views, best deal in Uptown.
7910 Eagle Trail $669,000 Built 2011, popular White Rock Valley neighborhood
4611 Beverly Drive $1,399,000 Mid-Century Modern on 1/2 acre
3424 University Boulevard $1,995,000 New Construction in UP! Transitional 4/4.2/5,320sf
SHARON S. QUIST, 214-695-9595 Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate
SHELL STEGALL, 214-577-7676 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
SUSAN BALDWIN, 214-763-1591 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
VICKI FOSTER, 214-526-1848 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
UN DE R
CO NT RA CT
6605 Northwood Road $1,595,000 Trnsit’l New Construction. 5/5.1/3-car/Fm/Lib/GmRm
4414 Alta Vista Lane $1,050,000 3887sf, 4/3.1, stdy,gmrm,lg kitchen & yard
10020 Meadowbrook Drive $1,999,000 Unique Preston Hollow Estate area Modern
5327 Ridgedale $525,000 Adorable M Streets. 3 bed/2 bath, porch
ANNE OLIVER, 214-957-7689 Allie Beth Allman & Associates
ARLENE BALADY, 214-384-4118 Keller Williams Dallas Premier
BLAIR HUDSON, 214-914-0499 Allie Beth Allman & Associates
CAROL STOREY, 214-707-1142 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
6935 Helsem Way #121 $259,000 2/2/Fireplace/Patio/Community pool and clubhouse
3901 Turtle Creek Blvd #12 $3,695,000 A Rare Offering in the coveted Place des Vosges.
5138 Deloache Avenue $7,249,000 Elegant Estate in Old Preston Hollow on 1.4 acres
3536 Villanova $2,675,000 Beautiful open floorplan, master down & pool
CATHY ORR BARTON, 972-733-5027 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
DEBBIE INGRAM, 214-680-5353 Allie Beth Allman & Associates
ELLY SACHS HOLDER, 214-207-6708 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
GAYL BRAYMER, 214-906-2170 Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate
7263 Lane Park Drive $775,000 3 / 3.5 / Formals / Bonus Room / Pool
6122 Meadow Road $1,599,000 5 / 4.2 / 4 Living Areas / Cabana / Pool / 3 Car
8616 Turtle Creek Blvd. #301 $359,000 Desirable corner unit at The Sorrento luxury mid-rise
10332 Woodford Drive $3,995,000 Estate Area/ Acreage/5/7.2/6LA/3/Pool/Sport Ct
JUDY SESSIONS, 214-354-5556 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
KAREN FRY, 214-288-1391 Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate
KATHY MYERS, 214-676-5823 Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate
KAY WEEKS, 214-676-8230 Ebby Halliday, Realtors
PE ND IN G
7524 Wentwood $525,000 2/2/LR/DR/Den/SR/2car/60x150 lot in DISD
8545 Midway Road $4,895,000 Stunning 1.26 acre Bluffview Estate
6711 Northwood Road $1,575,000 Elegant 4/4.2/3, Master down, media room, 5,926sf
6738 Northport Drive $1,599,000 Custom built 6 BR w/ 2 studies, media rm, pool+yard
LEANNE MCKINLEY, 214-681-3132 Allie Beth Allman & Associates
LEELEE GIOIA, 214-616-1791 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
LINDA JORDAN HOBBS, 214-535-3732 Ebby Halliday, Realtors
LORI SPARKS, 214-680-6432 Virginia Cook, Realtors
RE PR ES EN TE D
SO LD
BU YE R
4400 Brookview $1,850,000 4 br, 3.2 BA, 1/2ac. pool, built in 2004
30 Sagecliff Court $3,300,000 Santa Barbara Inspired Home in Glen Abbey
2804 Amherst Avenue $1,700,000 Gorgeous 1-owner home by Jackson Custom Homes
14554 Overview Drive Northwood Hills. Great value! 4/3.5/2LA/Large lot
MARTY MARKS, 214-808-7887 Virginia Cook, Realtors
MAYO REDPATH, 469-231-7592 Virginia Cook, Realtors
PAM BRANNON, 214-912-1756 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
PAULA SCOFIELD, 214-232-0562 Ebby Halliday, Realtors
UN DE R
Exquisite Preston Hollow Estate 4/5.2/4.9 creek-lined acres
10022 Fieldcrest Dr. $559,500 4/3.1/3LA’s Lake Highlands Colonial built in 2007.
6322 Carrington Drive $2,488,000 Today styling on .580 acre in gated community
5223 Royal Lane $1,499,000 Cul de sac on .97 acre. Master Dn. Pool
PENNY TOWER COOK, 214-384-2847 Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s Int’l Realty
PHYLLIS GLOVER, 214-770-3521 Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate
RONDA NEEDHAM, 214-801-5828 Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate
SANDY DONSKY, 214-458-8808 Ebby Halliday, Realtors
CO NT RA CT
24  MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
TOPIC
3516 BEVERLY DR | $7,900,000 | 5 Bed | 5.2 Bath | 9,084 SqFt
4224 BELCLAIRE AVE | $3,895,000 | 5 Bed | 5.2 Bath | 6,600 SqFt
3507 UNIVERSITY BLVD | $2,750,000 | 6 Bed | 6.2 Bath | 6,300 SqFt
4301 McFARLIN BLVD | $1,425,000 | 3 Bed | 3.1 Bath | 3,850 SqFt
DORIS JACOBS | 214.537.3399 | doris.jacobs@alliebeth.com
PINKSTON-HARRIS | 214.460.7401 | margie.harris@alliebeth.com
4215 EDMONSON AVE $2,895,000
DORIS JACOBS | 214.537.3399 | doris.jacobs@alliebeth.com
PITZER/FOXWORTH | 214.354.8048 | dennie.pitzer@alliebeth.com
5 Bed | 4.1 Bath | 6,007 SqFt
3712 WENTWOOD DR $2,680,000
5 Bed | 6.2 Bath | 6,576 SqFt
8181 DOUGLAS AVE #210 $2,500,000
3209 WENTWOOD DR $2,175,000
DORIS JACOBS 214.537.3399 doris.jacobs@alliebeth.com
FRANK PURCELL 214.729.7554 frank.purcell@alliebeth.com
CYNTHIA ZIDELL 214.801.2209 cynthia.zidell@alliebeth.com
FRANK PURCELL 214.729.7554 frank.purcell@alliebeth.com
3445 UNIVERSITY BLVD $2,100,000
4324 POTOMAC AVE $2,050,000
3425 HANOVER AVE $1,999,999
3820 MARQUETTE ST $1,950,000 CYNTHIA BEAIRD 214.797.1167 cynthia.beaird@alliebeth.com
2 Bed | 2.2 Bath | 4,472 SqFt
6 Bed | 6.2 Bath | 6,404 SqFt
4 Bed | 5.1 Bath | 5,462 SqFt
4 Bed | 4.1 Bath | 5,450 SqFt
SALLY JOHNSON 214.676.4992 sally.johnson@alliebeth.com
CYNTHIA BEAIRD 214.797.1167 cynthia.beaird@alliebeth.com
PINKSTON-HARRIS 214.460.7401 margie.harris@alliebeth.com
Information contained herein is believed to be correct, but neither agents nor owner assumes any responsibility for this information or gives any warranty to it. Square foot numbers will vary from county tax records to drawings by a prior sale or withdrawal without notice. In accordance with the Law, this property is offered without respect to race, color, creed or national origin.
5 Bed | 5.3 Bath | 6,114 SqFt
4 Bed | 5.1 Bath | 5,221 SqFt
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015  25
TOPIC
A l l ie B e t h .com
4502 CATINA LN | $2,849,000 | 4 Bed | 4.2 Bath | 5,183 SqFt
6047 WOODLAND DR | $2,495,000 | 4 Bed | 3.1 Bath | 6,783 SqFt
4415 GLOSTER RD | $1,895,000 | 5 Bed | 6.1 Bath | 7,947 SqFt
6531 MEADOW RD | $1,895,000 | 6 Bed | 5.1 Bath | 6,539 SqFt
DAVID NICHOLS | 214.520.8350 | david.nichols@alliebeth.com
ARTHUR/ARCHER | 214.682.4372 | ira.archer@alliebeth.com
SUSAN HULL | 214.533.0818 | susan.hull@alliebeth.com
4222 VALLEY RIDGE RD $1,795,000
DEBBIE MURRAY | 214.558.1004 | debbie.murray@alliebeth.com
11484 STRAIT LN $1,750,000
7538 COLGATE AVE $1,498,000
11260 LEACHMAN CIR $1,495,000
5 Bed | 6.1 Bath | 6,570 SqFt
5 Bed | 4.1 Bath | 5,390 SqFt
5 Bed | 4.1 Bath | 5,632 SqFt
5 Bed | 5.1 Bath | 5,200 SqFt
DAVID NICHOLS 214.520.8350 david.nichols@alliebeth.com
DORIS JACOBS 214.537.3399 doris.jacobs@alliebeth.com
DORIS JACOBS 214.537.3399 doris.jacobs@alliebeth.com
DORIS JACOBS 214.537.3399 doris.jacobs@alliebeth.com
6716 DELOACHE AVE $1,299,000
11805 NANWOOD LN $1,150,000
9108 CLEARLAKE DR $1,095,000
4633 CROOKED LN $1,089,000
4 Bed | 4.1 Bath | 4,575 SqFt
5 Bed | 4.1 Bath | 4,815 SqFt
4 Bed | 3.2 Bath | 4,164 SqFt
4 Bed | 3.1 Bath | 3,923 SqFt
JULI HARRISONS 214.207.1001 juli.harrison@alliebeth.com
JILL LONG 972.849.4001 jill.long@alliebeth.com
SUSAN BRADLEY 214.674.5518 susan.bradley@alliebeth.com
JILL LONG 972.849.4001 jill.long@alliebeth.com
5 0 1 5 Tr a c y S t r e e t
|
Dallas, TX 75205
|
214. 521.7355
|
info@alliebeth.com
26 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
R E AL E STAT E QUARTERLY
Affordable Listings Still Cause Feeding Frenzy Sellers can capitalize on market trend By Todd Jorgenson
People Newspapers Sellers still had the upper hand in the single-family housing market during the first quarter of the year, and that trend might not change anytime soon. Available inventory is down and prices are higher in the Park Cities and Preston Hollow, especially among luxury properties, according to statistics from the North Texas Real Estate Information System. “Inventory is still really low, and that’s driving a lot of prices,” said Blair Hudson, an agent with Allie Beth Allman and Associates. “There’s just nothing to buy. That’s why you can hold out for your price. This is still
very much a sellers’ market.” In the Park Cities, for example, the median price for homes sold jumped to $1.28 million in March, an increase of more than $300,000 from December. That’s a rise of $263 per square foot to $351 in a three-month span. And Park Cities properties sold in March were on the market for an average of just 49 days, compared to 66 days in December. The trends aren’t quite as pronounced in Preston Hollow, where the median price for closed sales declined slightly during the first quarter of the year. Still, a house sold in March was on the market for 11 fewer days on average than one sold in December. “People still perceive value,” said Elly Sachs Holder, an agent with Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. “It’s all still dependent on price. When you price right, it goes. If you try for too much, I think the buyer notices.”
PARK CITIE S Month March 2015
Closed sales
Median price
Price per sq. foot
Sold to list price
Active listings
Days on market
Months’ supply
67
$1,282,500
$351
97%
251
49
4.4
December 2014
58
$825,000
$263
96%
196
66
3.3
First quarter 2015
125
$1,112,500
$352
97%
135
56
3.9
Sold to list price
Active listings
Days on market
Months’ supply
PRE STON HOLLOW Month
Closed sales
Median price
Price per sq. foot
March 2015
78
$698,750
$237
97%
236
52
4.0
December 2014
62
$870,000
$317
93%
164
63
2.8
First quarter 2015
149
$750,000
$246
96%
221
57
3.8
Holder said that holds true for both high-end properties, where inventory is significantly higher, and among more modest homes that are more popular with first-time buyers. Still, it could actually be advantageous to underprice a home at first to draw interest. “The market corrects you right away,” she said. “If it’s underpriced it goes quickly. Every-
body wants a deal right now.” Besides the houses themselves, Holder also has noticed ongoing demand for vacant lots, especially in the Park Cities, where land is always scarce. “Everyone wants to find that piece of land so they can build exactly what they want,” Holder said. “Inventory is not popping up, and people are waiting for something new to come along.”
Some of the market numbers might be seasonally influenced. Yet Hudson said she expects current trends to continue into the spring and summer months. “There’s an expectation that rates will climb, but they will climb gradually,” Hudson said. “This is not the bubble getting ready to burst.” Email todd.jorgenson@ peoplenewspapers.com
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PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015  27
Extraordinary Spring
RE A L E STAT E Q UA RT ERLY
SOLD | 4504 Arcady | Listed for $1,425,000
SOLD | 3024 Milton | Listed for $1,250,000
Marcy haggar 214.793.0309
mhaggar@briggsfreeman.com
5315 MEADERS
SOLD
4617 S VERSAILLES
SOLD
4215 LOMO ALTO
SOLD
3617 DARTMOUTH
SOLD
3207 DREXEL
SOLD
525 N BROOKSIDE
SOLD
SOLD | 3225 Caruth | Listed for $1,300,000
Martha Miller 214.769.4457
Molly hurt 214.394.1234
mmiller@briggsfreeman.com
mhurt@briggsfreeman.com
www.mollyandmartha.com
2014 TOP PRODUCER HIGHLAND PARK Ralph Randall celebrates over thirty years of uncanny instincts, incomparable thoroughness, and yes, the unmistakable personality. ralph@daveperrymiller.com 214-217-3511
28 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
R E AL E STAT E QUARTERLY
TV Show Makes Hyer Teacher’s Dream Home a Reality By Paige Kerley
People Newspapers Although this will be Gail Holt’s last year as a science teacher at Hyer Elementary School, her new home in Waco is ready to welcome her and her husband, Allen, thanks to the reality show “Fixer Upper.” The couple, a blended family with seven children between them, decided to relocate to Waco for Allen’s job as director of development for Baylor University’s Truett Seminary. After some of their friends moved to Waco and settled on sections of the Brazos River, the Holts decided to look for a similar location. They found a home last summer, and their realtor, who works with the stars of “Fixer Upper,” asked them if they would be interested in doing the show. “We said yes, although I’d never seen the show,” said Gail. “Now, I haven’t missed one since.” “Fixer Upper” is a home-renovation show on HGTV in which Waco-based husbandand-wife team Chip and Joanna Gaines take over a couple’s home for a complete makeover.
C O U R T E SY P H O T O S
Allen and Gail Holt recently had their Waco home renovated by Chip and Joanna Gaines from the TV show “Fixer Upper.” Chip focuses on the project’s construction and Joanna handles the interior design. “You sign a contract at the beginning saying you will not peek, you won’t go over,” said Gail. “You really have to hand the reins over to them.” Even though the Gaineses ask their clients about their personal styles and their preferences for redesigning the home, it
remains a mystery until the big reveal. “You just have to trust them,” Allen said. The two-month renovation process from August to October turned out to be a huge success. The Holts said the design duo was efficient with their budget, put in quality work, and added some great surprises to their new home.
One surprise was a 16-foot dinner table, which works perfectly for their big family. “We’ve had family out at Thanksgiving, and our kids at Baylor will all be out studying on it,” Gail said. The Holts also enjoy the space renovated specifically for the kids. The Gaineses transformed the garage into a room with
bunk beds and plenty of room to hang out and watch television. “Our kids are coming from Houston and Dallas going, ‘Why would you move to Waco? We’ll never come visit,’” Allen said. “Now we can’t get them to leave.” The episode first aired in January, and the Holts will move into their renovated home this spring. SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT THE ELLIOTT GROUP
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Paige & Curt Elliott of Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate are pleased to offer 3815 Northwest Parkway for $1,100,000. This single-family attached home features five bedroom suites, including a guest suite on the first floor. The others, including the master with a sitting room, are on the second floor, as is a study. The third floor has a game room with a full bath and wet bar plus an attic that could become a media room. To schedule a showing, call 214-478-9544 or email elliott@daveperrymiller.com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate is an Ebby Halliday Company and a member of Luxury Portfolio International.
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 29
M O T H E R ’ S D AY
1
Dreams Lavender
2
Moms deserved to be pampered, especially on their day. Here are just a few ideas to help you say, “Thanks for everything.”
3
④
⑤
➊ Thymes gold-leaf perfumed dusting powder, Suzanne Roberts Gifts, $40; Thymes lavender body lotion, Suzanne Roberts, $25; Thymes Temple Tree jasmine hand cream, Suzanne Roberts, $18; Thymes lavender bubble bath, Suzanne Roberts, $27; Michel Design Works hydrangea foaming hand soap, Paper Affair, $12.50; Thymes Clary sage tea home fragrance mist, Paper Affair, $20; Thymes Temple Tree Jasmine candle, Suzanne Roberts, $30; Mackenzie Child’s Thistle pillar candle, Suzanne Roberts, $30. ➋ Cashmere poncho, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $125; Zenzi necklace, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $46. Echo design scarf, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $68; Gold chain necklace, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $67; Akola paper bead necklaces, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, long $88, short $68. ➌ Earrings, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $22; Alligator Cuffs, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $230 each. ➍ Jon Hart tote, Paper Affair, $193; SR2 beige wristlet, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $28; Sondra Roberts tan wristlet, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $98. ➎ Peepers reading glasses, Paper Affair, $23; Amethyst geode, St. Michael’s Women’s Exchange, $89; Ann Page striped notecards, Paper Affair, $23; Ann Page initial notepad, Paper Affair, $18.50; Le Pen, Paper Affair, $1.95; Rosanne Beck folded note, Suzanne Roberts, $14; Julia Knight peony oval bowl, Suzanne Roberts, $50. PHOTOS: CLAIRE CASNER
30 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
M OTH ER ’ S DAY
Plan Mom’s Special Day With Her in Mind M
other’s Day is the perfect excuse to shower our moms with the love and gratitude we should show all year. Here are a few fun ideas for you and your mom, no matter her interests. GET CULTURAL nSur La Table Mother’s Day Macarons class, 10 a.m., $69 per person n“Our Roots” Mother’s Day Concert presented by The Women’s Chorus of Dallas at Texas Discovery Gardens, 2 p.m., $25 per person nExhale Spa, 25 percent off spa treatments for you and mom or free yoga class for mom, May 3-10, prices vary THE THEATRE, THE THEATRE nDallas Children’s Theater presents
“Jackie & Me” at the Baker Theater, 1:30 and 4:30 p.m. nThe Dallas Theater Center presents “Sense and Sensibility” at the Kalita Humphreys Theater, 2 p.m. nWinspear Opera House presents “Newsies,” 2 and 7:30 p.m. BRUNCH A BUNCH nDISH Preston Hollow Mother’s Day Brunch, $45 per person or $15 for children 12 and under 1
nBrunch at Hotel St. Germain, first seating at 11 a.m., 11:30 a.m., and noon; second seating at 1 p.m., 1:30 p.m., and 2 p.m., $60 per person nBrunch at Rosine Hall, Dallas Arboretum, $68 for adults, $30 for children ages 5-10, free for children 4 and under
2
3 3
IMAGINE IT:
1 . Exhale Spa 2. DISH Preston Hollow 3. Hotel St. Germain C O U R T E SY PHOTOS
—Mackenzie Cimala and Paige Kerley
DALLAS WOMAN’S FORUM
BRUNCH
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Walk out in minutes with your custom made pillow created just for you to match your sleep style ONLY from The Pillow Bar. ONLY at The Linen Boutique.
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5600 W. Lovers Ln. #122 • Dallas, TX 75209 • 214.352.5400 Linen-Boutique.com M-F: 10:00 - 5:30 • Sat: 10:00 - 5:00
The Alexander Mansion 4607 Ross Avenue, Dallas, TX 75204
Find a Father’s Day gift guide in our June issue. advertising: (214) 734-2244
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The Abelló Collection A MODERN TASTE FOR EUROPEAN MASTERS APRIL 18 -AU G U ST 2, 201 5
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COMING UP AT THE MEADOWS MUSEUM Sunday, May 3, 2-4 p.m. Panel Discussion: The Meadows Museum Celebrating Fifty Years Lee Cullum moderates a conversation with the Museum’s former directors, its current leader and Robert Meadows, son of the founder Thursday, May 7, 6 p.m. Renaissance Masters in the Juan Abelló Collection Lecture by Zahira Véliz, Senior Paintings Conservator, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston FREE Friday, May 8, 12:15 p.m. Francis Bacon’s Modern Allegories Gallery talk by Charles Wylie, Independent Scholar Free with regular admission
St. Michael’s Woman’s Exchange Temporary Location 30 Highland Park village, Suite 200 (upstairs) 214-521-3862
This exhibition has been organized by the Meadows Museum with works generously loaned to the Museum by the Abelló Collection, and has been brought to Dallas by a generous gift from The Meadows Foundation. The exhibition is part of the Museum’s Golden Anniversary, which is sponsored by The Meadows Foundation, The Moody Foundation, the Dallas Tourism Public Improvement District and the Dallas Convention & Visitors Bureau. Media sponsorship has been provided by The Dallas Morning News. Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881-1973), Nu assis (Seated Nude), winter 1922-23. Oil and charcoal on canvas. Colección Abelló (Joaquín Cortés). © 2015 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
32 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
LIVING WELL How to Ease Anxiety About Flat Heads By Molly Livingstone
EXPERT ADVICE
Special Contributor Finding a flat spot on an infant’s head can be a scary moment for a parent. For many years, scarce amounts of information left many parents in the dark — but Jennifer Barnard is trying to switch on the light. Plagiocephaly, more commonly known as flat head syndrome, is a condition caused by laying an infant on their back while sleeping. The tendency to lie on one side can cause a flattened spot on a child’s head. It can also lead to other conditions such as torticollis, which is tightness on one side of the neck. Devonshire mother Kendall Coleman experienced it firsthand when her child’s pediatrician discovered a flat spot on her infant daughter’s head. “It [the condition] was all totally new,” Coleman said. Coleman’s pediatrician referred her to Barnard, a Plano occupational therapist who works exclusively with babies who suffer from plagiocephaly and torticollis. Coleman said Barnard taught her simple techniques and treatments that can help correct the common conditions. She also said Barnard made her aware of daily habits that could be worsening her child’s condition. Barnard worked in pediatric occupational therapy for eight years before she said she felt a longing to help more families avoid the use of the ubiquitous corrective helmets. “It seemed to me there was more consideration in treating the flat head with a helmet rather than in preventing
Here are a few suggestions from the Mayo Clinic about positioning your baby that can help minimize head unevenness.
n Try tummy time: With close supervision, place your baby on his or her tummy to play. Make sure the surface is firm.
n Change direction: Continue to place your baby on his or her back to sleep, but alternate the direction your baby’s head faces when sleeping. You might also hold your baby with alternate arms at each feeding. If your baby returns to the original position while sleeping, adjust his or her position next time.
n Get creative: Position your baby so that he or she will have to turn away from the flattened side of the head to look at you or to track movement or sound in the room. Move the crib occasionally to give your baby a new vantage point. Never rest your baby’s head on a pillow or other type of soft bedding.
n Hold your baby: Holding your baby when he or she is awake will help relieve pressure on your baby’s head from swings, carriers, and infant seats.
F L AT H E A D S I G N S :
F I N D M O R E F R O M M AYO C L I N I C AT: M AYO C L I N I C . O R G / H E A LT H Y- L I F E S T Y L E / I N FA N T A N D - T O D D L E R - H E A LT H / I N - D E P T H / H E A LT H YB A B Y/A R T - 2 0 0 4 5 9 6 4 ? P G = 1
Plagiocephaly: Brow, ear, and cheek pushed forward on flatter side.
Brachycephaly: Flattening to one side or the back of the head.
S O U R C E : T E C H N O LO G Y I N M O T I O N I L LU S T R AT I O N : E L I Z A B E T H YG A R T U A
it,” Barnard said. “An important piece of the puzzle was missing and I knew what that piece was.”
So Barnard founded her company, Baby Begin, which consists of a series of in-home treatments that can correct
flat head syndrome and torticollis. This includes alternative ways to hold the baby, strategic repositioning, educating about carrier usage, and therapeutic stretches and activities. According to Barnard, these simple changes can make a huge impact — helping to eliminate the need for helmets. Dr. Julie Linderman of Inwood Village Pediatrics said she knows how crucial it is to treat these conditions early, because her son was affected. “The pediatrician I saw, told me not to worry about it, that it would correct with time,” Linderman said. “I didn’t worry about it. Luckily, Holden is as handsome as they come, but he does still hold his head tilted slightly to the side and if you really look, he still has some plagiocephaly. Of course, no one is perfectly symmetric, but if I knew then what I know now, I would have sought physical therapy services.” Barnard said she advises parents to be proactive by checking for possible signs of plagiochepaly including ear misalignment and flat spots. “Take care of it before it becomes an issue,” Barnard said. “Don’t be afraid to discuss your concerns with your pediatrician. The wait-and-see approach is not going to fix anything.” Barnard said her ultimate goal is to help eradicate plagiocephaly entirely. “It’s really special because you get to celebrate with the family,” Barnard said. “It’s small, but it really is truly going to affect that baby forever. Her pigtails are going to look good, the glasses are going to fit correctly, and now when she wears her crown — it will fit perfectly.”
Radishes Aren’t Just For Peter Rabbit
A
s soon as I started harvesting radishes from my garden, I knew I wanted to devote a column to this colorful vegetable. For most of my life, radish exposure was limited to the classic round reds acting as decor on party trays or dry, bitter slices in a salad. No, thanks! I began playing with this vegetable in my kitchen a few years ago. Now a spring favorite, I have found so many ways to enjoy radishes. If you are not a fan, I hope you will give the little guys another chance. They are very hearty, grow easily and quickly, and can even act as a deterrent to garden pests because of their pungent, spicy quality. There are many beautiful and tasty varieties ranging
STEPHANIE M. CASEY in spice, shape, and color. With their greens intact, the vegetable retains moisture, nutrients, color, and wonderful flavor. Side note: Whenever possible, buy vegetables with their leaves, stems, roots, even dirt still on them — these will always be your best-tasting and most nutritious choice. A current favorite radish variety is the French Breakfast. Slen-
der with a pink-red top fading to a white root, it’s a mellow strain with a milder flavor than some of the others. The French like to enjoy their radishes simply — sliced on a baguette with butter and salt. Use greens as you would any green — in a salad, on a sandwich, wilted into pasta, in pesto, add to a frittata or quiche. If the flavor is a bit stronger than you are ready for, just massage raw leaves with a little lemon or oil. This will mellow out green leaves from any veggie. If you’ve done crispy kale, try crispy radish greens. Just keep the oven temperature very low, as these greens have a higher water and lower fiber content than kale leaves. I love making a toasted ciabatta sandwich with sliced
raw radish, lemon-massaged radish greens and a creamy spread (whisk fresh lemon, no-egg mayo, cracked pepper). They are great raw, and sliced thin they add awesome crunchy spice to any salad or sandwich. Again, if yours are a bit too spicy or pronounced for your taste, toss them in lemon and a little salt. You can also roast or grill radishes. I’ve been known to pan-fry slices with smoked sea salt until crispy, pile it on toasted bread rubbed with garlic, finely chop up the greens on top, and call it bruschetta. I suppose you could even batter up and deep-fry thick slices of radish, though I haven’t tried this, yet. But I think I just thought of my next radish taste test.
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 33
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34 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
LI VI N G W ELL
SMU Sees Unique Collaboration With Vision Research By Meredith Carey
Special Contributor With an eye on new research, a $2.5 million grant from the W. W. Caruth Jr. Foundation at Communities Foundation of Texas provides funding to the Retina Foundation of the Southwest and SMU’s Bobby B. Lyle School of Engineering. The goal is to create the Clinical Center of Innovation for Age-Related Macular Degeneration. The new collaborative research center will focus on new methods of diagnosis. It will also help the treatment of patients who are losing their vision to age-related macular degeneration. “This grant was really interesting to us because it’s taking professionals from two different fields and giving them the opportunity to tackle really interesting challenges. Typically, you don’t have medical doctors and researchers focused on the eye working with engineers from an academic institution,” said Monica Egert Smith, community philanthropy director of the Caruth foundation at CFT. “We hope that this will serve as a model for lots of different medical disciplines.”
C O U R T E SY O F S M U
Lyle School of Engineering dean Marc Christensen, Caruth Foundation philanthropy director Monica Egert Smith, Communities Foundation of Texas president Brent Christopher, and Retina Foundation chief medical officer Karl Csaky. The new clinical center, housed at the Retina Foundation, will allow the foundation’s creative researchers as well as professional engineers and students to tackle the most common cause of vision
loss for people 50 and older. “This venture is pushing innovation to allow researchers in peripheral fields to tackle the problems in a new way,” said Dr. Marc Christensen, dean of the
Lyle School of Engineering. “It sets up the framework for conversations that are critical for getting sparks of genius to happen.” The Retina Foundation of the Southwest is on the cutting edge of basic research related to the disease that destroys the vision necessary for daily tasks like reading, driving, and texting. SMU, on the other hand, has no such specific research or experience. “We bring people who have never thought about the problem to the table. Maybe there’s some inspiration that may be gleaned from a geologist that has looked at layers structures of the earth that are similar to the structures at the back of the eye,” Christensen said. “We plan to be a clearinghouse for bringing the right problem solvers from SMU and the Retina Foundation to the table.” The grant from one of the largest community foundations in the country is only the beginning. Christensen said the center is designed to be sustainable, attracting other funding from national sources, to continue research until the problems facing patients with macular degeneration are solved.
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36 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
FOCUS ON PHILANTHROPY
FOUNDER INVESTS IN RELATIONSHIPS Compassion fuels effort at nonprofit
“The idea of going where no one wants to go and trying to love, serve, care, and make life better for people who are in those places — that paired with a collaborative approach just drew me in immediately,” Dowell said. By Jacie Scott The ministry serves Willow Special Contributor Pond apartments and Village Oaks. They had an open conIf relationships are the keys versation with the residents and simply asked, “What do you to success, Park Cities resident want?” Will Dowell says relationships “The kids had nothing to play can also help someone out of poverty. on,” Dowell said of Village Oaks. “In ‘A Framework for Under“There was a massive amount of standing Poverty,’ Ruby Payne graffiti, and when you put it all identifies several types of assets together you see that it’s really you lack that indicate poverty,” a result of them not having anything to do.” said Dowell, executive director Today, kids can enjoy the afof Behind Every Door Ministries. “Number one is the lack of ter school programs such as tuQ U I C K FAC T S relationship with someone not toring, enrichment activities, in poverty.” and free meals. Adults have acDowell’s friendship with cess to life classes that teach the FOUNDED: 2009 community about relevant topemployee Lawanda ThompCREDO: son backs up this notion — not ics, as well as addiction-recov1. We Believe The Best ery programs. that their relationship directly 2. We Inspire Others Thompson now has two jobs removed her from poverty, but 3. We Do Everything In Love she loves, knows how to manage it helped her realize her own worth. money, owns a car, and can’t reFIND THEM AT: At 16, Thompson was deep member the last time she was behindeverydoor.org behind on rent. into Louisiana “street life.” Instead of staying in school, she “When you think no one noC O U R T E SY O F B E H I N D E V E RY D O O R tices you, you’re always watched got her GED so she didn’t have Bottom left: Will Dowell spends time with residents at a Behind Every Door event. by somebody,” Thompson said. to blame school for missing street activities. “I learned that with Behind EvBy 20, she was in Dallas and ily’s path to a fresh start came istries. here and amazing potential,” ery Door Ministries. They had pregnant. She returned to Lou- with several speed bumps. “I knew these people actually said Dowell, who spent time to be watching me very closely isiana to seek her mother’s help “Most nights, we slept on the cared,” said Thompson, now the with Campus Crusade for Christ to realize that I had potential.” Dowell’s future goals for the in caring for her son. Her real floor or in the closets, because community ambassador for Be- at the University of Texas. “We just need some help.” organization are simple: branch plan was to leave the baby and there was always a shoot-out,” hind Every Door. disappear back to Dallas. Thompson said. Relationships and collaboraFounders Dean Wilson, Ben out and change more lives. But a severe asthma attack One day, Thompson noticed a tion are the principal values at Logan, Mike Downey and John “We want to see thousands of put Thompson’s son in the hos- group of 30 people handing out Behind Every Door, an organiza- Wallace all share a heart for people who have been believed pital month later. She brought food, playing with the kids, and tion committed to improving life helping those in need. Dowell in and walked with,” said Dowhim back to her home at Village talking to residents. That’s when for those in underserved neigh- joined the team shortly after its ell. “Every community is differOaks apartments, a community met Dowell. HeHollow introduced borhoods. formation, but he knew right ent, every person is different, Highland Park Village -she ParkCity Preston - April 2015 lastjob. modifiand ed:every Mar 6, 2015has 3:05 PM in southeast Dallas, but the fam“There are amazing people away that this was his dream person a story.” her to Behind Every Door MinTrim: 10”w x 3”h, Bleed: 10.25”w x 3.25”h, Safety: .25”
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PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 37
SOCIETY M A D H AT T E R ’ S T E A
CLAIRE CASNER
Kunthear Mam-Douglas
Dress designed by Nardos Imam
Sherwood Wagner bidding on a David Lee Holland ring with designers on the right. Rain couldn’t squelch the spirit of the Women’s Council of the Dallas Arboretum’s Mad Hatter’s Tea on April 9. Attendees took part in a cocktail reception and hat judging before the fashion show and tented luncheon. Awards for hats were granted in seven different categories.
Rebecca Schragin, Nell Broughton, and Priscilla Starnes
Ese Azenabor & Nicole Barrett
Best of Show winner
NICOLE MILLER MEET & GREET
Amy Espinosa and Andrea Campbell
J A M E S E D WA R D P H O T O G R A P H Y
Sam Stewart, Nicole Miller, Lauren Murphy, and Ellen Flowers
Anna Cobs with Charlee and Andi Theis
Erin Bryant, Rhonda Joines, and Ashley Ripp
Vanna Collins and Nicole Barrett
Missie Allen and Leah Sushelsky Tootsies in Preston Center hosted a meetand-greet with designer Nicole Miller on April 2. Guests enjoyed cookies, a mimosa bar, and live music. Miller showcased her spring and summer collections.
38 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
S OCI ET Y YO U N G F R I E N D S O F T H E RO N A L D M C D O N A L D H O U S E
Lizzie Duplantis, Margretta Wikert, and Katie Crow
Blair Metcalfe, Sarah Means, and Natalie Wolfe
RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE OF DALLAS
Julie Denham, Aida Reyna, Chris Talamantez, James Starcher, Stacy McElreath, and Celeste Newton
Campbell and Tory Foster, Jonathan Perlman, and James Page
Charlie Goyer, Lora Farris, Sara Sherrieb, and Austin Blankenbeckler
Nina and Trevor Tollett
William Manning, Kate Van Amburgh, Gretchen Manning, and Jere Thompson The Young Friends of the Ronald McDonald House of Dallas hosted its spring party, “A Night with Reckless Kelly,” on March 26 at Chicken Scratch/ The Foundry in West Dallas, with more than 300 in attendance. Cochairs Katie Crow, Lizzie Duplantis, and Margretta Wikert organized the Western-themed fundraiser with the Austin-based country band. Rob and Natalie Wills
Jenny Harris with Brian and Diana Oates
Adrian and Ryan Rodriguez
Eve and Blake Wiley
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 39
S OC I ET Y MEADOWS MUSEUM JOHN ALEXANDER OPENING
C O U R T E SY O F M E A D O W S M U S E U M
SMU Meadows School of the Arts dancers with steering committee chair Stacey McCord and Anne Stodghill
SMU Meadows School of the Arts dance students As part of the museum’s 50th anniversary celebration, artist John Alexander is displaying his exhibit, “Human/ nature: The Ridiculous and Sublime.” The SMU graduate was heavily influenced by Francisco de Goya in his work. The exhibit runs at the museum through June 28.
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WEDDINGS & ENGAGEMENTS WEDDING
ENGAGEMENT
ELIZABETH SOWA & STEWART COLEMAN
JOHNSON-GILBERG
E
lizabeth Wilson Sowa and Stewart Alexander Coleman exchanged vows at Saint Charles Avenue Presbyterian Church, New Orleans, on March 7, 2015. The Rev. Donald Frampton officiated the ceremony. A reception with buffet stations with traditional New Orleans cuisine, an oyster bar and martini bar followed at The Old Ursuline Convent. Dance music was provided by Jessie’s Girls of Atlanta. A rehearsal dinner, hosted by the parents of the groom, was held at Arnaud’s on the eve of the wedding. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Edward Sowa of St. Louis. She is the granddaughter of Mrs. Joseph Hoyt Burson and the late Mr. Burson of Newnan, Ga. and the late Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Sowa of Pawtucket, R.I. The groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Winton Lee Coleman Jr. of Dallas. He is the grandson of Mrs. Jeanne Stewart Hubbard of Dallas and the late Mr. William M. Hubbard and the late Mr. and Mrs. Winton Lee Coleman Sr. of Victoria, Texas. The bride was presented in marriage by her parents. She was escorted down the aisle on the arm of her father. Elizabeth chose an Ulla Maija/Anna Maier wedding gown, with sweetheart neckline, of French circular rose lace overlaying a fluted charmeuse gown. Assisting Elizabeth as maids of honor were her sisters Lindsay Anne Sowa and Kathryn Hilsman Adickes. Her bridesmaids included Staley Hawkins, Kendall Berry, Madison Shoppa Davis, Alixe Ryan, Mary Pierce, Suzanne Carter Shaw, Caroline Cole, Catherine Cowart O’Mell, Elizabeth Minch, Leighton Kohlmann, Kendall Banowsky Coleman, Elizabeth Stone, Bridget Ryan, and Jennifer Sangalis. Among the members of the house party were Kingsley Beer, Victoria Pappas, Kelsey Montz, Helen McDougald, Julie Zambie, Lindsay Dorman, Mary Margaret Schley, and Abigail Burke Henderson. Pryor Parsons Sowa, the bride’s niece, was the flower girl. Attending the groom as best men were his brothers Winton Lee Coleman III and
TA R A W E LC H P H O T O G R A P H Y
M
MARISSA LAMBERT PHOTOGRAPHY
Patrick Carter Coleman. His groomsmen were Matthew Bryant, Michael Ginnings, Scott Herlihy, Will Hickey III, Alex Pearson, Preston Powell, Addison Seifert, and Spence Sowa. John Edge Sowa, the bride’s nephew, was ring bearer. The bride is a graduate of the Academy of the Sacred Heart in New Orleans. She received a Bachelor of Science in consumer economics from the University of Georgia where she was a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Elizabeth is a senior manager for Adroit Digital in New York.
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The groom is a graduate of Jesuit College Preparatory School in Dallas. He graduated Phi Beta Kappa in the business honors program, receiving a Bachelor of Business Administration in finance from McCombs School of Business, the University of Texas at Austin where he was a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. Stewart is a vice president for Crestline Investors Inc. of Fort Worth. Following their honeymoon visit to Amankila Resort, Bali Indonesia and Amanpulo Resort, Phillipines, the couple have made their home in Fort Worth.
r. and Mrs. William Randall Johnson of Preston Hollow are pleased to announce the engagement of their daughter, Courtney Holleman Johnson, to David Benjamin Gilberg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larry Gilberg, also of Preston Hollow. The bride is a graduate of The Hockaday School. She received a Bachelor of Arts in economics and in international studies from the University of North Carolina and a Juris Doctorate from The University of Texas. Courtney is an attorney for Baker Botts L.L.P. The groom is a graduate of St. Mark’s School of Texas. He received a Bachelor of Arts in economics and in history from the University of North Carolina. David is a systems manager for Oilfield Water Logistics. The couple plan an early May wedding at Highland Park United Methodist Church.
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 41
COMMUNITY
BURMESE TRAVELS INSPIRE
Candidates Eye Vacant Seat on DISD Board By Sarah Bennett
People Newspapers
Author speaks on hope for country amid conflict By Sarah Bennett
People Newspapers In her career, Preston Hollow resident Rena Pederson has interviewed Fidel Castro, Margaret Thatcher, Julia Child, Jane Goodall, and U.S. presidents from Carter to Bush. She’s been a speechwriter for the U.S. State Department, a vice president and editorial page editor at The Dallas Morning News, and a member of the Pulitzer Prize board. In 1987, Texas Monthly named her one of the most powerful women in Texas. But you will never hear her brag. “I have been a lucky duck,” she said. Her roles in journalism and policy would prepare her for the greatest one yet: author. Pederson has now penned her fourth book, The Burma Spring: Aung San Suu Kyi and the New Struggle for the Soul of a Nation, based on her travels to the country and interviews with Suu Kyi. For those unfamiliar, Suu Kyi is a Nobel Peace Prize winner and opposition leader in Burma (also technically known as Myanmar), and leader of the National League for Democracy in Burma. She faced 15 years of
house arrest under the country’s military dictatorship, and is now a key contender in this year’s election. “It’s more important than ever before to get her story out,” said Pederson, who teaches persuasive writing at SMU at the graduate level. “Any time there’s a military regime, women and children suffer.” Pederson has visited the country eight times, and interviewed Suu Kyi twice — even under her house arrest in 2003. “I worked for a year to set up an interview, which was really tricky because at the time, no press visas were granted,” she said. “She was, quite simply, the most impressive person I’ve ever met. She has this aura … I think it’s because of her character in the midst of such difficulties.” After spending a few years translating these eye-opening visits into a manuscript, Pederson found the right publisher for her book and the right person to write her foreword: former First Lady Laura Bush. “Mrs. Bush has long been a supporter of the people of Burma, and of Aung San Suu Kyi,” said Margaret Spellings, president of the George W. Bush Presidential Center. Pederson first met Bush in 2006 when she was invited to a United Nations session on Burma. Bush had a personal correspondence with Suu Kyi and eventually started a young leaders program in Burma. “Monks would tell me, ‘tell Laura Bush
Rena Pederson displays a promotional book cover among the extensive book collection in her Preston Hollow home.
thank you,’’ Pederson said of her visits to the country. Now that the book is out, Pederson has held a book signing at her neighborhood C H R I S M C G AT H E Y Barnes and Noble, but the Bush Center also hosted an event for her on April 14. “ Ho s t i n g an event with Rena Pederson, who is a leading expert on Burma and shares a passion for the country’s fledgling democracy, is a natural fit for the Bush Center,” Spellings said. “[It’s] a great opportunity to shine a light on the democracy movement in Burma, as well as the important work that’s happening right here in Dallas.” No doubt, the book has garnered much attention from the literary and political fields. “The Burma Spring captures Aung San Suu Kyi’s courageous fight for democracy,” reads one review from Sen. John McCain. But Pederson isn’t in it for the political notoriety. She’s in it to bring awareness of the global stage to a greater audience. “I do think people have ‘compassion fatigue.’ There is so much violence in the rest of the world,” she said. “But I do believe injustice anywhere is an injustice we should all care about.”
Edwin Flores and Kyle Renard are both vying for Elizabeth Jones’ District 1 seat on the Dallas ISD school board. Both come from a medical background and have various schoolboard experiences, but the two Republicans Kyle Renard can still see certain issues their own way. Renard is an SMU graduate, a pediatrician, and mother of three. Two of her chilEdwin Flores dren attended DISD’s School for the Talented and Gifted, or TAG. She sits on the Dallas County Schools board. “Serving on the county school board has been a great experience in getting my feet wet and conveying constituent desires to administration, and helping intervene for them and get solutions,” she said. Her opponent has previously held the exact seat they now compete for. Edwin Flores filled the spot from 2005-2012. The father of two and Mexico City native has a Ph.D in molecular immunobiology and a law degree and now works in biotechnical patents. His children attended DISD schools as well. “I use science every day. I have the skill set to say, ‘If we had modified these inputs, our output would be different,’” he said. Both candidates are strong supporters of expanding dual-language programs such as that at Withers Elementary. But on other issues, they see things a bit differently. “Nationally, people are looking at Dallas as a place where great reforms have been taking place and are excited to see the results of those reforms, including the principal evaluation and now the teacher evaluation and
CONTINUED ON 44
42 MAY 2015 | PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM
C O MMUN I T Y
Hockaday Model Isn’t Just a Pretty Face By Paige Kerley
People Newspapers Evan Miller has always been a naturally driven performer. She learned piano at age 3, joined her church choir at 6, and taught herself guitar at 12. The Hockaday junior recently added modeling and poetry to her resume. So Miller wasn’t afraid of the spotlight when she landed her first big modeling gig when she was just 14 at New York Fashion Week. She got a call that 3.1 Phillip Lim for Target was interested in having her model for their “Stylescape” ad in 2013. She never auditioned; they requested her specifically. “It was one of my very first jobs,” said Miller, who stumbled upon the finished product on social media. “And I didn’t know how big of a deal it was. I didn’t know it was going to be a billboard.” Miller plans on continuing to model through Page Parkes Model Agency for the time being, but her heart is devoted to music. Her father, Jimmy Miller, is a local music producer and passed on his love of music to his daughter. “I’ve always spent time with him in the studio since I was a baby, so music and making music has always been an integral part of my life,” Miller said. She wrote and recorded five original songs for an EP titled “Heiress” that debuted in January 2014. Her father helped facilitate the melodies but the rest was left to Miller. “She pretty much figured it out herself,” Jimmy said. “She knew what she wanted, how she wanted it, and when she wanted it.” The music and lyrics came natural-
ly, but it proved more difficult to market herself without a major label behind her. Miller used music-sharing company Tunecore in conjunction with marketing to YouTube and Twitter followers. In the first week on Amazon and iTunes, she sold between 200 and 300 EPs. “She’s modest, but they’re all over the world,” said her mother, Evelyn Miller, an executive for a local marketing services company. “She gets the business side from me and the music side from her dad.” Miller’s music is being played in Australia, Korea, Finland, and throughout South America, in addition to the United States. “The finished product was so exciting,” she said. “I would sit and listen to the songs and think, ‘Oh my gosh, I did this.’” Outside of being a musician and model, Miller is involved with school activities such as concert choir, show choir, and drama. She was a finalist at the Texas State Poetry Out Loud competition in 2015, and is on the student diversity board. Looking ahead, Miller isn’t much different than her classmates at Hockaday — she spent her spring break looking at potential colleges. Her short list is comprised of schools that would allow her to combine entrepreneurship with music. “My goal is to start the foundation to build a global brand,” she said. Jimmy said his daughter’s success is attributed to her focus and capitalizing on her natural gifts. “If anyone wants to know what it looks like when someone takes all of their God-given talents and puts them together,” he said, “just pull up Evan’s picture.”
Hail Mary
50/50
[CHORUS] This is more than temporary, quite the contrary Put my heart on the line, no time, gotta throw the hail mary You got me all twisted, you can’t be resisted Put my heart on the line, no time, gotta throw the hail mary [VERSE 1] Crawling out of my shell, stepping out on faith I can’t help but dwell on the mess we’ve made There’s no time left, I’ve gotta make my move This can’t be suppressed, I gotta have you (So go long) Call this play or lose it all (Be strong) Keep my eye on the prize won’t drop the ball (Stand tall) You and I could be so perfect (Above all) I just know that we are worth it [CHORUS] [VERSE 2] Too late to turn back, too far to quit My guard’s been cracked, I don’t want it fixed Wish you could see all that I do Success not guaranteed, but I’ll risk it for you (So go long) Call this play or lose it all (Be strong) Keep my eye on the prize won’t drop the ball (Stand tall) You and I could be so perfect (Above all) I just know that we are worth it
[VERSE 1] I feel I’m under attack I try and you don’t react So tired of this uphill climb I need someone who’s more than part time Only call when you need something Have you noticed that I let the phone ring I need what you can’t give So immature, it’s unattractive, yeah (50/50, 50/50) x2 [CHORUS] You were never ever there for me We were always on a one way street I wanted you to keep it real Give to me 50/50 But now I gotta focus on me I need to find a two way street Somebody who will keep it real Give to me 50/50 [VERSE 2] You’re confused but this is old news And save the excuses cause they’re overused Did you really think that I’d just sit and wait for you to move forward with this? You must not know about me, you better get with it or get lost baby Miller writes If you want me you should make it poetry andclear music I’m done begging, that is soinlast year addition to (50/50, 50/50) x2 her modeling
career.
[CHORUS]
PHOTO I L LU S T R AT I O N : [BRIDGE] ELIZAB ETH YG A R T U A
[CHORUS]
Temple Emanu-El Amps Up Its Mid-Century Modern Campus By Sarah Bennett
People Newspapers Temple Emanu-El has been a landmark in Dallas since its founding in 1875, but its Northwest Highway and Hillcrest Avenue location has been even more in the spotlight since it emerged in 1957. Even with its mid-century modern design and large spaces for worship, the congregation of more than 2,500 families still needed more room. “Our congregation is one of the largest [Reformed Jewish communities] in the country — certainly west of the Mississippi,” Temple president Scott McCartney said. Studying the spatial needs
LAURA BUCKMAN
Temple Emanu-El’s entrance is covered in construction. of the community began eight years ago through focus groups with a small number of families. Once a project was drawn
up with a target cost, the temple began its simultaneous architectural and fundraising tracks. A groundbreaking was
finally held on May 5, 2014 with Mayor Mike Rawlings in attendance. It also honored Rabbi David Stern’s 25th anniversary with the temple. Construction, about a 19-month process, is basically broken up into three parts: worship, education, and community/administrative areas. A new, 450-seat chapel — to be named for Rabbi Stern — will be built, and Olan Sanctuary will receive acoustic updates as well. Lefkowitz Chapel is also getting a makeover. It will include one glass wall so the Hillcrest-facing garden can be easily seen from multiple viewpoints. “The garden will be the center of the campus,” McCartney
said of all the renovations to worship spaces. “We want to bring nature into worship.” Over on the administrative side, a second floor is being added to house new offices and a youth wing, and Linz Hall will be converted into a community space with a coffee-and-couches kind of space to encourage fellowship. “It will be a focal point,” McCartney said. As for the temple’s early-childhood and religious schools, the education building will receive a new wing, complete with beams at the entrance marked with children’s signatures.
CONTINUED ON 44
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 43
C OM M U N I T Y
DISD Kids Wear Dreams on Their Backs By Paige Skinner
Special Contributor Preston Hollow mom Louisa Meyer had an idea. Much like Highland Park ISD’s tradition, Meyer wanted to give T-shirts to Dallas ISD elementary school students with their high school graduation year on the front of it. Though DISD graduation rates are improving, keeping students in the district from elementary through high school remains a challenge. But Meyer’s idea had a challenge of its own: funding. She originally thought to reach out to local businesses, but another idea hit her. “I’ve got to put colleges on the back,” she said. “So we’re taking it one step further, both in scale and reach, but in promoting colleges as well as high school.” She reached out to DISD alumni to donate to help make the shirts. If they donated, their college would be represented on the backs of the shirts. Among the alumni are Forrest and Sally Hoglund, who represent University of Kansas, the Scovells of Texas Tech University, Todd Williams of Austin College, and more. But Meyer wants the kids to be able to wear the shirts and identify with one another. She said if they see each other out, both wearing the shirt, even if they’re not at the same elementary school, they will see each other in middle and high school — if they’re staying in the district. There’s about a 20 percent mobility rate because of different circumstances, including families moving, Meyer said. “I’ve just always felt like, especially in this part of town, we need an identity with our public schools and we need a conductivity with our high school,” Meyer said. Right now, high school students are delivering the shirts.
One of those students is Nicole Finks, a senior at W.T. White High School and student body president. She helped deliver shirts to Nathan Elementary School and said the kids were excited to receive them. As far as having their college graduation date on the front of the shirts, Finks said it’s important for the kids to know that college is an option. “They’re smart enough to do it,” she said. “They have the backing of the school and their teachers that can help them get there.”
L A R RY YO U N G A N D C O U R T E SY P H O T O
Left: PHES student Dane Walther shows off the back of the shirt. Right: Students at Nathan Adams Elementary learned how to “hook ’em,” and learned about Mr. W.T. White, a UT alumnus.
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the incentive pay that goes with it,” Flores said. His opponent doesn’t place as much value in the concept of incentive pay. “Most teachers are not motivated by money,” Renard said. “It’s not the financial incentive so much that rings their bell. They are very committed to the children and to seeing these kids succeed.” Renard feels that appropriate recognition from trustees helps teachers feel supported. “I love what Elizabeth Jones does right now,” she said. “At the beginning of the board
VOTING INFO WHAT: Election Day WHEN: Saturday, May 9 WHERE: Check dallascountyvotes.org to find your polling place.
meeting … she always applauds everything going on in her district that she knows about. She gives them the accolades for what they’re doing.” Following a final round of forums and appearances, the candidates will eagerly await the results of their work on May 9.
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CONTINUED FROM 41
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CONTINUED FROM 42 “Thirty percent of our students [in the early-childhood school] are not Jewish, so there’s a long waiting list,” McCartney said. “It will be a fantastic, new, modern space.” Board members were able to get a walk-through sneak peek in mid-March. “Being a kid that was raised there, it has an extra emotional punch,” lifelong member and board member Barbara Einsohn said. “One of the first things I was looking for was something that would remind me of the old space … the designers and architects are being extremely mindful of the past.” Einsohn admits to getting “kinda teary” to see how longstanding spaces are being repurposed and rededicated to the temple’s new overall campus. “There’s a sense of warmth and family,” she said.
LAURA BUCKMAN
Students at Temple Emanu-El’s school left their mark on the new beams. As for timeline, the community spaces and education wings are slated to finish out over the course of the summer, so they are ready to go for the new school year. The sanctuary upgrades will be the last phase to be completed. “There’s a real thread of an emotional tie to all the celebrations and life’s passages there,” Einsohn said. “I still sit in the same section my parents sat us in.”
SPECIAL ADVERTISING CONTENT BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
Lock-in a Favorable Rate Now The word on Wall Street is that the Federal Reserve may begin raising interest rates as early as June of this year. Currently hovering at about 4% for a 30-year fixed mortgage, now is the perfect time to lock-in a great rate on a new home and enjoy big savings over the life of your home. Mortgage Math As recent as the summer of 2009, we saw interest rates holding steady at 6%. On a $500,000 home with 20% down at 6%, the principle and interest payment is $2,398 per month. On the same loan at today’s rate of 4%, principle and interest is $1,909 per month. That’s a monthly savings of $488. Most people stay in their home for about 5½ years, and at 4%, that savings is about $32,000. In fact, to qualify for the same $500,000 home at 6%, you need to make $13,000 per year more than if you were securing a loan at 4%.
The home at 6230 Norway Road is listed by Tessa Mosteller and Lucinda Buford for $2,350,000. For more information on home loans, contact Bobby Sillers at ascenthomelending. com
PRESTONHOLLOWPEOPLE.COM | MAY 2015 45
CLASSIFIEDS
C O MMUNIT Y
Food Truck Hype Could Help Hungry
A
hh, May. It’s a month when people picnic, eat outdoors, and enjoy the plethora of produce, especially that grown regionally. But there is much grumbling in Highland Park, where banks and boutiques abound, that it’s now inconveniently necessary to go to the periphery to grocery shop since Tom Thumb left the Village. People, especially women who still do the vast majority of grocery shopping, don’t like to adjust to an unfamiliar store. Imagine, then, what it is like for those working poor and impoverished who live in what have been dubbed “food deserts.” There are swaths of Dallas where people must take multiple buses, often toting a child, just to get to a grocery store, as KERA has pointed out. Convenience stores, often outnumbered by pawn shops and liquor stores, are the only places to shop in the Jubilee Park area, where the average income is about $14,000. Their closest grocery is the Whole Foods in Lakewood, and that’s not where they’re going to go. Moreover, even when able to get to a grocery, those pinching pennies will discover fresh is not a bargain. Years ago, when my daughter got her first job in D.C., she called to wail: “Mom, do you know how expensive it is to eat healthy? I can’t afford fish!” Cheap fillers are fattening, hence the obesity epidemic and the attendant health problems. Studies show that the number of grocery stores does not impact the obesity of the poor; it is the stress of poverty itself that leads to eating junk. I know chips and cheese are comfort foods and cereal is cheaper than fruit, but I’m not buying that argument. I’ve served up enough meals at shel-
LEN BOURLAND
“IF FOOD T RUCKS WORK AT K LYDE WA RREN PA RK , GREEN G RO C E RY TRUCKS SH O UL D WORK ALL OV ER THIS CIT Y.” ters to know that the salads and fruit are devoured just as quickly as the casseroles and sandwiches. It hasn’t been that long since everyone had relatives in rural areas who knew where to pick blackberries and how to grow greens. Fresh is fresh. Going to the farmers’ markets and groceries is a sensual delight right now, if you can get there. What are we doing about it in Dallas? Michael Sorrell, president of Paul Quinn College, has done an amazing job with the We Over Me Farm program, introducing agricultural education and partnering with the locals to develop a farmers’ market in southern Dallas. Communities in Schools of the Dallas Region has addressed the lack of knowledge about healthy eating with a gardening project at Ebby Halliday Elementary School in the Hampton Road area. Jubilee Park has tried to provide a farmers’ market for the Fair Park area but has had to cut back with the increased expense of produce and
their limited budget. The North Texas Food Bank does a great job in distributing goods. Minyards has valiantly put a grocery store on MLK, but frankly, the locals have not been kind to the facility. Nonprofits, churches, and government assistance are all well and good, but until the efficiency and brainpower of the private sector gets involved, our food deserts and all the issues that accompany them will not get resolved. Consider this: food oases. Remember bookmobiles? Roving refrigerated trucks with produce could bring healthy food to atrisk neighborhoods. Heck, they could bring it to the more affluent downtown and Uptown urban neighborhoods with limited groceries. If food trucks work at Klyde Warren Park, green grocery trucks should work all over this city. Toward the end of their expiration period, grocery stores could take steeply discounted fruits and vegetables into poorer neighborhoods rather than disposing of the food. On-location demonstrations and free samples of less familiar foods like eggplant, squashes, and beets could occur just like in other stores to educate the shopper. Perhaps a government worker to help with food stamps and coupons could be on hand. Stores could be incentivized with tax breaks to end food deserts. There are pilots like StockBox in Seattle and Fresh Moves in Chicago to study, but even they do not involve big grocery chains. Why can’t Dallas lead the way with our Texas savvy? Because from Highland Park to Jubilee Park, people ought to have affordable and healthy food nearby. Len Bourland can be reached at len@lenbourland.com.
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S P ECI AL ADVERTISING C ONTENT DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE
BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
Highland Park Masterpiece Has It All
Strategic Marketing Brings Success
Kelly Hosch and Shelly Bailey are offering the luxury estate at 3700 Euclid Avenue for $14,900,000. Prominently positioned on a .875-acre corner lot, the custom residence at 3700 Euclid Avenue, completed in 2012, is an exceptional luxury offering in the heart of Highland Park. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate’s Kelly Hosch and Shelly Bailey are offering the estate for $14,900,000. Masterfully designed by the award-winning team of Stocker, Hoestery and Montenegro, this well-appointed home showcases 13,980 square feet of clean-lined open space with an aura of tranquility and refined elegance. It was constructed by Rusty Goff with a flawless blend of carefully selected 18th-century materials, a plethora of modern-day amenities, and unsurpassed quality of workmanship, resulting in a state-of-the-art Texas Mediterranean masterpiece.
Italian chestnut windows by CC Serramenti and locally handcrafted steel doors graciously illuminate each room with abundant natural light. Crisp white walls with elliptical eased-edge archways contribute to the fresh, airy ambiance throughout. This uniquely elegant, comfortable home offers tremendous interior and exterior space without feeling opulent or overwhelming. The tasteful top-notch finish-out, eco-friendly and technologically advanced amenities, and precise attention to detail are nothing short of perfection. To schedule a showing, contact Kelly Hosch at 214-4784313 or kellyhosch@daveperrymiller.com. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate is an Ebby Halliday Company and a member of Luxury Portfolio International.
EBBY HALLIDAY REALTORS
Grand Vie Showcases Luxury Listings The spring 2015 edition of Grand Vie: Luxury in Living magazine recently mailed to homes across North Texas. Grand Vie is the luxury-home publication of Ebby Halliday Realtors and the newest member of the Ebby Halliday Companies, Fort Worth-based Williams Trew Real Estate. Not only has the magazine’s distribution grown significantly across the Metroplex, it also includes some of the very best luxury real estate companies outside of our local market, in such locations as Beverly Hills/LA, New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Miami, Palm Beach, Newport Beach, Santa Barbara and Vail. In addition to featuring some of Dallas-Fort Worth’s premier luxury properties, the 16th edition of Grand Vie offers a plethora of interesting editorial content, including special sections for farm & ranch and lake properties; interviews with leading North Texas landscape architects Harold Leidner and Angelynn Harvey; a new feature, “Houses of Art,” showcasing some of the area’s top cultural events; and real estate insider Candy Evans’ take on lake living a short distance from DallasFort Worth. To view the digital version of Grand Vie, visit grandviemagazine.com. To learn more about Ebby Halliday Realtors, its Associates and all of their listings, visit ebby.com.
Visit grandviemagazine.com to view the new Grand Vie: Luxury in Living.
DAVE PERRY-MILLER REAL ESTATE
Taylor Made For Dave Perry-Miller The strength of Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate has been boosted by the addition of industry veteran Gene Taylor. During his 30-year career, Taylor has done it all. He has been in full-time sales as a top producer, but he has also managed, trained, and developed other agents. He is extremely well-connected and has always lived by his father’s motto: “You can never know too many people.” With a degree in accounting from Texas Tech University, Taylor has brought his ease with numbers to the business of real estate. Earning his residential sales license in 1985 and his broker’s license in 1988, he has been immersed in Texas real estate ever since. Taylor’s passion for his career and community is surpassed only by his unwavering devotion to his family. He takes great pride and joy in his three children and two grandsons. Respected for his success and loved for his genuine
Gene Taylor is the newest agent with Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate.
warmth and friendliness, Taylor exemplifies the core values of a Texas gentleman and real estate executive. “We are so pleased to add Gene Taylor to our roster of agents for life,” Dave Perry-Miller said. Dave Perry-Miller Real Estate is an Ebby Halliday Company and a member of Luxury Portfolio International.
Today, 90 percent of people in the market for a new home start their search on the internet—on real estate websites, Facebook pages, and through the digital magazines they know and love. “Buyers are looking to get the top price for their home in the shortest number of days,” said one agent. “They are very familiar with the concept of marketing, and they expect to see a knockout campaign created to sell their home quickly and for top dollar.” At Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty these campaigns include breathtaking photography, strategic digital marketing and targeted print advertising— all designed to attract the maximum number of qualified buyers. The company has a full-time staff of photographers, videographers, digital, graphic and content specialists committed to showcasing properties on a global, multimedia platform. And because not all social marketing takes place online, agents also host events, from open houses to charity events and architectural tours that showcase home and lifestyle. President and CEO Robbie Briggs independently owns
The modern home at 3314 Dartmouth Avenue features, natural light, open floor plan and a floating staircase. Listed by Michelle Wood for $2,749,000. and operates Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. For more information see briggsfreeman.com.
BRIGGS FREEMAN SOTHEBY’S INTERNATIONAL REALTY
New on The Market Dallas just keeps blooming—with beautiful new homes ready to welcome people looking for fabulous amenities, convenient locations and great neighborhoods. To view these and other newly listed homes, go to briggsfreeman. com 3501 Euclid Avenue Cool, clean-lined, one-story California contemporary home on almost a half-acre lot in Highland Park features a great floorplan with high ceilings, tons of natural light and quarter-sawn, five- inch white oak floors throughout. Listed by Sam Sawyer for $3,225,000 3605 Wentwood Drive Stunning new construction designed by Larry Boerder has an exceptional balance of formal and casual living. Enjoy well- appointed design including a marble entry, sophisticated ceiling treatments, exposed beams, marble mantles and an open kitchen. Listed by Amy Detwiler for $3,300,000 4684 Fairfax Avenue This updated home is on one of the most charming streets in West Highland Park and features a large living room with bay window and wood burning fireplace. The kitchen boasts granite counters, stainless appliances and a breakfast nook. The guest house includes a bedroom and full bath. Listed by Meredith Ferrell for $925,000
The clean-lined contemporary at 3501 Euclid Avenue is located on a large lot in Highland Park, just blocks from the Katy Trail. Listed by Sam Sawyer for $3,225,000 President and CEO Robbie Briggs independently owns and operates Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. For more information see briggsfreeman.com.
ALLIE BETH ALLMAN & ASSOCIATES
Pinkston/Harris Top Producing Team Honored by Allie Beth Allman & Associates as the Top Producing Team for 2014, Senior Vice Presidents Stephanie Pinkston and Margie Harris are perennial leaders in listings and sales in the Park Cities and Preston Hollow. Each is an experienced and respected professional, merging their talents in 2007. Ms. Pinkston graduated from SMU’s Cox School of Business with a BBA in Real Estate and Accounting. With over 30 years of experience, she earned her broker’s license and owned and operated three successful residential sales offices. Ms. Harris, a University of Texas graduate, joined the Allman firm in 1992. She takes a disciplined approach to staying current on listings, sales - both in and out of MLS, market trends, and pricingknowledge that serves the best interests and needs of her clients. The Pinkston and Harris families are long time Park Cities residents. Ms. Harris’ three daughters attended HPISD schools, as did Ms. Pinkston’s daughter and son. Ms. Pinkston and Ms. Harris, recognized by industry publications as regular top producers, are congenial and well-liked by their colleagues and clients. “Our company
encourages sharing information with each other, and we regard our associates as an extended family,” said Ms. Harris. “Our firm’s reputation is wonderful,” said Ms. Pinkston. “We are known for our integrity and market knowledge.” The Pinkston/Harris Team may be reached through AllieBeth.com, or 214-521-7355.
BRADFIELD FAMILY
T
he Bradfield legacy is alive and well in the Park Cities. Claire Roberts is part of seven generations of family members raised in the neighborhood. Her grandfather was John S. Bradfield, one of the founding members of the Highland Park Independent School District, and recently her great-grandson became the first sixth generation to be baptized at Highland Park United Methodist Church. “We are blessed, number one, to live here and number two, to have family so close,” Roberts says. Dallas has changed significantly since Roberts’ grandparents bought a farm out in the country – at Forest and Greenville. But the Park Cities remain a place that families settle down to raise children and live life together.
Generations
Generations
eorge Seay is proud to be part of six generations of Dallasites and seven generations of Texans. His ancestors moved to East Texas in 1819, before Texas was even a state, and then onto Dallas in the 1870s, and his grandfather, William Perry “Bill” Clements, Jr., served two terms as governor of Texas. “I often joke, if you want to find a Seay in central Dallas, throw a rock and you’ll likely hit one,” Seay laughs. “But anywhere else in the world, you won’t find one.”
in the Neighborhood
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hether you are NEW TO TOWN or can TRACE YOUR FAMILY’S LINEAGE BACK TO DALLAS’ FOUNDING, it’s easy to see WHY PEOPLE STAY in the PARK CITIES. It’s a BEAUTIFUL NEIGHBORHOOD with an EXCELLENT SCHOOL SYSTEM, and it’s full of FRIENDLY FACES. And the TRADITIONS of eating GRILLED CHEESES at the HIGHLAND
HITZLEBERGER FAMILY
PARK PHARMACY, cheering for the SCOTS AT FRIDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL GAMES or watching movies at the VILLAGE THEATRE continue decade AFTER DECADE. These FAMILIES have been in the NEIGHBORHOOD FOR GENERATIONS, possibly leaving for a stint but ALWAYS COMING BACK TO THE PLACE THEY CALL HOME. By Avery Reed
Generations
J
im Hitzleberger is the third of five generations of Parkies and six generations of Dallasites. When Hitzelberger was president of the Highland Park High School Alumni Association, he attended an event honoring HPHS alumni who graduated more than 50 years ago. Expecting a handful of people to attend, he was shocked when 650 former HP Scots arrived, including graduates from the mid-1930s.
Generations
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SEAY FAMILY
BELL FAMILY
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our generations of the Bell family call the Park Cities home. Janie Bell, a member of third generation remembers when her grandfather used to hunt pheasants on Lovers Lane, then an old country road. Many of Bell’s friendships extend as far back as elementary school. “My husband keeps up with old friends via Facebook,” Bell says, “but I get to actually do life with people I’ve known since fourth grade.”
HUNT FAMILY ouston Hunt has 17 first cousins. All Generations
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but one live in Dallas, and of those 16, all but three reside in the Park Cities. “It’s a great place to live,” Hunt says. “Feels like you know everyone – or at least I do. It’s home.” As the second of three generations building memories in the Park Cities, Hunt has passed along many of the things he did as a boy to his children, including fishing at Turtle Creek and learning to swim at the Dallas Country Club.
extraordinary lives | extraordinary homes A Vision for Living neighborhood parking, increased noise from Love Field operations, protecting residents from the effects of City of Dallas up-zoning changes, and protecting the Town’s legal ability to respond to the needs and concerns of its residents. The Town also is focused on the important need to increase water conservation. Mayor Olin Lane University Park is a known for safe neighborhoods, beautiful parks and green space. We are a city that values its institutions and are careful and deliberate in our decision-making.
Highland Park Mayor Joel Williams and University Park Mayor Olin Lane share their vision for future growth.
R
ecently, Mayors Olin Lane and Joel Williams shared their vision for growth and development.
Mayor Joel Williams Highland Park Town staff and Council remain focused on preserving and protecting the fundamental characteristics that make the Town a wonderful place in which to live. Over the years, a variety of issues have degraded some of the things our residents treasure most, particularly the quiet, safe, suburban feel of the Town’s highly livable residential streets. For decades these streets have featured low traffic, little on-street parking pressure, safe walking and biking environments, and a remarkable aesthetic that has attracted generations of families interested in preserving a small-town feel within close proximity to a major urban downtown.
5528 Springmeadow Drive $1,149,000 ANNE GOYER | 214.457.0417 agoyer@briggsfreeman.com
In 2015, the city expects to issue more than 100 permits for new residential construction projects, which is consistent with activity over the past two years. Remodel and home addition activity is also expected to keep pace. Two park improvement projects have just been completed. Upgrades in Burleson Park included the installation of a trail system, the addition of a rubberized surface for the playground area, tennis court resurfacing and decorative lighting to enhance security. The project also involved new picnic tables and benches, installation of a smart irrigation system and new turf and botanical beds. Improvements in Smith Park centered on the playground area, with the installation of a rubberized playing surface to meet accessibility guidelines that are already in place in other city parks.
Among the issues the Town is addressing are increasing cut-through traffic and non-resident
NEW PRICE 4205 Stanhope Street $1,149,000 TOM HUGHES | 214.649.3323 thughes@briggsfreeman.com
For More InForMatIon updatedallas.com Robbie Briggs independently owns and operates Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty.
NEW PRICE 3416 Drexel Drive $3,199,999 LINDY MAHONEY | 214.546.1555 lmahoney@briggsfreeman.com
4312 Beverly Drive | $2,695,000 Stunning traditional Highland Park home offers 5,027 sq. ft. including five bedrooms, four and a half baths, two studies, three living rooms, and a dining room. Step outside to an outdoor grill and covered patio overlooking the beautiful pool area.The three-car garage also boasts a spacious living space or additional bedroom upstairs.
JONATHAN ROSEN 214.927.1313
3314 Dartmouth Avenue $2,749,000 MICHELLE WOOD | 214.564.0234 mwood@briggsfreeman.com
jrosen@briggsfreeman.com
7263 Lane Park Drive $775,000 JUDY SESSIONS | 214.354.5556 jsessions@briggsfreeman.com
6645 Northaven Road | $7,950,000 Set on almost two acres in Hillcrest Estates, this award winning Contemporary is a best of renowned Architect Lionel Morrison. Featuring design brilliance, subtle charm, commanding presence, seamless entertaining, top technology, amazing finishes, outdoor living, a downstairs master suite, guest quarters and a stunning pool. See beckyfrey.com for details.
BECKY FREY 214.536.4727 bfrey@briggsfreeman.com
An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Briggs Freeman Real Estate Brokerage, Inc. is independently owned and operated.
briggsfreeman.com