The Downtown Issue March 2017
AN INTERVIEW WITH
LIVING ARTS
FAB AT 40
Tulsa Performing Arts Center CELEBRATES A MILESTONE
ARTISTIC DIRECTOR STEVE LIGGETT
Living downtown doesn’t mean sacrificing amenities
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Colon Cancer Awareness Month
Standing: Erin Williamson, APRN-CNP; Steven Medina, MD; Sarah Oberste, DO; Harvey Tatum, MD; Jeffrey Hunt, DO. Seated: Christopher Lynch, MD; Amjad Mreyoud, MD; Rose Ramirez, PA-C.
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MARCH 2017 | VOLUME 31 ISSUE 5
FEATURED
34 Q&A Steve Liggett, artistic director of Living Arts of Tulsa
BY JASON ASHLEY WRIGHT
36 Mapped and tracked As downtown continues to burst with activity, developments keep the market moving.
BY ANNE BROCKMAN
39 Be my neighbor A booming downtown means its surrounding neighborhoods are a must for those wanting a short commute without sacrificing their residential needs.
55 LIFESTYLE
March Madness descends on Tulsa, as do 18 other events this month. A campaign is underway to redesign the Tulsa flag. Dive with a Tulsan on his submarine.
Take a weekend getaway in downtown Tulsa; we’ve got suggestions. Get five space-saving garden tips. Tulsa’s newest shopping center — the Boxyard — is open downtown.
The Tulsa Performing Arts Center enters its fifth decade of bringing culture to Tulsans.
BY MARNIE FERNANDEZ
Downtown eats too good to miss. Plus, chef Libby Billings dishes about her new ramen joint. Belly up to the bar at the downtown Albert G’s.
25 COMMUNITY The Greenwood Chamber of Commerce has created a young professionals group and tapped its first leader. Learn about the new USS Tulsa. And, what has Keith Bailey been up to?
109 GIVING BACK It’s the spring event season. Mark your calendars for can’t-miss charitable events. We also meet some passionate volunteers.
SPECIAL SECTIONS 73 Best Doctors® 82 Top Realtors
AN INTERVIEW WITH
LIVING ARTS
FAB AT 40
Tulsa Performing Arts Center CELEBRATES A MILESTONE
ARTISTIC DIRECTOR STEVE LIGGETT
THE DOWNTOWN ISSUE
51 Still fabulous at 40
March 2017
MARCH 2017
19 TABLE TALK
The Downtown Issue
TULSAPEOPLE
BY KIM BROWN
11 CITYGUIDE
Living downtown doesn’t mean sacrificing amenities
ON THE COVER Dani Widell inside her Brady Heights home with her dogs Charlie and George. TulsaPeople.com
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@debkennedyphoto The lovely @ashliamador a while ago on our way back from a camping trip. Needing another one of those soon. #mytulsapeople
GROWING ROOM (p. 62)
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FROM THE EDITOR
Volume XXXI, Number 5 ©2017. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without written permission from the publisher. TulsaPeople Magazine is published monthly by
Describe downtown Tulsa in one word.
1603 South Boulder Avenue Tulsa, Oklahoma 74119-4407 918-585-9924 918-585-9926 Fax
PUBLISHER Jim Langdon PRESIDENT Juley Roffers VP COMMUNITY RELATIONS Susie Miller EDITOR CITY EDITOR DIGITAL EDITOR ARTS & BENEFITS EDITOR ASSISTANT EDITOR ONLINE CALENDAR EDITOR
A
s we developed this issue — our downtown issue — I asked myself this question many times and each resulted with a different answer. For some, the answer is “historic.” On p. 18, we talked to the authors of the new book “4th and Boston: Heart of the Magic Empire,” who tell the history of the intersection, its architecture and how it set a foundation for Tulsa’s future. Other Tulsans will always have the same answer: “confusing.” A group I belong to avoids having get-togethers downtown because of this. As I encourage these folks to be brave, I also urge caution. There’s not a week that goes by when I don’t see someone driving the wrong way down a one-way street. My one directive: Open your eyes people. But, perhaps I should be more patient. It can be confusing. After all, construction is rampant downtown. Just see p. 36 for some of the biggest construction projects of date. “Home” is how many describe downtown, and I don’t just mean those who live in the apartments and condos that dot the IDL. I also mean the historic neighborhoods of Brady Heights, Owen Park, Riverview and others. These pockets have seen increased real estate activity as people have become interested in living downtown, but still desire all the comforts of a stand-alone home. Our cover feature on p. 39 introduces you to five near-downtown dwellers. John Scott and Steve Liggett might call downtown “artistic.” Their cultural hotspots, the Tulsa Performing Arts Center and Living Arts of Tulsa, respectively, have welcomed performing and visual art installations for decades. This month, the PAC will turn 40 and will celebrate with a concert and summer remodeling project (p. 51). At the end of June, Liggett will “hang it up” as Living Arts’ artistic director. But, he won’t go far. See p. 34 for what’s in his future. 8
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
As my stomach reminds me, it’s time for lunch. And downtown has no match for quick bites and working lunches. No doubt there’s a co-worker of yours who deems downtown a “destination” for culinary travel. If today’s lunch line at Lassalle’s was any indication, Food Editor Natalie Mikles’ picks on p. 20 are no longer flying under the radar of downtown foodies. But, I think we can all agree on one thing — downtown means “activity.” Just check out our calendar on p. 12 or our Weekend Getaways on p. 64. There’s a ton of shopping options. Shopping has never been cooler than at the new Boxyard (p. 55) or more worldly than at Colors of Etnika (p. 60). “Vibrant” is another way to describe our city center. Young professionals and entrepreneurs are making downtown a place for innovation, courage, determination and success. This year, the Greenwood Chamber of Commerce created its first young professionals’ organization (p. 31) to tap into the energy of its youth and help foster community growth. We might also use the word vibrant to describe our future city flag. We meet the men behind the campaign on p. 18. Downtown is all of these things. Tulsa is all of these things. I’ll see you downtown. TP
Anne Brockman Morgan Phillips Anna Bennett Judy Langdon Liz Blood John Langdon
EDITORIAL CONSULTING Missy Kruse, The Write Company CREATIVE DIRECTOR ART DIRECTOR GRAPHIC DESIGNER MANAGING PHOTOGRAPHER CONTRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER VIDEOGRAPHER ADVERTISING REPRESENTATIVES
CONTROLLER SUBSCRIPTIONS DISTRIBUTION COORDINATOR INTERNS
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ONLY
HOSPITAL
IN
TULSA
a physician-owned hospital
Fifteen years ago a group of quality-minded Tulsa physicians had the vision for a new hospital that would provide the exceptional care and personalized service that their patients deserved. We are pleased to announce that their efforts continue today as Oklahoma Surgical Hospital has received a five-star rating from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). CMS’ new Overall Hospital Quality Star Rating combines 64 quality measures into one consumer friendly rating that is available on their Hospital Compare website. Oklahoma Surgical Hospital is one of only 102 hospitals in the nation and the only hospital in Tulsa to receive this prestigious rating.
8 1 s t & L e w i s | C i t y P l e x To w e r s | 9 1 8 - 4 7 7 - 5 0 0 0 | ok lahoma surgicalhospital.com
7 LUCKY GUESTS ARE GUARANTEED TO WIN A NEW INFINITI QX50 During Osage Casinos Spring Spectacular
MARCH 25 • 4 PM – 10 PM Details at Players Club. Cash and prize amount is across all 7 locations. Earn entries beginning March 5. TULSA • BARTLESVILLE • SAND SPRINGS • PONCA CITY • SKIATOOK • HOMINY • PAWHUSKA ©2017 Osage Casino. Must be 18 to participate. Visit Players Club for details. Management reserves all rights. If you think you have a gambling problem, please call 1-800-522-4700.
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C A L E N D A R + E N T E R TA I N M E N T + C U LT U R E 17 & 19
DOWNTOWN AND REBOUNDS
NCAA PHOTOS
M
arch welcomes madness for college basketball players and fans alike. And thanks to the combined efforts of the University of Tulsa, the BOK Center and the Tulsa Sports Commission, Tulsa has a front-row seat to first- and second-round games of this year’s NCAA Men’s Division I Basketball Tournament. Eight teams will compete in Tulsa. Among the 68 college teams competing in the 2017 event, only one will be
deemed the national champion. Don’t miss the experience and excitement of this single-elimination tournament as it comes to Tulsa. TP BOK Center, 200 S. Denver Ave. Tickets range from $150-$300. Game times will be announced March 12. ncaa.com/tickets/basketball-men/d1
TulsaPeople.com
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MARCH C OMPIL ED BY L A URA DENNIS
Dropkick Murphys plays Celtic Rock ‘n’ Roll royalty 1 punk rock at Cain’s Ballroom to 6 Stevie Nicks calls all of kick off the month that celebrates Tulsa’s gypsy souls to the BOK
American rock band ZZ Top Head downtown to Arnie’s, 10 17 makes an appearance at Woody’s and McNellie’s for the River Spirit Event Center for an good beer and great times at the
Ireland’s most notorious saint.
evening of blues and rock to soothe the soul.
Center for a performance on her 24 Karat Gold Tour.
The BOK Center hosts Grammy The BOK Center presents 7 11 Award-winning and Rock and country music star Miranda Roll Hall of Fame inductee Green Lambert with special guests Old Push your limits and 1-4 experience thoughtprovoking, exploratory performances at the New Genre Arts Festival at Living Arts and the Tulsa Performing Arts Center. Browse galleries, museums 3 and studios at the Brady Arts District’s First Friday Art Crawl.
Day to perform the band’s new album “Revolution Radio.”
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BookSmart Tulsa presents an evening with the No. 1 New York Times Best-selling Chris Cleave, author of “Little Bee” and “Everything Brave is Forgiven,” at the Central Library downtown.
Theatre Tulsa brings The Greater Tulsa 3-12 the demon barber 9-12 Home and Garden of Fleet Street “Sweeney Todd” to Show comes to the River Spirit wreak havoc and seek vengeance at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center.
VISIT TULSAPEOPLE.COM FOR MORE LOCAL EVENTS.
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TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Expo at Expo Square to help you check off to-dos on that homeimprovement list.
Dominion and Aubrie Sellers.
Tulsa Symphony presents “Route 66: A Trip Down Memory Road” at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center for a perfectly tuned tribute to the main street of America. Wear your green and run for a cause at the 35th annual St. Patrick’s Day 5K at Brookside on Peoria; proceeds benefit Special Olympics Oklahoma and Tulsa Running Club.
annual St. Patrick’s Day Celebration in the Blue Dome District. The multi-artist celebration Experience Hendrix stops at The Joint to perform and pay homage to musical genius Jimi Hendrix. Elmo, Big Bird, 18-19 Cookie Monster and the gang of Sesame Street Live! make music downtown at the Cox Business Center. Experience the 24-26 spell-breaking beauty of Tulsa Ballet’s “Swan Lake” at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center.
Celebrity 14-19 Attractions The black-tie fundraising presents “Motown the Musical” at 25 event Carnivale Tribalé, Tulsa’s Performing Art Center for an benefiting Mental Health Association evening of classic hits.
Oklahoma, offers a lavish evening of fine dining, dancing and surprises at the Cox Business Center.
CARNIVALE: COURTESY MENTAL HEALTH ASSOCIATION OKLAHOMA; DROPKICK MURPHYS: GREGORY NOLAN; LITTLE BEE: COURTESY CHRISCLEAVE.COM; EXPERIENCE HENDRIX: LESLII C. STEVENS
Mental Health Association Oklahoma’s 2016 Carnivale
The University of Tulsa
PRESIDENTIAL LECTURE SERIES Sponsored by The Darcy O’Brien Endowed Chair Presents
Evan Osnos
Journalist and China expert April 4, 2017 7:30 p.m. Donald W. Reynolds Center 3208 East 8th Street Evan Osnos is an investigative journalist specializing in politics and foreign affairs. Since joining The New Yorker in 2008, he has reported on current events, spanning the U.S., the Middle East, East Asia and China. Osnos won the National Book Award for Age of Ambition: Chasing Fortune, Truth, and Faith in the New China. Based on his eight years living in Beijing, the Pultizer Prize finalist examines the rise of the individual in China and the clash between aspiration and authoritarianism. On the campaign trail, Osnos followed the president-elect, forecasting the implications of a Trump presidency in his New Yorker piece “President Trump’s First Term.” Osnos is a fellow at the Brookings Institution and contributor to This American Life and Frontline. He has appeared on Charlie Rose, The Colbert Report and Fareed Zakaria GPS.
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WHERE TO …
ENJOY THE JOURNEY Three ways to get around downtown
BY JORDAN COX
Old Urban Trolley
RADcab
Tulsa Bike Bar
Ding, ding! The Old Urban Trolley marries the practical with the whimsical. The trolley provides seating for up to 28 people and offers a nostalgic experience for a special event. Saturday trolley tours cruise through the downtown districts while an expert guide gives the lowdown on the city’s history. Tickets, which are $25 per person, must be purchased in advance. Owner Shannon Terry-Dotson says the tour, from 10 a.m.-noon, picks up at the downtown Home Depot. Visit website for tour schedule and special bookings.
It’s a bicycle and a taxi, powered by human energy. Offering rides for up to four people, RADcab has been doing business in Tulsa since 2015. Pedicabs ride lower than a car and are not fully enclosed to offer patrons a unique vantage point with close access to the breeze and sound of the streets. “It redefines space as you’re being transported,” says RADcab driver Sherman Effinger. “The experience can be romantic, fun or logistical,” says owner Aaron McKey. RADcab offers downtown architectural tours, transportation to the BOK Center, Cain’s Ballroom, Brady Theater, RiverParks events and destinations throughout the downtown districts. And, it can be rented for private functions.
Picture an open-air trolley with bicycle seats and six people (on each side) facing each other at a bar top. That’s the Tulsa Bike Bar, according to General Manager Nick Oxford. TBB offers a participation-required party bus experience for up to 16 people. It is known for its two-hour tours that hop through the Blue Dome and Brady Districts. TBB has hosted guests of all ages — from retirees to bachelorette parties — so get pedaling. TBB will add a more intimate experience with a septicycle (a bicycle built for six) this spring. The bike is being built in Germany. TP
oldurbantrolley.com | 918-744-1100
Rides start at $10. radcabtulsa.com | 405-255-7191 14
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
$295, Sunday-Thursday; $320, Friday and Saturday 918-323-4502 | tulsabikebar.com facebook.com/tulsabikebar
VALERIE GRANT; OLD URBAN TROLLEY AND RADCAB: COURTESY
Downtown boasts many enticing attractions for wining, dining and entertainment, but Tulsans are finding it isn’t always about the destination. Some Tulsa companies simply offer the thrill of the ride.
Todd Hardy
cancer. Between working full-time, coaching little league baseball and weightlifting, his schedule was full. The former college athlete was the picture of health, but a trip to the doctor for kidney stones revealed lung cancer. Hardy was shocked. “I ate right, exercised religiously and had never smoked,” he says. After searching for treatment options, Hardy found Cancer Treatment Centers of America® (CTCA) in Tulsa. Within days, he traveled from his home in Texas to meet with his medical team, including thoracic surgeon Peter Baik, D.O., F.A.C.O.S. “Dr. Baik listened, found out what was important to me, and explained my options,” Hardy says. Baik recommended minimally inRola Eid, D.O. vasive surgery with the use the da Medical Director, Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery Vinci® Xi™ robot, a robotic surgical system. The da Vinci Xi requires only a few tiny incisions and offers greater vision, precision and control for the surgeon. In addition, patients often can recover sooner, move on to addiDr. Peter Baik tional treatments if needed and get and the da Vinci® back to daily life more quickly. Xi™ robot. A quarter of Hardy’s lung, where the Wednesday, and I was back working For more information about Cancer cancerous tissue was found, was rethat following Monday,” Hardy says. Treatment Centers of America, visit moved. “The da Vinci enabled me to Less than two months after his surcancercenter.com or call 800-515-9610. make very small incisions during surgery, Todd ran the LUNGevity 5K race gery, which meant less time for Todd At Cancer Treatment Centers of America® (CTCA), treating cancer forthe lung cancer research. to recover in the hospital,” isn’t onesays thingBaik. we do—it’s only thing we do. With state-of-the-art precision cancer ourothers experts diagnose patients Histreatment, advice to is to “get a sec“He was able to gettechnologies back to and doing and develop a thorough treatment plan. A plan that not only attacks the cancer, ond opinion, a third opinion, or howwhat he loves.” but also offers evidence-based therapies to help reduce side effects as well ever many it takes until you find a docToday, Hardy continues to be acas reconstructive surgery to restore what cancer takes away. tor that will give you options. There is tive and is passionate about sharing No case is typical. You should not expect to If you’ve been cancer,than or areone already undergoing treatment, way to treat cancer.” his experience. “My surgery wasdiagnosed on a withmore experience these results.
Our focus is expert cancer care. Every stage. Every day.
and are unsure about your options, talk to the experts at CTCA® in Tulsa. Our team can recommend a treatment plan customized to fight your specific cancer and help you get back to living your life.
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ARTIST SPOTLIGHT Clay McIntosh created “Mazeppa” as an homage to the Tulsa TV character.
Mark Trezza and “The Seahorse”
Creative One local artist uses collage to pay homage to iconic Tulsans. BY ANGELA EVANS
C
lay McIntosh graduated from East Central High School, but his career in advertising design took him all over the country. “It was the nomadic existence of the ad industry life,” McIntosh says. McIntosh lived in Charlotte, North Carolina; New York City; Dallas, Texas; Nashville, Tennessee; and Lubbock, Texas; while he worked on high-profile national campaigns for companies like American Airlines and Frito-Lay. “If it’s a package of potato chips and the name ends in an ‘o’ or an ‘s,’ I’ve worked on it,” he laughs, “but I was ready for a big change.” He was offered a teaching position at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, moved back to Oklahoma, got married and started a new life as a professor. McIntosh now operates his freelance advertising and graphic design company, Clay McIntosh Creative. But after working for clients and following rigid teaching plans, he has a unique way of relaxing. McIntosh creates collages using Tulsa icons as inspiration. His method is to “create each likeness from scratch, assembling facial features piece by piece.” “I find these elements from different sources, kind of like a treasure hunt without a map — get
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TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Clay McIntosh
an eye from here, an ear from there, noses and clips of hair. Then I put it all together to create a likeness.” He scans scraps of paper to digitally assemble his creations. So far, he has created homages to Mazeppa, Leon Russell and a piece called “Tulsa Jam” featuring a group of Tulsa’s great musicians. He currently is working on pieces inspired by S.E. Hinton and Cry Baby Hill. “The whole purpose of this work is to remind people that Tulsa is a unique place. A place that has produced a lot of people who have influenced our culture in big ways,” he says. A limited number of McIntosh’s prints are available at Ziegler’s Art and Frame. TP
COMMUNITY Mark Trezza has his head in the clouds when it comes to underwater exploration. He and his cousin, David Trezza, recently restored a 15-foot-long mini sub, dubbed “The Seahorse.” Television was influential in sparking Trezza’s underwater interest. “Sea Hunt” with Lloyd Bridges introduced him to scuba diving. In high school, his parents surprised him with scuba lessons. About five years ago, Trezza found a Kittredge 350 two-man submersible for sale in a marina in New York. It originally was used for underwater bridge inspections. “It was filthy, dirty and was this horrible lime-ish, greenish color — horrid,” he says. The two men rebuilt everything over twoand-a-half years and gave it a new brightyellow paint job. The Trezzas and their underwater vehicle have helped various law enforcement agencies with missing person cold cases that involved underwater search and recovery. “The Seahorse” is on display at Tulsa Air and Space Museum through April. — ANGELA EVANS
VALERIE GRANT
PIECING TULSA TOGETHER
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Douglas Miller, center, with Chris and John Bumgarner who commissioned “4th & Boston” as a gift to tenants.
NEW BOOK EXPLORES TULSA’S ‘MAGIC EMPIRE’ BY HEATHER KOONTZ
I
f Tulsa’s architecture and rich history appeal to you, grab a copy of a new book about the intersection of East Fourth Street and South Boston Avenue. Written by Douglas Miller and Steve Gerkin, “4th & Boston: Heart of the Magic Empire” explores the history behind one of Tulsa’s most iconic streets. “There were five turning points in the city’s history during which timing and seemingly inconsequential decisions became make-it or break-it moments,” Miller says. “All of these incidents involved men tied to Fourth and Boston.” Those five turning points include the locating of Tulsa in 1882, the Red Fork Oil Strike in 1901, constructing an Arkansas River bridge in 1904, the creation of the Exchange National Bank in 1910 and the development of the Cosden refinery in 1914. According to Miller, Fourth and Boston became the location of Tulsa’s first community building and evolved into a prestigious building
ground. “Many of the buildings Tulsans associate with our architectural heritage sit on the four city blocks that make the corners of Fourth and Boston,” he says. The book was commissioned by John Bumgarner as a gift to the tenants of 320 South Boston, the Kennedy Building and the MidContinent Tower just in time for their centennial celebrations. Miller, founder of Müllerhaus Legacy, specializes in designing and publishing custom history books. “4th & Boston” is his first one to author. The book features photographs and details about the intersection’s history, and took about 18 months to complete. The stunning collection also examines some of Tulsa’s most admired architecture and explores the lives of its influential founders. “4th & Boston: Heart of the Magic Empire” is available on Amazon.com, as well as Tulsa’s Decopolis, Ida Red, On a Whim Tulsa, Dwelling Spaces, Gilcrease Museum, Belvedere Barber Co. and more. TP
MARCH FILM EVENTS
3/6
UNIVERSITY OF TULSA SPRING FILM FESTIVAL
The TU Film Studies Program debuts a lineup of student-produced films, followed by a juried competition, prizes and refreshments. 7-8 p.m. TU’s Lorton Performance Center, Meinig Recital Hall, 550 S. Gary Place. Free and open to the public. facebook.com/pg/utulsafilm 18
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
3/7
INDIE LENS POP-UP PRESENTS “NEWTOWN”
3/9
“HEDDA GABLER”: NATIONAL THEATRE LIVE
A documentary about how the community of Newtown, Connecticut, came together in the aftermath of the largest mass shooting of schoolchildren in American history.
Tony Award-winning director Ivo van Hove returns to National Theatre Live with a modern production of Henrick Ibsen’s masterpiece. Ruth Wilson plays the title role.
6 p.m. Circle Cinema, 10 S. Lewis Ave. Free. circlecinema.com
6 p.m. Circle Cinema, 10 S. Lewis Ave. $20, general admission; $17, seniors; $15, Circle Cinema members. circlecinema.com
Jacob Johnson and Joey Wignarajah are behind the campaign to redesign the Tulsa flag.
A CITY’S SYMBOL
I
n the coming weeks, Tulsans will have the opportunity to cast their vote for an exciting, new city flag design. “This flag is for all Tulsans, so Tulsans will have the final say,” says Jacob Johnson, a campaign cofounder with Joey Wignarajah. “We want people to feel an ownership of the new design and feel a part of the entire process.” Johnson and Wignarajah kicked off the privately funded campaign by asking residents for their input last November. They are now seeing their vision nearing completion. “We recognize that no one has more passion for this city than the people who live, work and love here,” Johnson says. “Our vision is that Tulsans have a symbol to show their pride, to rally around for inclusion, creativity and progress.” A selection panel will narrow the massive response of design ideas to a “top three” for public vote. Voting will take place later this month. Citizens are encouraged to like and follow Tulsa Flag on Facebook and to visit tulsaflag.com for more information. The winning design will be presented to the mayor and city council for adoption in April or May. — LAURIE GOODALE
VALERIE GRANT; BOOK PHOTO: MULLERHAUS LEGACY
LOCAL TALENT
DINING + FOOD + DRINKS
PRAIRIE’S ON FIRE P
rairie Brewpub opened in 2016 to fanfare that continues to pack the Brady Arts District restaurant. Creative components make standard menu items stand out, like the Prairie Burger ($11). A juicy patty is sandwiched between a house-made bun and adorned with roasted tomato, Bibb lettuce, house-made pickles, haystack onions and Lomah Dairy cheese curds. Served with fries. PRAIRIE BREWPUB | 223 N. MAIN ST. | 918-936-4395 | PRAIRIEPUB.COM
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DINING OUT
THE LUNCH BUNCH DOWNTOWN LUNCH SPOTS HAVE A DEDICATED FOLLOWING. BY NATALIE MIKLES
THOSE WHO WORK DOWNTOWN KNOW ALL THE LUNCH SPOTS. In a downtown the size of Tulsa’s, it doesn’t take long to figure out the fastest place for a sandwich or what day of the week will have the shortest line for barbecued ribs. Regulars would rather keep their favorite lunch destinations to themselves. These are a few of those places with loyal followings. Some have been around for decades and others are new to the scene. But all have one thing in common — customers who can’t imagine a downtown lunch without them.
Boston Avenue Grille
Boston Avenue Grille’s Signature Salad
Don’t let the line at Boston Avenue Grille deter you. The line goes fast — and all the people are in it for a good reason. This is the place to go for a quick, great-tasting lunch. Soups, sandwiches and salads are perfect for a fast bite in or to-go. Lesser known is Boston Avenue Grille’s breakfast menu — a hidden gem for those who want to start the day with something besides cereal. Check out the breakfast quesadilla with eggs, bell peppers, sausage, pico de gallo and cheddar. TRY THIS
The Signature Salad is packed with roasted chicken, romaine lettuce, field greens, cranberries, apples, toasted walnuts, tomatoes and bacon, then tossed with balsamic dressing. 15 E. Fifth St. | 918-392-7171 bostonavenuegrille.com Hours: 7 a.m.-2 p.m., Monday-Friday 20
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Wanda J’s fried chicken with mashed potatoes and gravy
Billy’s Theta burger
Lassalle’s jambalaya
Wanda J’s Next Generation
Billy’s It was more than 30 years ago when Billy’s opened on Bartlett Square downtown. The food is as good today as it was all those years ago. In fact, those who haven’t been to Billy’s in a long time will be glad to know the burgers and char chicken sandwiches haven’t changed a bit. Hamburgers here are big (1/3 pound) with loads of options for great toppings, including chili and cheese, mushroom and Swiss and blue cheese topped with an onion ring. Billy’s has a little something for everyone. You also will find favorites like a turkey louie sandwich, rib eye on a French roll and baked potato soup on the large menu.
Tyreiha, Atyria and Glory Walker were in a unique position when they opened Wanda J’s Next Generation late last year. Most new restaurant owners don’t open their doors to already-loyal customers. But the many Tulsans who’ve followed the food of Wanda J’s or Evelyn’s over the years knew they could count on the Walker sisters for the same exceptional food. Granddaughters of Wanda J. Armstrong herself, Tyreiha, Atyria and Glory know what goes in to making beautifully cooked greens, crisp-crusted chicken fried steak and fried chicken that’s perfectly seasoned and tender. Wanda J’s is a friendly, cozy restaurant with a small menu of deliciousness including pork chops, catfish, chicken-fried chicken and fried corn on the cob. If they tempt you with peach cobbler, give in. The warm cobbler’s flaky crust and sweet peaches are so tasty, you may end up ordering another to take home with you.
TRY THIS
Lassalle’s New Orleans Deli I once overheard a guy telling his friend, “Why didn’t you tell me it was this good?” while eating gumbo and a po boy at Lassalle’s. I knew what he meant. Although actually I had heard how good it was, but loved it even more with the first bite. The lunch rush is fast and furious at Lassalle’s. Diners pour in, ordering their favorites and sometimes branching out to something new. Either way, you can’t go wrong with anything on this menu. Owners Chris and Amanda West left New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina, and have had a strong following among Tulsans ever since. TRY THIS
Theta burger with mayo, pickles, hickory sauce and cheddar cheese. It’s even better with a side of colossal onion rings.
Fried chicken with mashed potatoes and cream gravy.
Jambalaya here is as good as you’ll find anywhere in New Orleans. Pair it with a shrimp po boy “dressed” with lettuce, tomato, pickle and sauce.
424 S. Main St. | 918-583-8703 | billysonthesquare.com Hours: 10:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m., Monday-Friday
111 N. Greenwood Ave. | 918-861-4142 Hours: 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Monday-Saturday
15 W. Fifth St. | 918-582-6652 | lassallesneworleansdeli.com Hours: 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Monday-Thursday; 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Friday TP
TRY THIS
TulsaPeople.com
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CHEERS!
A LA CARTE
Everyone can agree on pizza. When carnivores and vegetarians are meeting for dinner, when you’re feeding picky kids, when no one can agree where to eat … Pizza is the answer. Don’t you wish all of life were as easy? Here are four of our favorite places (PRICES: $: LESS THAN $10 $$: $10-$15 $$$: $16-$25 $$$$: OVER $25) for pizza downtown. — NATALIE MIKLES
East Village Bohemian Pizzeria
Naples Flatbread and Wine Bar
AND
BARBECUE Albert G’s downtown location, 421 E. First St., might seem like an unlikely cocktail bar, but with at least seven signature, barrel-aged cocktails at a time and 130-plus different bourbons, it rivals Tulsa’s other craft cocktail bars, boasting the largest bourbon collection in town. Using charred, white oak barrels, bar manager Shannon Greenberg creates cocktail recipes and then experiments with the aging process. The bar also has a corner for scotch whiskies. But, according to Greenberg, “that’s not why you come here.” You might not head there for a barrel-aged margarita, either, but try it — it’s swoon-worthy. Albert G’s sells roughly 600 margaritas per month and barrel-age around 60 liters at any given time. Also good is the barrel-aged Rol’n Rye, made with Jim Beam Rye, ginger bitters and Aperol, a bitter, orangeflavored apéritif. Albert G’s also hosts a bourbon club, which meets monthly and offers a “whiskey passport” for working your way through the selection, with rewards as your stamps accumulate. — LIZ BLOOD
201 S. DENVER AVE. | 918-879-1990 $$
818 E. THIRD ST. | 918-895-6999 $$
STG Pizzeria
Hey Mambo
Grab a seat at the bar and watch as your pizza is prepared and then glided into STG’s centerpiece, a wood-fire oven built in Naples. One of the most popular pizzas is the classic Margherita STG with San Marzano tomatoes, buffalo mozzarella, basil and extra-virgin olive oil. The pizza Bianca is also a winner with a dreamy combination of ricotta, garlic, oregano and housemade mozzarella.
Here, inventive pizzas go way beyond sausage and pepperoni. Take the Baroness with its pesto cream, diced pears, prosciutto, gorgonzola, black pepper, chopped walnuts and honey. Or the Carpenter with peppered bacon, roasted garlic and caramelized onions. Beyond pizza, try the layered Caprese salad, rosemary-braised lamb shank or arrabbiata ravioli.
114 S. DETROIT AVE. | 918-960-2011 $$
114 N. BOSTON AVE. | 918-508-7000 $$
Pizza — Gourmet
My, oh, my, pizza pie. In Tulsa, there’s a pizza place to match anyone’s taste. These are the winners from TulsaPeople’s annual A-List Readers’ Choice Awards. Andolini’s Pizzeria
Hideaway Pizza
1552 E. 15th St. | 918-728-6111
Seven metro locations. hideawaypizza.com
222 S. Main St., Broken Arrow 918-940-2770 12140 E. 96th St. N., Owasso 918-272-9328 | andopizza.com
East Village Bohemian Pizzeria 818 E. Third St. | 918-895-6999 eastvillagebohemian.com
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Savastano’s 8211 S. Regal Blvd. | 918-369-9387 savastanospizzeria.com
Upper Crust 9110 S. Yale Ave. | 918-728-7326 tulsabestpizza.com
CHEERS: LIZ BLOOD
BOURBON
Before and after BOK Center events, Naples Flatbread is packed with people grabbing a quick bite. Being right across the street from the arena has its perks. Lucky for us, the pizza is good, too. Try the sausage pizza with caramelized onions.
Wood-fired pizzas are cooked at 800 degrees, giving them a crisp edge. If you like spicy, try the Mount Vesuvius with spicy soppressata, Burn Co.’s handmade Italian sausage, crimini mushrooms, roasted jalapeño and buffalo mozzarella. A quick appetizer of pizza points, with lemon arugula pesto, will be a table favorite.
WHAT’S COOKING? The buzz on Tulsa’s tastiest products, restaurants and events BY NATALIE MIKLES
AND
Libby Billings
RAMEN AT ROPPONGI MARCH ... THE BEGINNING OF SALAD SEASON.
A restaurant server friend of mine told me March is when she begins taking more orders for field greens and Caesars. It’s when we begin to slide away from comfort food in favor of lighter foods and salads, in particular. Maybe it’s that we’re ready to take a break from the rich braised and stewed foods of winter. Or maybe it’s that we have a looming date for a spring break beach vacation. Of course a good salad is hardly a deprivation. A colorful salad with a tangy vinaigrette makes a great meal — and easily can be given some oomph when served with grilled fish or chicken. One beautiful and tasty salad I’ll be making this spring comes from Tulsan Cheryl Waldeck’s new cookbook, “Occasions: Seasonal menus and entertaining secrets.” The 400-page book is as much a guidebook as recipe book, with complete menus for parties ranging from Easter Whimsy to Baby’s Welcoming Brunch. Waldeck not only offers great-tasting recipes, but advice on etiquette, table setting, flower arranging and wine pairing. Her book is available online at her Etsy shop. Waldeck says her Salade Niçoise is perfect for a spring luncheon. The briny capers, boiled potatoes and toasted anchovies combine deliciously in this classic French salad.
SALADE NIÇOISE AND TOASTED ANCHOVIES Serves 6 4 to 6 new potatoes, boiled with skins on and quartered 8 ounces fresh green beans, blanched 4 hard-boiled eggs, sliced 6 to 8 artichoke hearts, quartered 1/2 pint cherry tomatoes, halved 1/4 red onion, sliced paper thin
6 to 8 ounces black and/or green olives, pitted 3 to 4 ounces capers, drained 4 to 6 anchovy fillets, drained 1 bunch field greens Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper Vinaigrette dressing
SALAD NICOISE AND BOOK: COURTESY CHERYL WALDECK
Boil potatoes until fork tender in salted water. Cool and cut into quarters. Prepare all remaining ingredients as directed. In a small skillet, toast anchovies in just a teaspoon of olive oil and butter until toasty. Set aside on a paper towel to drain. Wash and spin dry field greens and arrange on a platter, or individual serving plates, as desired. Artfully mound all ingredients (except anchovies) in the center of the platter/plate and lightly salt and pepper beans, potatoes and eggs; drizzle with vinaigrette. Top with toasted anchovies. Serve chilled. TP
Take a wine class Here’s a fun way to take your wine knowledge to the next level. OSU-Tulsa is offering a class, open to the public, taking students from the production of wine to wine pairings. In the two-Saturdays class, you will learn to identify grape varietals, explore winemaking regions and taste lots of wine. (Isn’t that why you want to sign up?) The class is from 8:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. on March 25 and April 1. It is $200. Find out more at osu-tulsa.okstate.edu/main/hrad-beverages.php.
There was no slow opening at Roppongi, the new ramen bar by Libby Billings, known to Tulsans for her other downtown restaurants, Elote and the Vault. Roppongi, 601 S. Boston Ave., seemed to be busy from day one, with hungry customers grateful for a new restaurant to add to their short lists of favorites. We talked to Billings about what’s on her plate. WHAT HAS THE RECEPTION BEEN LIKE AT ROPPONGI? It has been great. People who have had Japanese ramen have been really excited to have a ramen bar in Tulsa. And those who have only had the 50-cent college ramen are pretty blown away at the difference with our fresh noodles, broth and high-quality ingredients. WHAT MADE YOU WANT TO OPEN A RAMEN BAR IN TULSA? I went to Dallas about a year ago and ate at a ramen bar and was really impressed. I knew Tulsa needed a ramen bar. I also knew the concept of fast but quality food would work really well in downtown Tulsa at lunch time. When the owner of Lassalle’s told me he was changing locations, I jumped at the opportunity to bring ramen to Tulsa. I booked a plane ticket to Japan right away and started studying as much as I could about ramen. WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE THING TO EAT AT ROPPONGI? The vegan bowl and add marinated shiitake mushrooms. It’s a pretty good seller, but the pork ramen definitely outsells it. We are in Oklahoma after all. IF YOU’RE NOT AT YOUR OWN RESTAURANTS, WHERE DO YOU LIKE TO EAT? I really like to eat at home. Even if it’s just cheese and apples, I like being at home these days. But if I’m going out, I have become a big fan of Torero. WHAT’S IN YOUR FRIDGE AT HOME? Eggs, black beans, cheese, corn tortillas, apples, carrots, red bell peppers, frozen berries, kale and Greek yogurt. As I’m sure you can tell, I’m a vegetarian. IF YOU COULD COOK FOR ANYONE, WHO WOULD IT BE? My Papa Howie. He passed away when I was 12. He was from a small town in Idaho. After World War II, where he was a POW and received a Purple Heart, he went to Stanford Law on the GI Bill. He later became the youngest attorney to go before the Supreme Court of New York where he represented a client suing the New York Yankees. He was very active in his community and even owned a seafood restaurant in Santa Barbara. I wish I could have a conversation with him as an adult. ANY GUILTY PLEASURE FOODS? Fat Guy’s veggie burger with spicy fries and parmesan peppercorn aioli. To top off my food coma I steal about half my kids’ milkshakes while they’re not looking. WHAT’S YOUR FAVORITE MUSIC TO PLAY IN THE KITCHEN? The Avett Brothers. THOUGHTS ON TULSA’S FOOD SCENE? It’s growing really fast! What’s the saying, “(A) rising tide lifts all boats.” I’m glad restaurateurs have to keep stepping up their game. I know I have. TP TulsaPeople.com
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MUSINGS
PEASE PORRIDGE HOT BY CONNIE CRONLEY
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These are victims of bad luck. The rest of the poor might be morally corrupt beggars on the slippery slope to sloth. Gosh, once a guy finds the road to the free soup kitchen, he might never take the higher path to hard work and self-sufficiency. Sometimes, other factors are influential. In the South during the Depression, poor whites were given food assistance with no strings, but poor blacks had to do road work to earn their food. The first breadlines in the nation were in New York in the early 1900s for “Bowery bums.” They were open only in the winter and only between midnight and 1 a.m. to make sure only the truly desperate and destitute showed up to get dry bread and coffee. Breadlines were listed in tourist guidebooks as entertainment. The breadlines spiked following the Financial Panic of 1907 and then again after 1918 when returning Doughboys raised unemployment. A decade later, Herbert Hoover ran for president with a boast that the nation was near “the final triumph over poverty.” Oops. In 1929, the stock market crashed, followed by a series of droughts, crop failures, failed business and unemployment of unimaginable numbers. By January 1930, New York soup kitchens had sprung up across the city, operated by religious communities, political clubs, business associations, veterans’ groups, socialites and even crime bosses. The storm crested in March 1930 on fashionable Fifth Avenue. Hungry people five abreast lined around the block for the soup kitchen at
the Church of the Transfiguration. Shoppers were startled, but merchants were so distraught they protested to city officials and the mayor threatened to have the church rector on grounds of creating a public disturbance. Hungry citizens? Frightened shoppers? Angry retailers? Hello Tulsa! The villain of the book is President Hoover who ate caviar off of gold plates in the White House while blocking funds for federal relief. He favored self-help and local relief. Before him, Grover Cleveland refused drought aid to Texas farmers, saying “the people support the Government, the Government should not support the people.” Federal policy changed when Franklin Delano Roosevelt became president and said that providing victims with shelter, clothing and food was not charity, but social duty. From this tumbled new ideas of relief — food stamps and school lunches — and a new approach to how Americans eat — canning, casseroles and white sauce. Not all has ended happily ever after. When it comes to our attitude about feeding our hungry, I think of the philosopher Friedrich Hegel who said, “The only thing we learn from history, is that we learn nothing from history.” TP Editor’s Note: Connie Cronley is the former executive director of Iron Gate, a soup kitchen and grocery pantry located in downtown Tulsa.
GEORGIA BROOKS
F
inally — at long last — I understand why I grew up eating creamed peas. I didn’t realize this was one of my life’s mysteries. In fact, I never thought about creamed peas at all. And then, I read the book “A Square Meal” by Jane Ziegelman and Andrew Coe and all came clear. The subtitle of the book is A Culinary History of the Great Depression. During lean times, food was stretched by pouring a white sauce (two tablespoons of flour, two tablespoons of butter and one cup milk) over vegetables, cold meat, seafood, eggs and macaroni. It expanded limited quantities of food and disguised bland foods. Home economists called it the workhorse of the American kitchen. My mother was a child of the Depression. By the time my mother served it to our family, she wasn’t stretching food; she was dressing peas from my father’s garden. He, too, was a Depression child and always grew a kitchen garden. So what I was eating for supper was social history. The book’s title is misleading. I was about onethird into the book before it got to the 1930s. Before that, it was a troubling history of how we in the United States have hated/helped our hungry citizens. The national attitude was set by the Puritans who brought with them England’s notion of poor houses as punishment. Then, as now, we want to help the deserving poor, but the question is: Who is deserving? Widows, orphans, the elderly and the ill, of course.
COURTESY TULSA HISTORICAL SOCIETY AND MUSEUM
PEOPLE + PLACES + HISTORY
O
ANCHORS AWEIGH
n July 26, 1919, the SS Tulsa was launched for the first time in Philadelphia. A cargo vessel, the ship was built under the Emergency Fleet Corp. during World War I when peacetime suddenly became wartime. Tulsan Lulu Crosbie was chosen to christen and sponsor the ship, which would be the first of three vessels to bear the
city’s name. The Crosbie family was influential in the city’s early banking days, and a historic neighborhood still bears the name (p. 42). Through March 25, “A Ship Named Tulsa” is on display at the Tulsa Historical Society and Museum for those looking to dive deeper. To meet the newest namesake, see p. 26. TP
TulsaPeople.com
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ICONIC TULSA
USS TULSA The newly christened USS Tulsa is officially seaworthy and will report for duty in late 2018. BY ANNA BENNETT
INFORMATION • Traditionally, a ship sponsor is a female civilian who is chosen to “sponsor” the vessel as a symbol of good luck and protection. The USS Tulsa will be a lucky ship indeed if any of sponsor Kathy Taylor’s determination rubs off on her. • Happy Birthday! The USS Tulsa was officially christened on Feb. 11, 2017, making her (appropriately) an Aquarius. 26
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• As a littoral combat ship (LCS 16), the USS Tulsa will be used for operations close to shore. This class of ship (including LCS 4, pictured here) is known for its stealth and agility. An LCS costs about $337 million to build.
• Since 1798, the Secretary of the Navy has honored partnerships with cities and states by naming ships to reflect this heritage. The USS Tulsa is the third ship to bear the name Tulsa.
• Want a taste of life on the high seas? Marshall Brewing Co., one of the ship’s sponsors, recently released its USS Tulsa Oatmeal IPA.
• Despite being far from the ocean, 490 Tulsans work in shipbuilding-related jobs, and the maritime industry contributes nearly $49 million a year to the city’s economy. TP
U.S. NAVY/MASS COMMUNICATION SPECIALIST 2ND CLASS JOHANS CHAVARRO
The USS Tulsa will be similar to the LCS 4, pictured here.
GETTABLE.
unforgettable. SPECIAL SAVINGS GOING ON NOW
CASTLEBERRY’S AN AUTHORIZED ETHAN ALLEN RETAILER TULSA 6006 SOUTH SHERIDAN 918.496.3073 Ask a designer or visit ethanallen.com for details. Sale going on for a limited time. ©2017 Ethan Allen Global, Inc.
riverfield growing . together .
Riverfield’s Middle School Academic Bowl teams have won 13 State Championships since 2004. In November, they won the OKC Blue Academic Tournament.
OPEN HOUSE SCHEDULE: INFANTS – 5TH GRADE
March 21, 9:30 am-noon 6th – 12TH GRADE
By Appointment. Call Admissions Director Kacey Davenport at 918-446-3553
riverfield.org TulsaPeople.com
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NOTEBOOK BY A NN A BENNE T T
TULSAN STARTS WEBSITE FOR THE ‘SPORTS CURIOUS’
Lastnightsgame.co was launched by Amy Siegfried and her brother, Scott Buchan of Las Vegas, to help people speak more confidently about sports. The siblings develop the site’s free, tri-weekly email subscription service called The Rundown. The content is designed for those who want to “level the playing field” in work or social settings by becoming more conversant about sports, Siegfried says. “We don’t focus on stats or sports jargon, and it has a little humor,” she adds. “The goal is to be able to read it in the time it takes to drink a cup of coffee.”
Model and actress Amber Valletta wearing a Gracious Tree beanie.
RESILIENT ROCK STAR
GRACIOUS TREE TAKES ROOT If you spot someone wearing a fleece jacket embroidered with a small tree, a child in need is probably wearing one, too. The seeds of Gracious Tree were planted two years ago when Ryan Reed — a social studies teacher and head football coach at Memorial High School — was running marathons and ultras. While running, Reed would focus on the simple pleasures awaiting him at the end of the race: especially his beloved fleece jacket. “It was like putting on a hug,” Reed says. “I felt warmth, love and a sense of accomplishment. I wanted everyone to feel those three things.” He approached his friend Daniel Mooney with the idea of a buy-one-give-one clothing company that would donate jackets to children around the world. But then, Reed began noticing children at school bus stops, hugging their elbows or jumping up and down to stay warm. “I got a big damn problem giving kids in Nepal jackets when there are kids in my backyard that are freezing,” he says. So far, Gracious Tree has done “coat drops” for Burroughs Elementary and Special Kids Care, for a total of more than 150 coats donated to date. Though details are pending, the next coat drop is already paid for, thanks to the holiday shopping season, and will be their largest yet. In addition to the signature Sharing Jacket, Gracious Tree sells beanies that support cancer patients through Assistance in Healthcare. VISIT GRACIOUSTREE.COM FOR MORE DETAILS.
Voices of Oklahoma “When I first got down there in the House parking lot, the wonderful sergeants ... would come up to the window and tap on it and say, “I’m sorry, ma’am, this is just for House members.” And I would say, “I know.” And they would say, “Well, are you the wife of a legislator?” And I would say, “No, I’m a legislator.” Betty Boyd, KOTV and KTUL personality, pioneer of women in broadcast journalism and five-term state congresswoman “VOICES OF OKLAHOMA” IS AN ORAL HISTORY PROJECT SUPPORTED BY THE OKLAHOMA CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES AT THE UNIVERSITY OF TULSA.
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DeVon Douglass recently became the city’s first Chief Resilience Officer. This position on Mayor G.T. Bynum’s cabinet was created and funded through a collaboration with 100 Resilient Cities, an effort dedicated to helping cities become more resilient to the physical, social and economic challenges that are a growing part of the 21st century. According to the mayor’s office, the position’s job requirements included near-superhuman interpersonal skills, a track record of bringing people together and a strong background in public policy. “When I pitched DeVon on taking this job, I was only partly joking when I told her she is our unicorn,” Bynum says. “There is no one else like her.” Douglass was a policy analyst at the Oklahoma Policy Institute and mediated and organized the recent Tulsa Talks series. She spends her time with City stakeholders and community members, collaborating with representatives from the 99 other Resilient Cities and setting the foundation for the larger, systemic goals of the local Resilience Office. These goals include shrinking the life expectancy gap, tearing down barriers to social equality and making sure all Tulsans are better equipped for acute shocks like tornados and floods. “We operate in the future: dreaming of what will soon be, working out problems before they happen, constructing a truly 21st century city,” Douglass says. “And yet we are here in the present, handling the day-to-day challenges of city government. And we even have a foot in the past — building on the accomplishments of our predecessors and learning from their mistakes.” TP
GRACIOUS TREE: COURTESY GRACIOUS TREE; DOUGLASS: COURTESY CITY OF TULSA
Off the cuff What began as a project to commemorate a loved one quickly turned into a line of jewelry, then a boutique and now a vendor mall. In 2014 Christie Rimer, co-owner of Barn 66 Antique and Mercantile Shops, was disappointed with a cuff she ordered to honor her late father. So, she decided to create her own from one of his old leather belts. This Old Belt was born, and soon, she was creating belt cuffs for clients. “(This Old Belt) brought a purpose to my life — to bring comfort to others and honor those who have passed on,” Rimer says. She spent much of 2016 renovating an old family plumbing business into Barn 66. “It just fits in with everything we wanted our store to be: rustic, local, repurposed and preserving family memories,” Rimer says. Barn 66, located at 1607 N. Old Highway 66 in Catoosa, houses more than 40 vendors with locally made products.
All-new 2017 Ridgeline and CR-V
FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED FOR OVER 40 YEARS 4141 S. Memorial Drive • doncarltonhonda.com
Give us a call today at 918.622.3636
2017 Acura ILX
$219 PER MONTH
LUXURY MADE AFFORDABLE
2017 Acura TLX
$269 PER MONTH
Closed-end lease for 2017 ILX 8 Speed Dual-Clutch vehicles (DE2F3HJW) available from January 4, 2017 through February 28, 2017, available to well-qualified lessees approved by Acura Financial Services. Not all lessees will qualify. Higher lease rates apply for lessees with lower credit ratings. MSRP $28,940.00 (includes destination, excludes tax, license, title fee, registration, documentation fee, options, insurance and the like). Actual net capitalized cost $22,880.29. Net capitalized cost includes $595 acquisition fee. Dealer contribution may vary and could affect actual lease payment. Total monthly payments $8,541.00. Option to purchase at lease end $15,338.20. Closed-end lease for 2017 TLX 8 Speed Dual-Clutch P-AWS vehicles (UB1F3HJW) available from January 4, 2017 through February 28, 2017, available to well-qualified lessees approved by Acura Financial Services. Not all lessees will qualify. Higher lease rates apply for lessees with lower credit ratings. MSRP $32,950.00 (includes destination, excludes tax, license, title fee, registration, documentation fee, options, insurance and the like). Actual net capitalized cost $27,765.74. Net capitalized cost includes $595 acquisition fee. Dealer contribution may vary and could affect actual lease payment. Total monthly payments $10,491.00. Option to purchase at lease end $18,781.50.
4905 S. Memorial Drive Tulsa, OK 74145 doncarltonacura.com
Acura of Tulsa
Give us a call today at 918-664-2300 TulsaPeople.com
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WHERE ARE THEY NOW?
MEET AND GREET Former Williams CEO Keith Bailey still calls Tulsa home. BY DAVID HARPER
K
eith Bailey traveled around the country before he found a home, and created a legacy, in Tulsa. He moved about a dozen times in nearly a decade before an opportunity in Tulsa in 1973 drew him to the city that he would grow to love. In the decades that followed, Bailey advanced from assistant to the vice president of operations at Williams Pipe Line Co. to president and chief executive officer of the Williams Cos. During his tenure, Bailey emphasized a corporate culture of “doing things the right way and getting the right results.” A dentist’s son, Bailey split his childhood between Wyoming and Missouri and even had opportunities to pursue careers in professional baseball and football before deciding on a different path. After he graduated college in 1964, the newly minted mechanical engineer took a job at Conoco, which required he live in a variety of states in addition to other travel.
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Bailey sought stability and decided to take a job at Williams even though he says he “didn’t know very much about Tulsa at the time,” beyond its airport. Under his guidance, Williams’ assets grew from $5 billion to $38 billion. However, he says he is most proud of setting its core values including integrity, entrepreneurial spirit and tolerance for risk. Bailey served Tulsa as board chairman for Philbrook Museum and the local United Way as well as two terms as board president at the University of Tulsa. He retired in 2002 and divides his time between Tulsa and Saratoga, Wyoming. Two of Bailey’s four children live in the Tulsa metropolitan area, where he and his wife Pat like to spend time with grandchildren. The two also are dedicated philanthropists. “We want to give in a meaningful way and to do so while we’re still alive to see the results,” he says. TP
On returning to Oklahoma State University as the new Entrepreneur in Residence in 2015: Nostalgic, for sure. Campus has changed so much since I graduated in 2009. What is an Entrepreneur in Residence? An Entrepreneur in Residence is a mentor and support leader to the emerging entrepreneurs in Oklahoma based on his/her professional experiences in starting and operating companies and playing various roles within them. What he’s been up to lately: Working for Bank of America Merill Lynch on leadership support and tactics. Here, I focus on building an ‘X’ team by taking the best principles and practices of the startup ecosystem and innovation economy and applying them to the Bank and across the financial sector. On his recent keynote speech at Tulsa’s 36DegreesNorth: I was honored, to say the least. It’s a privilege to be considered a reference for Tulsa entrepreneurs. — EMMA GIDDENS
WHERE ARE THEY NOW: VALERIE GRANT; MEET AND GREET: COURTESY ANDREW STROUP
A SERENDIPITOUS LIFE
NAME: Andrew Stroup AGE: 31 KNOWN FOR: His time as the director of product and technology for the White House Innovation Fellows
BIZ WHIZ Jamaal Dyer
NORTHWEST ARKANSAS
Enjoy the perfect mix of natural beauty, big-city fun and small-town charm: explore our great outdoors and distinctive downtowns, discover world-class art and more
TAKING CHARGE
Greenwood Chamber of Commerce creates new group for young professionals. BY LAURIE GOODALE
J
VALERIE GRANT
amaal Dyer has a passion for Tulsa. He describes himself as “a proud product” of Walt Whitman Elementary, Carver Middle and Booker T. Washington High Schools. After earning a bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism from the University of Arkansas and a Master of Science in rehabilitation counseling from Langston University, Dyer is back home — and ready to serve his community as president of the new Greenwood Chamber’s Young Professionals group. Dyer is employed by Family and Youth Intervention Services as a licensed professional counselor and is active in his family’s funeral home business, Dyer Memorial Chapel. But, he wants to do more. Following much discussion with chamber leadership, Dyer was appointed as the leader of the initiative and, with the assistance of Charity Marcus, CEO of Avenu Consulting, formed a team that began meeting last June. “It is very important to have the involvement of young professionals in the chamber,” Marcus says. “We need to reach out to the next generations, bring them in, get them involved and mentor them.” The Greenwood Chamber has been looking to add a Young Professionals group for a few years. Dyer believes it is important for Greenwood to have its own group separate from the Tulsa Regional Chamber’s Tulsa’s Young Professionals. “TYPros is doing a phenomenal job with their community initiatives and business development opportunities throughout a large portion of the city,” Dyer says. “However, while they have been very instrumental in bringing businesses to Tulsa, north Tulsa has been neglected. We plan to partner with them to see how we can work together to bring businesses and recreation to the Greenwood District and north Tulsa, as well.” The Greenwood Chamber represents all of Tulsa, but its primary focus is the people and businesses of north Tulsa, the historic Black Wall Street and the Greenwood Business District. More than 60 young professionals attended the Greenwood Chamber Young Professionals group’s first mixer last September. “Our group will bring vivacity, innovative ideas, business development opportunities, collaborations with other professional organizations and a social network that will make Greenwood a great place to work, serve and enjoy,” Dyer says. The group plans on hosting quarterly membership mixers, as well as professional development workshops. Plans are being made for the coming year, and anyone age 18-39 is invited to become a member. TP For more information, visit greenwoodchambertulsa.com, or email Jamaal Dyer at jdyer@greenwoodchambertulsa.com.
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art
Outdoor Adventures
Historic Downtowns
Farmers Markets
BELLA VISTA | BENTONVILLE | EUREKA SPRINGS | FAYETTEVILLE HOLIDAY ISLAND | HUNTSVILLE | ROGERS | SILOAM SPRINGS | SPRINGDALE This ad paid for with state and private regional association funds TulsaPeople.com
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QA &
From Tulsa Professionals
For information about participating in Q&A, please contact adservices@langdonpublishing.com.
DOG TRAINING
What’s the difference between BHRT and other hormone therapies? BHRT (bio-identical hormone replacement therapy) is customizable, unlike conventional HRT, which has only a few standard dosages. Additionally, Hormone Pellet Therapy provides sustained hormone levels throughout the day for up to 4-6 months without any “roller coaster” effect. Placed under the skin, BHRT pellets consistently release small doses of hormones, providing optimal therapy. Most people experience increased energy levels and sexual drive, consistency in mood, relief from anxiety and depression, decreased body fat, increased mental clarity and many other immediate benefits. For more information, call us at 918-872-9999. Malissa Spacek and Dr. James Campbell BA Med Spa & Weight Loss Center 500 S. Elm Place • Broken Arrow, OK 74012 918-872-9999 • www.baweightspa.com
INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
What is the best way to introduce my dog to a new baby in the home?
I am over 70 and still working. Do I have to start taking a required minimum distribution (RMD) from my company’s 401k?
The baby needs to be mostly off-limits to the dog. They can come smell and investigate, but they need to be polite — no jumping, licking or intense sniffing. They can meet the baby, but it needs to be on your terms, not theirs. If they are overly interested, send the dog away and let them approach when they are calm. If you are having trouble, call a dog trainer before the problems get out of hand.
As long as you are employed with your company, distributions are not required until age 70.5 or the year employment terminates, whichever is later. Owners of 5 percent or more of the company do not qualify for this deferral. Distributions are required at age 70.5 from regular IRAs and qualified retirement plans from previous employers.
Lola Carter
J. Harvie Roe, CFP, President
Zen Dog Training 45637 W. Hwy 16 • Bristow, OK 74010 (918) 609-0595 • www.zendogtulsa.com
AmeriTrust Investment Advisors, Inc. 4506 S. Harvard Ave. • Tulsa, OK 74135 918-610-8080 • hroe@amerad.com
VETERINARIAN
WILL AND TRUSTS
Why should I use flea and tick products all year?
Are my Trust distribution directions practical?
Oklahoma is considered by many to be a temperate climate, which means fleas and ticks can survive all year. As a result, many animals can have flea and tick infestations in the middle of winter! We have found that even when owners don’t see fleas or ticks during the winter, using preventatives all year greatly reduce their chances of having problems with these parasites during the warmer seasons. Many of these products are also combined with heartworm preventatives, which makes compliance much easier. Now there is an oral product available that will kill fleas and ticks for 3 months.
Many people want to provide for their surviving spouse with all the income their trust earns after their death. But if that family member’s business or farming operation depends on the same income stream, the trust directions may bankrupt the very business that provides for the rest of the family. Make sure your stated directions for distribution make sense. Call your estate planning attorney for a review.
Dr. Mark Shackelford
15th Street Veterinary Group 6231 E. 15th St. • Tulsa, OK 74112 918-835-2336 • www.15thstreetvet.com 32
BEAUTY & WEIGHT MANAGEMENT
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Karen L. Carmichael The Law Office of Karen L. Carmichael 2727 E. 21st St., Ste. 402 • Tulsa, OK 74114 918-493-4939 • www.tulsawillsandtrusts.com
Security On
With Cox Homelife’s security, cameras and door lock control, it’s never been easier for your home to take care of you. And your guard dog.
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H
istorically, it’s best not to tell Steve Liggett he can’t hang a piece of art — even if it might or might not contain male genitalia. Years ago, Liggett was artistic director for Johnson Atelier, the Tulsa Park and Recreation Department’s community fine arts center that we all know now as WaterWorks. He had arranged for an exhibition of artist S.K. Duff, who is an alumnus of Booker T. Washington High School. “The work that he showed in the gallery at Johnson Atelier was all abstract work, but the titles were what got me,” Liggett recalls. “I was ordered by my supervisor to, ‘Take down that painting with the penis in it!’ But I refused. All the works were abstract — and I didn’t see a penis.” Over the next couple of years, Liggett’s interests became more aligned with Living Arts, which was founded by Virginia Myers and others, including a coalition of University of Tulsa students and professors, in the 1960s with a mission of presenting and developing contemporary art forms in Tulsa. “I decided that I would never work for an organization again that would censor art,” says Liggett, who has been true to his word for 26 years as artistic director of the nonprofit Living Arts of Tulsa. He assumed the reins of the organization following Myers’ death in 1991. “No one in Tulsa was bringing in the artists you’d see in Los Angeles or New York,” Liggett says. “I really believed in the goals that Living Arts had — that Tulsa needed an uncensorable place.” On June 30, Liggett will retire; but he has plenty to keep him busy until then, including the New Genre Arts Festival March 1-4, one of Living Arts’ biggest and most nationally well-known events of the year. But what happens after that? “The plan is to have no plan or very little of a plan,” he says of his retirement. “But I will always stay in Tulsa. It is my home, and I love it here. I have a clay studio at my house that I plan to utilize as a type of meditation and ongoing creative outlet.” Not that his tenure at Living Arts hasn’t been creative. In fact, he feels like Living Arts has been his artwork — a social sculpture, to borrow a phrase from Joseph Beuys. Now, he can concentrate on new objects. “To produce lots of work would be a joy to me,” he says. “More time to devote to a piece that evolves into another piece and another.”
WHAT DREW YOU TO LIVING ARTS? I had been introduced to Virginia through an odd circumstance. She was playing a George Crumb piece for prepared piano at Harwelden. This was right
Q&A
STEVE LIGGETT Artistic director, Living Arts of Tulsa BY JASON ASHLEY WRIGHT
after I transferred to the University of Tulsa from Oral Roberts University, and my professor, Tom Manhart, suggested I go hear her in concert. I had no idea why a potter studying ceramics should go to a concert, but I respected Tom and went anyway. I was shocked and appalled by what happened there. This woman crawled inside her piano and played the music from the inside. I had taken classes in demonology at ORU, and I knew that this woman was possessed, so I ran out of Harwelden in a huff. The next day in class, I asked Tom Manhart, “Why did you suggest that I go hear that demon-possessed woman?” He just smiled and said that I should hang around with this woman because she might know a few things that I didn’t. WHAT HAVE BEEN SOME OF YOUR BIGGEST ACCOMPLISHMENTS? I’m very proud of being able to work with pioneers in contemporary art — people like Walt Kosty, Ralph Bendel, Ann Weisman, Georgia Williams, Michael Christopher and Marty Jensen, who were all part of the group that helped organize and form the Tulsa Artist Coalition and the Tulsa Center for Contemporary Art. But I think my experiences with Johnson Atelier and Donna PondWatson, the brilliant woman who conceived of turning a recreation center into an art center, was the real fertile ground that led to me understanding how to grow Living Arts. Of course, much credit should be given to George and David Sharp, who bought the buildings and teamed up with the George Kaiser Family Foundation for seeing the potential in Living Arts and believing in what we
were doing enough to help us with a building — actually, four buildings in the last 26 years. Also, I’m proud of starting many annual events in Tulsa, including Dia de los Muertos Arts Festival, the New Genre Arts Festival, OK Electric, the Tulsa International Animation Festival, the 24 Hour Video Race, the Tulsa Poetry Slam, Love and Lust, the Living Legend Award, Tulsa Biennial, the Tulsa ArtCar Weekend, and Champagne and Chocolate. HOW HAVE YOU SEEN THE TULSA ART SCENE CHANGE? When I first moved Living Arts into the building that is now the Hunt Club, the area was just waking from a yearslong sleep. The buildings were derelict, very much fixer-uppers. But little by little, galleries and artists began to move in, and David Sharp would let them fix them up. We began to call the area the Brady Arts District because we wanted people to know where we were. It was not until Living Arts received our first grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts — we were the first in Oklahoma to receive this grant — that things really began to speed up. Then, the George Kaiser Family Foundation gave Living Arts a great home, asking us to anchor the Tulsa Arts District on the east side of their new plan. Now, we are in the midst of a renaissance for Tulsa arts like I have never seen happen here. WHAT DO YOU FORESEE FOR TULSA’S ART SCENE? Anything is possible. What I hope will happen is that Tulsa will be smarter than many cities that have undergone gentrification, where the arts organizations and artist studios move in but are booted out by bars and restaurants as people begin to see the area as a cool place to live. Eventually, the offices renovate the area and artists cannot afford to live there anymore. We need controlled rents for artists and arts organizations so that this jewel of an area does not become another area like that. I also foresee the areas off-Brady emerging, since property within the Inner Dispersal Loop is already beyond the definition of reasonable. WHAT THINGS ARE GOING ON BETWEEN NOW AND YOUR RETIREMENT AT LIVING ARTS? This May, we are planning a project called “Crossing Borders,” which will deal with one of the most oppressed groups in our country: immigrants. In June, our “Examining Change: North Tulsa Art Project” will examine whether or not anything has really changed since Tulsa decided to form a city government with a mayor/council format. These are the kinds of programs that I am most proud of — the ones that deal with Tulsa’s underbelly and the social issues faced by every city and, as Leroy Chapman used to call it, “Tulsa’s Dirty Secrets.” By exposing these and discussing them through art, we form a real dialogue — or as Kerry Walsh so aptly coined the phrase, “art that makes you talk.” TP TulsaPeople.com
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MAPPED AND TRACKED As downtown continues to burst with activity, developments keep the market moving. Several hotel, apartment and commercial properties are currently underway in downtown. Here’s an update on what’s popping up across our city center. — ANNE BROCKMAN
B HOTEL INDIGO
Location: Elgin Avenue between First and Second streets Along with 105 rooms, the boutique hotel will feature 1,500 square feet of meeting space, a restaurant, a bar and a fitness studio. The hotel will be a part of the Santa Fe Square development. SJS Hospitality
C TULSA CLUB BUILDING
Location: 310 E. First St. Developers hope to welcome residents by late second quarter this year. The 10-year-old project features 28 loftstyle apartments that include studio, one- and two-bedroom units. An additional 900 square feet of leasable ground-floor space joins Whiskey Business and a vacant restaurant opportunity. Ross Group
E FORMER NORDAM PROPERTY
Location: Between South Lansing and Kenosha avenues and East Fourth and Sixth streets Located in the East Village, this 11 ½ acre property is in the early stages of development by Brickhugger, which plans a multi-use space with
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Location: 522 S. Boston Ave. Nearing completion, the nine-story Meridia has eight floors of apartments — most with open-air balconies, which is a rarity in downtown real estate — and planned commercial development for the first floor. RiverCity Development
H RESIDENCE INN BY MARRIOTT Location: 202 W. Fifth St. A 110-room hotel is set to be complete by the end of 2017. Anish Hotels Group
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Ross Group, Promise Hotels and TYTO Realty Advisors are working together on this $24 million project.
F Y LOFTS Location: 515 S. Denver Ave. The former YMCA building has been transformed into 79 residential apartments that range in size from 500-2,300 square feet. The building includes a secure underground parking garage. The renovation took more than two years to complete and the building is welcoming residents this month. Brickhugger
E ENU E AV YENN CHE
Location: 115 E. Fifth St.
In the next few months, renovations will begin to turn the 90-year-old Tulsa Club Building into a Curio by Hilton boutique hotel, along with ground-level restaurant space and bringing back the ballroom and mezzanine space to its former glory. This project is a historic renovation certified by the National Park Service.
opportunities for residential, retail and commercial prospects. Brickhugger
T REE N ST MAI
Location: Between South Elgin and Greenwood avenues and East First and Second streets Site work has begun on the square city block construction project that will include 200 apartments, retail and office space, and a parking garage. Nelson+Stowe
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D BLV MLK
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I ARCHER COMPLEX
Location: East Archer Street between Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and North Detroit Avenue Ground-floor retail (Goods Bodega, Strange Donuts, Lone Wolf, Magic City Books and Glacier Chocolate) will open in late spring 2017. $20 million project by George Kaiser Family Foundation
J THE PALACE APARTMENTS Location: 324 S. Main St. The nine-story renovation includes 60 units that range in size from 500-860 square feet. Tenants are expected to move in this month, with ground-floor retail space available. Wiggin Properties K HAMPTON INN AND SUITES
Location: West Third Street and South Cheyenne Avenue The nine-story, 125-room hotel is under
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construction next to One Place, close to the BOK Center and is expected to be completed this month. Promise Hotels
L HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS-BRADY DISTRICT Location: East Archer Street and North Detroit Avenue Construction will begin this summer on the 115-room hotel. Ross Group and Promise Hotels
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M DAVENPORT LOFTS Location: 405 N. Main St. With a rooftop deck and five floors of condominiums, the Davenport will likely begin construction this summer. Three floors of interior parking will be built into the structure, along with 26 units that range in size between 1,800-2,500 square feet. Omicron Land Development LLC
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N THE VIEW Location: 420 E. Archer St. Although plans for The View, with 13,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space and 200 luxury apartment homes, are approved, a date to begin construction has not been set. Property developed by American Residential Group O OKPOP MUSEUM
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Location: 110 N. Boston Ave. Set to begin construction this spring, the Flats on Archer will transform a parking lot into 62 one- and twobedroom apartments. Commercial space on the ground floor is planned to be a market/café setup with a yet-tobe-announced partner. SATTCOM Investments LLC
Q BLOCK 44 REDEVELOPMENT
Location: North Elgin Avenue and East Archer Street The five-story project directly across from ONEOK Field will have first-floor commercial opportunities with office space on floors 2-5. Construction will begin Oct. 1 with an expected completion date of Dec. 31, 2018. Ross Group TulsaPeople.com
COURTESY GOOGLE EARTH
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Location: 422 N. Main St. Site planning and design will begin this year with ground breaking in 2018 and a projected fourth quarter 2019 opening. The facility will include a 100-space parking garage. A $25 million bond issue supports design and construction.
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Anne Pollard James
T
ulsans love the idea of living downtown — walking to work, stopping for a bite or a drink on the way home, having a regular spot at the Guthrie Green. It’s the metropolitan fantasy so many automobile-dependent residents have dreamed about for decades. Then after that brief daydream, most families still prefer three bedrooms, a yard for the dog and extra closet space. Tulsa is still mostly a single-family residence kind of town, and there’s nothing wrong with that. But in 2017, that vision of a downtown-adjacent lifestyle has become a feasible reality, and the demand for real estate in near-downtown neighborhoods proves it. Tulsans have been snapping up fixer-uppers in historic neighborhoods — Brady Heights, Owen Park, Tracy Park, Crosbie Heights and Riverview — for the last several years, and the demand continues to grow. “It’s the ripple effect of what a vibrant downtown does — it makes property around it become desirable in a different way,” says Realtor Anne Pollard James, who specializes in downtown Tulsa real estate. “People don’t want to necessarily live in downtown, but they are buying that single-family housing that allows them to take advantage of all things happening downtown and still be a part of a small neighborhood community.” Pollard James says she hasn’t seen the demand so high since she began working with downtown real estate in the early 2000s. “Within the last 12 months, I have seen pricing for housing in the areas near downtown — in Brady Heights, Owen Park, Riverview — that are commensurate with many midtown Tulsa neighborhoods,” she says. “Folks are interested in buying housing not just to be near downtown, but to be near an interesting group of people of social, ethnic and economic diversity.” The reason for the boom now? As downtown Tulsa’s revitalization began to build momentum in the mid2000s, the global economic downturn of 2008 hit. People who were thinking about making the move downtown from suburbs, or even midtown neighborhoods, became cautious. “I think we had to settle our growth a little bit after that happened,” Pollard James says. “Tulsa never had the inflated housing stock pricing that a lot of other communities had, but it had enough for people to be fearful.” Ashley Wozniak, a Realtor for Coldwell Banker Select, says she and her husband moved to Tracy Park about seven years ago, and near-downtown areas have been steadily growing as destination neighborhoods. “You’d think (buyers) would all be younger people with kids, but I’m seeing all ages,” Wozniak says. Wozniak says Brady Heights homes that need a lot of work are going for around $20-$40 per square foot in her experience and that fully remodeled homes are selling for
Be my neighbor A booming downtown means its surrounding neighborhoods are a must for those wanting a short commute without sacrificing their residential needs. BY KIM BROWN
about $120 per square foot, on average. In Owen Park she’s seeing “full-project houses being sold for $30-$40 a square foot and remodels are selling for over $100 a square foot.” “Just like the people who want to live there, investors see the great things happening and such a big change in downtown over the years,” she says. “They really see the growth and want in.” Although some near-downtown neighborhoods, such as Tracy Park and Riverview, have been well or moderately established for longer, Brady Heights and Owen Park neighborhoods have been experiencing a steady increase that doesn’t appear to be stopping any time soon. And Crosbie Heights could be right behind.
For these Tulsans, it’s not only about location and diversity — it’s about making a positive mark, she says. “There’s a huge pride in these neighborhoods that people invest in,” she says. “You’re investing because you believe that what you’re doing is making a difference to the neighborhood. You’re not just improving a property, you’re bringing this thing that was once rough around the edges and that may have been forgotten to its original beauty. It’s Tulsa’s history.”
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Amanda DeCort recovered a lot of original details hidden away in the attic by a former homeowner.
With a passion for history and architecture, it is no wonder Amanda DeCort’s home reflects her interests. When she moved to Tulsa from Pennsylvania about 11 years ago, DeCort chose to rent a house in the Lortondale neighborhood, near East 31st Street and South Yale Avenue. “I used to live in an apartment in Philadelphia that was built in 1748,” says DeCort, who is the executive director for the Tulsa Foundation for Architecture. “I’ve always been an old-house girl — I’ve never been a suburban person.” She moved to Brookside a year later and was happy living in the area close to Riverside for about six years. Then a 1924-era home further north in the Riverview neighborhood found her. The historic neighborhood, a compilation of several smaller areas founded in the early 1900s, is something of a hidden gem. It’s just north of Maple Ridge and earned its name from Riverview Elementary School, which was demolished in 1975. Now, people interested in renovating and enhancing historic oil-boom-era homes are finding the location a prime spot right on the edges of downtown and a perfect match for their lifestyles. “I was out walking my dog and saw a for-sale sign in the yard of this house. It really did find me,” DeCort says. “I stood in the front yard and said, ‘There’s the river, and there’s the skyline.’” She was sold on the area for its proximity to the river and downtown, where she now works. The house needed some TLC, but that also suited her. “I’d rather live in a house that maybe someone’s grandmother didn’t do anything to rather than someone who did too much,” she says. “I look for the historical details — the good stuff that tells the story of a house, not the bad ’80s stuff you have to undo.” Since she’s lived in Riverview, she has had a 5-minute commute to her office and a 2-minute walk to RiverParks. Walking to downtown isn’t ideal yet. “I wish we’d do a better job of connecting people to downtown,” she says. “We have work to do for pedestrians and cyclists because the sidewalks just aren’t there, and when the IDL was constructed, it was convenient but it cut off the residential area.” Still, she wouldn’t live anywhere else. “I love the historical details. I’ve found a lot of historical stuff in the attic the former owner removed,” she says. “It’s great — I’ve been able to find all these little clues.”
Riverview
KEY LANDMARKS: Cry Baby Hill; McBirney Mansion, 1414 S. Galveston Ave.; Riverside Studio (aka Spotlight Theatre), 1381 S. Riverside Drive
13TH STREET
DENVER AVENUE
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Riverview
ESTABLISHED: 1911; The district was added to National Register of Historic Places in 2007
BOUNDARY STREETS: 13th Street to the north; Elwood and Denver Avenues to the east; Riverside Drive to the south; and Jackson Avenue to the west TYPES OF HOMES: Craftsman Bungalows, Tudor Revival, Prairie School and Colonial Revival
The Riverview District has a number of home styles: Tudor Revival, Prairie School, Crafstman Bungalows and Colonial Revival.
DeCort was sold on this Riverview kitchen with space to accommodate her vintage stove.
Why is this house you? I’ve filled it with things I love, many given to me by people I love. Most of my “stuff” has a story. It’s happy and personal and comfortable. What’s your favorite detail of the home? The kitchen cabinets, the 1920s light fixtures and all the wavy cylinder glass in my original windows. What was unexpected about living in this particular home? Uncovering original details and fixtures as I went about making the home my own. I found the original dining room light fixtures in the attic. I figured out the kitchen cabinet doors were originally the back porch windows. I found some original wooden storm windows with fantastic hardware in the garage. That sort of thing. What made you fall in love with the home? The first time I walked in the house, I realized that my vintage 1940s stove fit perfectly in the kitchen. I said to my Realtor, “My stove will fit. Let’s make an offer!” Ha! I’d been in the house about 2 minutes. Does owning this home check any box in your life-must list? I need to live near water. I need to live near downtown. Done and done.
Amanda DeCort TulsaPeople.com
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Crosbie Heights Like many people who stumble upon their dream home, Dr. Miriam Mills wasn’t looking to buy a house when she found her 1914 Craftsman home in Crosbie Heights in 2000. “A Native American architect built it and I’m only the fourth owner,” says Mills, a clinical professor at OSU Health Sciences Center and practicing pediatrician and osteopathic manipulative therapist. “The previous owner updated it and kept it authentic. It’s been my experience that a neighborhood close to downtown is a wonderful investment, but the neighborhood has taken off much slower than I thought.” Founded in 1908, the diverse neighborhood west of downtown was believed by many to be “the next Owen Park,” come the 21st century, but the global economic downturn of 2008 didn’t help matters. “People are paying attention. I’d say it’s where Owen Park was five or six years ago,” says Realtor Anne Pollard James. “It’s in that cycle. It has all the benefits of being near downtown, but it hasn’t had quite the number of rehab projects that Owen and Brady Heights have.” While the development of renovated homes has been slower than she would have expected, Mills says it’s attaining momentum. “Crosbie Heights is one of the most heterogeneous neighborhoods in Tulsa — economically, socially and racially. Three or four landlords bought and held a lot of land years ago, but some are finally letting go of properties,” Mills says. “The reality is that it takes a lot of money to renovate here.” Mills owns the property next to hers as well — the PH Community House, formerly the Blue Jackalope Grocery and Coffee. Progress from the 2015 Tulsa Metropolitan Area Planning Commission’s small area plan is encouraging, she says, and neighborhood crime watch groups are helping neighbors and property owners feel more secure about their investments. “The last two or three years, you can really feel a better sense of a community,” she says. Mills’ home has many unique features she couldn’t find anywhere else — such as a full basement and access to the roof from a door off the second floor, which provides her a view of WaterWorks Art Center and the hills to the west. And the view of downtown Tulsa? “Oh my gosh, the view of downtown is the best view in town,” she says.
One of the things Miriam Mills loves about her home are the “cartoonish fat” columns on her front porch. Mills bought her Crosbie Heights home in 2000. 42
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Miriam Mills’ 103-year-old home was owned by a doctor and his family for almost 80 years. Some of her favorite parts of the home include the views.
Crosbie Heights BOUNDARY STREETS: Between Highway 412 (Sand Springs Expressway) and the Arkansas River and between the Inner Dispersal Loop (IDL) and South 25th West Avenue ESTABLISHED: 1908
IDL
S 25TH W AVE
HIGHWAY 412
ARKANSAS RIVER
Why is this house you? I treasure the fact that it is old and sturdy, pretty but not lavish, and has character, some of it rather quirky, and is very functional. What’s your favorite detail of the home? Of the neighborhood? I love the view of both downtown and the river and beyond from the portecochere, which has access from my upstairs bathroom. I see beautiful sunrises and sunsets all the time. And the proximity to downtown has gotten more and more valuable — especially now that the trail to Riverside has reopened. And I like the fact that the houses have basements and the neighborhood has alleys.
Crosbie Heights features many Craftsman homes.
What was unexpected about living in this particular home? The historical significance of the neighborhood, from its having been part of the Creek allotment, to the changes wrought by cattle drives, railroads and then the discovery of oil. It is a microcosm of the history of Tulsa. I also liked the fact that a doctor and his family once owned it for almost 80 years.
KEY LANDMARKS: Nogales Avenue Baptist Church, 102 S. Nogales Ave.; the Cave House, 1623 Charles Page Blvd. TYPES OF HOMES: Craftsman Bungalows
What made you fall in love with the home? Its proximity to the river. Also, the cartoonish fat columns in front. Does owning this home check any box in your life-must list? Living in a more than 100-year-old house. Being a part of something (the neighborhood) larger than me over a long period of time.
TulsaPeople.com
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MARSHALL ST
Brady Heights BOUNDARY STREETS: Marshall Street on the north; the Inner Dispersal Loop on the south; the alley between North Cheyenne Avenue and Main Street on the east; and the Osage Expressway (LL Tisdale Parkway) right of way on the west. TYPES OF HOMES: Inspired by Queen Anne, Prairie School, Victorian, Georgian Revival and Bungalow
MAIN ST
KEY LANDMARKS: Tate Brady’s Arlington mansion, 620 N. Denver Ave.; Tisdale Food Forest along Tisdale Parkway
OSAGE EXPRESSWAY
ESTABLISHED: 1906; Placed on National Register of Historic Places in 1980
IDL
The Widells fell in love with many of the home’s original features, including the natural wood coffered ceilings and floors. They managed to incorporate modern touches while still letting the home’s historic features shine.
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Brady Heights Brady Heights has been gaining a lot of Tulsans’ attention as one of the most up-and-coming neighborhoods in the city for at least the last decade. As Tulsa’s first neighborhood placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980, it has seen a steady influx of invested property owners who love the location for its Craftsman Bungalows and historical significance. They’ve been rehabbing once shabby — even severely dilapidated — houses and turning them into the vibrant homes they once were in the early 1900s, when it became one of Tulsa’s first neighborhoods. People who grew up in the neighborhood are moving from other cities to come back to Brady Heights, and residents from Tulsa suburbs and south Tulsa are leaving their gated communities to move to the area just north of downtown. Dani Widell, a local home remodeler, and her husband Will lived in downtown Tulsa long before many of the newer apartments and condos sprung up. They lived in an apartment at the Tribune Lofts, so they both could walk to work downtown and enjoy the lifestyle. But they started to outgrow the space and struggled with guest parking, especially on a busy evening with a concert at the BOK Center or a game at ONEOK Field. “It got to the point where we couldn’t invite my mom down for dinner on a Tuesday,” Dani Widell says. “We wanted a driveway, and a garage and a guest bedroom.” They knew they wanted to buy in either Brady Heights or nearby Owen Park, and after a year of searching, they found a house that needed some hefty renovating in Brady Heights. They bought it the day it went on the market and Why is this house you? lived there a little over a year, until they heard about another home just down the street going up for sale, so they I spent hundreds of hours planning bought it and sold their first home for a good profit. and designing every aspect of the home. Not “But I did a lot of the work and labor myself,” Widell only materials, colors and finishes but, more says. importantly, salvaging every bit of the original Their current home is different — they don’t plan to craftsmanship of the house and, at the same sell it anytime soon. time, providing 21st century functionality “We bought it to flip, but my husband and I just fell in and still maintaining a budget. Old houses love with it. This is a forever house,” she says. are never finished; there is always more to be The couple has put a lot of labor into the home, which done. It becomes almost an obsessive hobby. had been converted into a duplex when they bought it. You spend so much of your time thinking about Once it was even a triplex after World War II, much like what has to be done and how to do it that the many homes in the area that were transformed out of the house can’t help but take on your personality. need for multi-family housing. The Widells adjusted the floor plans to make it a What’s your favorite detail of the four-bedroom home, removing and adding walls to make home? The original coffered ceilings. In a more modern space, while putting thought into keeping over 100 years, nobody ever decided to take a the home’s historical features alive. “We pulled out a wall to reveal the staircase — it had paintbrush to them. I can’t tell you how rare been covered to have a private entrance for the upstairs that is. unit,” she says. They reconfigured the upstairs to include a master, Of the neighborhood? a spare bedroom, an upstairs laundry, a large bathroom The Community Garden. It’s the social hub of and a private suite area for guests. They transformed the the neighborhood. Not only do we grow food basement into a workout area and storage space, and together, but in the summer, we have movie they even remodeled a guesthouse in the back. nights for the kids and cookouts. “You make a budget, pick a wish list and then think about what makes the most sense for a family; you have What made you fall in love with to be flexible,” she says. “You know in a 100-year-old the home? One look at this house tells house, the closets aren’t going to be huge.” you that the original owner loved the warmth But living in Brady Heights is much more than just and natural feel of wood. Craftsmen handhaving a quick commute — by car or by foot — to work. cut and laid the hardwood floors in intricate It’s about the community; one that has a reputation for patterns and the wood glows with age and diversity and community involvement. “Our neighborhood association is a nonprofit, so it life. The ceilings are coffered throughout exists not only to help the neighborhood but to help the the entirety of the ground floor and original community of Tulsa,” Widell says. “We support local Brady wood windows make the house feel warm and Heights residents and Tulsa businesses.” inviting. I bought this house because I saw the
Dani Widell moved from downtown to Brady Heights and began remodeling properties that bring modern amenities and style to historic homes.
wood and had to bring it back to life.
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Tracy Park When Mary Atkinson found her home in Tracy Park nearly 20 years ago, she was something of a frustrated renter. She had sold her home in Maple Ridge and then rented for a few months until she could find a permanent residence. “I thought surely I can find something, so I never really unpacked,” Atkinson says. “I spent every free minute, when I wasn’t working, out driving around. I had lived in Tulsa for 20 years prior, but I never saw this neighborhood.” When she lived in Maple Ridge, Atkinson loved its proximity to Utica Square, where she owned a store for many years. Now that she’s working downtown at the Tulsa County Courthouse, she enjoys her quick commute — but living in an apartment or condo downtown wouldn’t suit her. “I’ve never even thought about not having a house,” she says. “Being one who has always had dogs — I like having a yard. I just like to have that spot of greenery as opposed to living on, say, a third floor with a cement balcony.” Tracy Park is small and tucked away near the Inner Dispersal Loop, which required razing most of the original neighborhood for its construction. The area was created in the early 1920s as single-family homes for oil industry workers — not the barons, but the likely middle class management and other professionals. Now it consists of a few dozen houses between East 11th and 13th streets, near Oaklawn Cemetery. “It’s a very desirable neighborhood and will continue to evolve,” Pollard James says. “It’s a lot like Riverview in that it’s got a dedicated fan base.” Atkinson says when she drove by her soon-to-behome and saw the for-sale sign, she was intrigued by its appearance, best described as an English Cottage style. “It was kind of serendipitous,” she says. “This neighborhood has a very good mix of things. I have found it to be wonderful with great sidewalks, and lots of houses have front porches, so in nice weather people are all out. People walk all about the neighborhood, too.” And Tracy Park neighbors keep an eye out for each other, she says. If someone spots trouble, they don’t hesitate to investigate or call the police. “I have been here almost 20 years, the longest I’ve lived anywhere,” she says. “There’s a reason — it’s my absolute favorite house, I love everything about it.” This home’s English Cottage appearance and proximity to downtown are just a couple reasons Mary Atkinson settled in Tracy Park nearly 20 years ago.
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The original kitchen sink is one of the homeowner’s favorite details.
Why is this house you? I like things that are out of the ordinary. There are so many little quirks, from the original hardware to the nonsymmetrical layout. What’s your favorite detail of the home? I love the kitchen sink. It’s just incredible, as is the bathtub, and both are original to the 1920s home. I love the art deco style. Of the neighborhood? For me, it’s perfectly located. I like that it’s small and contained, and not going to grow. And, there are so many different styles of architecture.
Many original details remained in the home when Atkinson moved in almost 20 years ago.
What was unexpected about living in this particular home? I took out a wall upstairs to form a master bedroom, and put in a nice closet. I hadn’t thought about how old houses wouldn’t have big closets. What made you fall in love with the home? I liked the architecture, and I didn’t have to do a lot to it.
S PEORIA AVE
Tracy Park
PWY
W EX
RRO
EN A
TYPES OF HOMES: Bungalows, mixed styles, cottages and eclectic styles
ROK
KEY LANDMARKS: The Adah Robinson residence is at 1119 S. Owasso Ave.
E 11TH STREET/TRACY PARK
IDL/B
ESTABLISHED: 1920s; Tracy Park was placed in the Oklahoma Landmarks Inventory in July 1978, and the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
E 13TH STREET
BOUNDARY STREETS: East 11th Street and Tracy Park on the north; South Peoria Avenue on the east; IDL/Broken Arrow Expressway on west/southwest; and East 13th Street on the south TulsaPeople.com
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The Steinbergs have a view of downtown Tulsa from their master bedroom.
When furnishing the home, Robin Steinberg opted for antiques and second-hand goods that complemented her home’s era.
Why is this house you? It feels very homey; it’s important to me to feel like I’m nested somewhere. What’s your favorite detail of the home? The beautiful light you can get everywhere in the house. The second-floor porch really sold me and my husband on the house. Of the neighborhood? The neighborhood is filled with interesting homes. Each is unique and different, though unified by architectural style. That’s what I love about it — it’s not cookie cutter. People made it their own. And the duck pond. The ducks are extraordinarily well fed and extraordinarily aggressive. What was unexpected about living in this particular home? The experience of having so much space is unusual for people from New York City. To have people stay over is a treat. The lack of grocery stores, restaurants and other resources in this area is surprising. It’s a real trip to get to a grocery store; it’s surprising no one has invested in north Tulsa in things that would be frequented. What made you fall in love with the home? It was warm and welcoming and a little oldfashioned in a way we found comforting. It makes it feel like a home. Does owning this home check any box in your life-must list? Homeownership was never on my list; neither was Tulsa. I was happy living in apartments. But the work we’re doing drew me here. It seemed the natural thing to do.
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“The neighborhood is filled with interesting homes. Each is unique ... it’s not cookie cutter.” — ROBIN STEINBERG
Many of Owen Park’s homes date back more than 100 years. Original details can be found throughout David Feige and Robin Steinberg’s (below) home, such as the fireplace, woodwork and light fixtures, like the one seen below.
Owen Park
W EDISON ST OWEN PARK ZENITH AVE
Robin Steinberg is a long way from home, but found her first permanent residence in Owen Park just west of downtown. The New York City native started visiting Tulsa through her work with Bronx Defenders, but for the past six months Steinberg has spearheaded the creation of Still She Rises, Tulsa. The nonprofit, which originated from the Bronx Defenders, advocates for and legally represents women from north Tulsa in the criminal justice system. The office opened its doors in January in north Tulsa, and because Steinberg was working and representing women in the area, she wanted to live close to where they live. “I’ve never owned a house before. Growing up in New York City, I always rented apartments,” says Steinberg, who bought her two-story home with her husband David Feige last May and moved permanently to Tulsa in November. “I felt like this was the right place for me. I looked at the ZIP codes and looked for economic and racial diversity. For me personally, I didn’t want to live in a homogenized or gated neighborhood.” Owen Park was founded in 1910 and most of the homes are over 100 years old — mostly Craftsman Bungalows. Steinberg says the home reminded her of her grandmother’s home in Pennsylvania and “the upstairs floor creaked and I can see a view of the tall buildings. That view reminded me of New York, in a way.” The large home was in perfect condition when she bought it — a must for her because she was busy opening the new Still She Rises office, and her team from New York would be staying with her so much that she needed the extra sleeping space. The original stained-glass windows and designs in the upstairs bathroom tile were also an added touch, as well as the two porches. “I’ve always wanted a porch, and the upstairs one especially drew me in; it even has a swing,” she says. Feige, a television writer, also is partial to the second story porch and spends much of his writing time on the swing, even in winter. Since she had to practically furnish the home from scratch, Steinberg wanted to choose things that weren’t from a big-box store, but rather pieces that seemed to go with the home, so she started searching through local second-hand and consignment shops. “It taught me so much about Tulsa,” she says. The master bedroom is a great space for Steinberg because during the winter when the trees are bare, she can wake up and look out to see the downtown Tulsa skyline. “It’s like New York,” she says. “I didn’t want to live in a bubble here in Tulsa because I knew we were going to be working with people with real needs and people with different backgrounds. That’s everything I like about here.” The one thing Steinberg is still getting used to has nothing to do with her view or her neighborhood. It’s the noise — or lack thereof. “For me the quiet is complicated,” she says. TP
Owen Park HIGHWAY 412
ESTABLISHED: 1910 KEY LANDMARKS: Owen Park and its Stone Bridge and resting site of Tulsa’s Oldest House on West Edison Place; Washington Irving Monument, West Easton Street and North Vancouver Avenue
BOUNDARY STREETS: Owen Park on the east, the Keystone Expressway (Highway 412) on the south, West Edison Street on the north, and Zenith Avenue on the west TYPES OF HOMES: Mostly Craftsman Bungalows
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Still fabulous at 40 The Tulsa Performing Arts Center enters its fi fth decade of bringing culture to Tulsans. BY MARNIE FERNANDEZ
It’s no secret that the arts bring people together. And no one knows that better than John Scott, director of the Tulsa Performing Arts Center, who has been at the helm of the prominent arts organization for 30 of its 40 years.
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s the center prepares for its 40th anniversary celebration on March 12, Scott reflects on the impact the PAC has provided to Tulsa and the region over the past four decades. “Long before oil barons brought wealth and fame to the region, we defined ourselves as a cultural city,” Scott says. “And because of the vision of civic leaders years ago, we have this amazing facility that allows our legacy of cultured sophistication to continue.” To celebrate this historic milestone, the PAC Trust is presenting a gala performance on March 12 at 7 p.m. The concert will feature jazz vocalist Jane Monheit with Grammy Award-winning trumpet player Nicholas Payton and the Tulsa Symphony. “But we actually started celebrating last July,” Scott says. “With the launch of the 2016-2017 season, every arts organization was asked to des-
ignate at least of one of their performances as a “40th Anniversary Celebration” show. The Tulsa PAC opened its doors in March 1977. Constructed with what was then a unique combination of public and private funds, the PAC is owned and operated by the City of Tulsa. “The center was originally intended to provide a modern facility to house local, nonprofit performing arts organizations,” Scott says. “Today, many local arts organizations still utilize the facility, but we also bring in shows from regional and national groups.” Public funds for building the PAC were provided by a 1973 bond issue. To encourage approval, civic leaders John H. Williams and Leta Chapman posed a challenge to Tulsa citizens. If citizens would vote to fund half of the total cost of a new performing arts center, Williams and Chapman would raise a matching amount in private dollars. TulsaPeople.com
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Led by Mayor Robert J. LaFortune, the campaign was a success as voters overwhelmingly approved the challenge and the Tulsa Performing Art Center (nicknamed “Everyone’s Place”) held its fi rst concert on March 19, 1977, featuring the Tulsa Philharmonic and jazz great Ella Fitzgerald. Since that inaugural concert, the Tulsa PAC has undergone many changes. “Over the years, our staff has always endeavored to keep the PAC equipped with the latest and best in theater technology,” Scott says. “Patron comfort has been a priority since day one, and we have made many non-visible improvements such as computerized tickets and online ticket purchasing. We were also one of the fi rst arts centers in the country to establish our own website.” The facility also underwent a major retrofit in the early 1990s to help the PAC become more accessible to people with disabilities. In 2000, the PAC completed an expansion that included an additional studio theater, a large reception hall and an additional suite of restrooms. The PAC will also receive a makeover during the upcoming summer months. The lobbies of Chapman Music Hall on East Th ird Street and the other lobbies on East Second Street will receive new carpet, paint, wall coverings, lighting and signage. “For the fi rst time since the building opened in 1977, all these public spaces will have a cohesive appearance,” Scott says. Looking ahead to the next 40 years, the Tulsa PAC is actively working to engage younger audiences. “In this day and age, engaging younger audiences is all about social media,” Scott says. “Younger theatergoers are constantly monitoring the world around them on electronic devices through various social media platforms.” Scott and his team are working to attract younger patrons more directly by presenting a constant flow of information through social media outlets and encouraging two-way communication. “Younger audiences are the ticket buyers of tomorrow,” he says. “We want to hear about the programs they want to come to the PAC, and we work closely with all our clients to improve our collective reach in this area.” In addition to the 40th Anniversary Gala Concert, the PAC offers several more performances to complete its anniversary season.
John Scott
The Tulsa PAC 40th Anniversary Concert March 12, 7 p.m. Jane Monheit with Special Guest Nicholas Payton and the Tulsa Symphony Chapman Music Hall Tickets are $25, $40, $55 and $90. The $90 VIP ticket price includes prime seating and a post-show reception with the performers.
During the month of April, patrons can look forward to dance troupe Black Grace, the musical “Dirty Dancing: The Classic Story On Stage” and Tulsa Symphony’s rendition of “A German Requiem” by Johannes Brahms and more. May brings Theatre Tulsa’s production of “Jesus Christ Superstar,” the Tulsa premiere of the Broadway smash “Something Rotten!” and Tulsa Opera’s “Tosca.” The season closes with the Tulsa Ballet’s “The Snow Queen,” Celebrity Attraction’s presentation of the children’s classic “Matilda The Musical,” Tulsa Project Theatre’s production of “Little Shop of Horrors” and the popular SummerStage Festival. “ The arts have a profound impact on all facets of a community,” Scott says. “We look forward to contributing to Tulsa’s quality of life for many generations to come.” TP
FROM WORLD-CLASS BALLET TO A STIMULATING LECTURE SERIES AND EVERYTHING IN BETWEEN, HERE ARE ORGANIZATIONS THAT PERFORM AT THE PAC: Tulsa Opera • Tulsa Ballet • Tulsa Symphony • Theatre Tulsa • American Theater Co. Theatre North • Tulsa Town Hall • Chamber Music Tulsa • Choregus Productions Theatre Pops • Tulsa Project Theatre • Celebrity Attractions 52
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
LIGHTS, CAMERA, ACTION!
FROM NEW YORK TO LOS ANGELES — THE BIGGEST ACTS TO LAND IN T-TOWN THE STARS • Ella Fitzgerald, inaugural performance at the PAC in 1977 • Luciano Pavarotti, 1981 • Itzhak Perlman, 1994 • Andre Watts, 1989 • Beverly Sills, 2016 • Joshua Bell, 2016 • Michael Buble’, 2006
• Jerry Seinfeld, 2004, 2006, 2009, 2011, 2014 • Chris Botti, 2007, 2017 • Cathy Rigby, 2005 • Tony Bennett, 2013, 2015 • Steve Martin, 2011 • David Sedaris, 2016, 2009, 2014, • Kelli O’Hara, 2016 • Judy Collins, 2016
THE SHOWS • “The Phantom of the Opera” Set the all-time attendance record of 94,588 with the five-week run in 1996
• “The Book of Mormon” • “Wicked” • “Disney’s The Lion King” • “Jersey Boys”
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JANE A N
E V E N I N G
W I T H
MONHEIT WITH SPECIAL GUEST
NICHOLAS PAYTON
THE LOOP
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AND THE
TULSA SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 2017 Don’t miss the bus!
Use the real time Bus Tracker App available at tulsatransit.org Scan the QR code and keep track of the Loop with the Tulsa Transit Bus Tracker App.
TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER CHAPMAN MUSIC HALL
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TICKETS @ TULSAPAC.COM OR CALL 918.596.7111 54
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017 monheit_tulsapeople_ad.indd 1
1/13/17 10:22 AM
BEYOND THE CONTAINER
T
he Boxyard, a development created from repurposed shipping containers, is downtown Tulsa’s newest shopping destination. Inspired by similar international sites, the Tulsa Boxyard is home to a mix of clothiers, retailers, services and commissary vendors, including:
SEE P. 56 FOR MORE ON THE BOXYARD.
Abelina’s Boutique Beau and Arrow Blue Sky Bank Bottles Beads Antiquities Boxyard Comics Downtown Dry Cleaners Dwelling Spaces and JoeBot’s Coffee East + West Tulsa Landella
Modern Mess Open Container Rose Rock Microcreamery Sole Massage The STEMcell The Sweet Boutique The Water Co. Tonsorial WirWar Tulsa
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Proof eyewear AVAILABLE AT DWELLING SPACES This Idaho-based brand’s lightweight, stylish sunglasses are handcrafted from unexpected materials, including wood, skateboards and aluminum cans. $90-$150.
Leather feather earrings AVAILABLE AT BOTTLES BEADS ANTIQUITIES Each pair is lightweight, hand-painted and one-of-a-kind. $17-$20.
Topo Designs backpack AVAILABLE AT EAST + WEST TULSA Clean, simple designs, available in multiple textiles; all made at the foot of the Colorado Rockies. $85-$168.
Casey Stowe
Geode necklace AVAILABLE AT ABELINA’S BOUTIQUE Each stone is earthy, chic and unique, in various shapes and springtime colors. $10-$16.
Allosaurus skull replica
STOREFRONT
UNFINISHED BUSINESS SHIPPING CONTAINERS TURNED SHOPPING DESTINATION IN DOWNTOWN BY ANNA HOLTON-DEAN
T
he newly opened Boxyard sits downtown, its 39 modified and modernized shipping containers perfectly juxtaposed against the older landscape. After circling the globe for eight to ten years, they are now permanently home to an eclectic mix of 20 retailers. “There’s a little something for everybody and something for everyone to discover,” says developer/owner Casey Stowe of Nelson+Stowe Development. “You can come for ice cream and find a comic book, or come for a haircut and check out the price of microscopes.”
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With repurposing always in mind, no space is wasted — even the roof deck is used for photo ops or simply hanging out. Tenants have the option to use the rooftop for events, and plans are in the works for nighttime stargazing parties, courtesy of the STEMcell’s telescopes, once spring temperatures rise. Stowe was inspired after seeing a similar development on a trip to London four and a half years ago. “I was fascinated by the unique use of space,” he says. So he brought the idea to life in Tulsa. Though it’s a simple, clean design, Stowe says much goes into modifying the containers to take them from ship-shape to shop-shape. A lot of structural steel must be cut away and replaced. Choosing the businesses to fill each space and complete his vision, however, was a much simpler process. “I knew what I wanted,” he says. “I could hear in (the store owners’) voices when I spoke to each one that they were passionate ... And if they are successful, the Boxyard will be successful. “Through that and a lot of luck, I created what I wanted — a good mix. You can shop, drink a glass of wine, eat dinner, get a massage and browse the boutiques all at once. “There was a little bit of luck, a little bit of planning and a whole lot of hard work.” TP
AVAILABLE AT THE STEMCELL A conversation piece of prehistoric proportions made of high-quality, museum-grade materials. $1,995.
Skin & Bones skincare AVAILABLE AT MODERN MESS Cleanser, moisturizer and salve locally made with organic, therapeutic-grade essential oils. $24-$48.
Vapur Anti-bottle AVAILABLE AT THE WATER CO. This eco-friendly, foldable water bottle comes in .7 liter and 1 liter. $16-$18.
@tulsaboxyard 502 E. THIRD ST. | TULSABOXYARD.COM FACEBOOK.COM/TULSABOXYARD
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Allison Sheffield 918.951.7009
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Worldly treasures IF YOU LONG TO TRAVEL THE GLOBE, YOU DON’T NEED TO VENTURE FARTHER THAN DOWNTOWN TULSA. BY KENDALL BARROW
C
olors of Etnika offers jewelry, handbags and gifts from destinations near and far. Owner Karla Aguirre has stocked her shop, located in the Brady Arts District for the past five years, with merchandise from her homeland of Guatemala as well as her travels to Thailand, Indonesia, Vietnam and Lebanon, just to name a few. Studio K Marina is her newest line of jewelry, which she designs and makes locally. Pictured are bracelets from this collection; prices range from $29.95-$44.95. They rest atop a hand-loomed, handdyed scarf from Guatemala. Each scarf takes one woman four days to make and is 100 percent organic, with the dye color coming from coconuts; $29.95 each. TP
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VOTE TO WIN A $500 DINING PACKAGE…
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GARDENING
No space? NO PROBLEM!
SPRI NG EVENTS Mark your calendars. Spring has sprung and local festivals and events feature gardening glory this season.
Tulsa Garden Center’s Springfest APRIL 7-8 | 9 A.M.–6 P.M. TULSA GARDEN CENTER Plants, gardening equipment, outdoor art and more will be for sale, but educational opportunities with experts and a Kidzone featuring a worm display and birdhouse contest bring extra fun.
Master Gardener Spring Plant Sale APRIL 13 | 9 A.M.-7 P.M. CENTRAL PARK HALL AT EXPO SQUARE Natives, herbs, vegetables, grasses and flowering bedding plants are for sale.
Jenks Herb and Plant Festival APRIL 15 | 8 A.M.-4 P.M. JENKS’ MAIN STREET The Jenks Garden Club’s annual celebration, where shoppers can find a variety of plants, garden supplies and home goods from local vendors.
28th annual Sand Springs Herbal Affair and Festival APRIL 22 | 9 A.M.-4 P.M. DOWNTOWN SAND SPRINGS Buy herbs, perennials, native and heirloom plants, herbal products, gardening supplies, décor and more.
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BY ASHLEY VAN HORNE
MAKE GARDENING WORK IN SMALL QUARTERS WITH THESE FIVE TIPS.
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ven downtown dwellers with limited outdoor square footage can enjoy a decorative boost from easy-to-grow gardening arrangements. We sat down with Paul James, marketing manager for Tulsa’s Southwood Landscape and Garden Center, to discuss five space-saving tips.
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PLANT UP, NOT OUT For a sleek, contemporary look, those short on space are turning to vertical, or wall-mounted, planters — an arrangement that is perhaps more artistic than practical. “Ideally, vertical or wall-mounted planters will have a reservoir at their base to collect water so you don’t stain the walls or floor below when you water them,” James warns. “My favorite plants for a vertical arrangement are succulents.”
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CHEF’S DELIGHT: WINDOW BOXES OF HERBS Spruce up a boring windowsill and invite fresh aromas in by planting easy-to-care-for culinary herbs. “Window boxes can make an otherwise boring exterior wall come alive — literally,” James says. “They create a garden that can be viewed from inside and outside your loft or apartment.” James endorses using heavy-duty mounting hardware, and swears by the hayrack model, which is made of metal and lined with coir — an all-natural and sustainable lining material made from coconut fiber and used for hanging baskets and window boxes.
HANG FLOWERS HIGH Save your precious patio square footage by taking your garden arrangements up high with hanging flower baskets. Although there are lots of different styles and materials available, James remains partial to metal wire baskets lined with coir. “Given that baskets are typically above eye level, it’s best to use plants that trail over the edges of the baskets such as petunias, lantana and creeping Jenny,” James suggests. “If you prefer to try a hanging basket of edibles, consider oregano, thyme, cherry tomatoes or strawberries.”
FOLLOW THE THRILLER, FILLER, SPILLER METHOD A tried-and-true method for small-space success is to make sure container arrangements employ a thriller, a filler and a spiller. “The thriller is typically a strong, upright-growing plant placed in the center or toward the back. The filler is smaller, and it’s important that it is shorter and wider than it is tall. And the spiller is anything that will trail over the edges of the container,” James says. While almost any combination works in a sunny spot, James’ go-to combination for shade is an autumn fern as the thriller, black mondo grass as the filler and a creeping Jenny spiller.
EMBRACE BLACK THUMBPROOF SUCCULENTS When you absolutely have no outdoor space, bring the outdoors in with low maintenance houseplants. For those with the dreaded black thumb, James recommends succulents, including cacti. “While they require a fair amount of light, they practically thrive on neglect — they need zero fertilizer and very little water,” James promises. “For a more tropical look, you can’t go wrong with the ZZ plant (Zamioculcas zamiifolia). It’s incredibly easy to grow, and its waxy leaves are gorgeous,” James says. TP
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FIRST STREET FLEA
WEEKEND GETAWAYS
Downtown has plenty of shopping venues, but a new venture delivers on all things unique. Once a month, First Street Flea welcomes more than a dozen vendors to 823 E. First St., where a carefully curated selection of goods is for sale — from books and records to furniture, collectibles, clothing and jewelry. Plus, there’s always a food vendor on site, like Chimera with its craft coffee and breakfast tacos. First Street Flea is open 9 a.m.-3 p.m. on select Sundays. Mark your calendars for March 19 and April 23. FACEBOOK.COM/FIRSTSTREETFLEA
LET’S DO BRUNCH
Brunch is big downtown and local eateries cater to the crowds every Saturday and Sunday. Bramble’s brunch menu features standards like omelets and pancakes, but with a twist. Try the savory and spicy white cheddar short stack topped with jalapeño maple syrup. Weekday breakfast and lunch hotspot The New Atlas Grill has expanded its hours to include brunch from 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Saturdays in the art deco-laden Atlas Life Building. Inside the historic Ambassador Hotel, try the Chalkboard’s famous Bloody Marys and the Okie Benedict — two biscuits, sausage patties, poached eggs and sausage gravy. BRAMBLE BREAKFAST AND BAR 311 E. Second St. | 918-933-4495 | bramblebartulsa.com NEW ATLAS GRILL 415 S. Boston Ave. | 918-583-3111 | newatlasgrill.com THE CHALKBOARD 1324 S. Main St. | 918-582-1964 | chalkboardtulsa.com
WALKING TOURS
Destination: DOWNTOWN BECOME A TOURIST IN YOUR OWN TOWN.
Whether you’re a regular or only visit the city center a couple times a year, there’s plenty you probably haven’t experienced in downtown Tulsa. Be a Tulsa tourist with some of these weekend ideas. — ANNE BROCKMAN 64
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
918-583-5550 | tulsaarchitecture.com
THE PERFORMING ARTS
Downtown has been home to the arts for decades. Up for some musical theater? Try “Motown the Musical” March 14-19 or “Sweeney Todd” March 3-12. Tulsa Ballet’s performs “Swan Lake” March 24-26 — all at the Tulsa Performing Arts Center. And, while big names like Miranda Lambert and Kansas will headline shows at the BOK Center and Brady Theater this month, don’t forget to check out local acts at venues like the Shrine, Vanguard, the Fur Shop and more. TULSA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER 110 E. Second St. | 918-596-7122 | tulsapac.com TP
VALERIE GRANT
First Street Flea
The Tulsa Foundation for Architecture hosts Second Saturday walking tours where expert guides lead informative and educational tours of some of downtown’s most storied districts. Each month’s tour carries a different theme. In March, modernism is the subject followed by historic renovations in April. Reservations are suggested. The tour costs $10 with all proceeds going back to TFA.
Tulsa Botanic
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Fine apparel www.TraversMahanApparel.com South Lewis at 81st • The Plaza • 918-296-4100
Appliances for EVERY room
5313 S. Mingo | 918-622-7692 | MetroAppliancesAndMore.com TulsaPeople.com
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The ONLY Master of Human Relations Degree offered in Oklahoma.
BECAUSE THERE’S ONLY ONE
HEALTH March is Colon Cancer Awareness Month. Cindy Lou Barraza, pictured with her puppy Devon, is on a journey to promote colonoscopies at age 50.
Worth discussing
T
Kendall MHR Graduate, OU-Tulsa Recruiter
Student
The American Cancer Society recommends using one of the below screening tests: Flexible sigmoidoscopy every five years | Colonoscopy every 10 years | Double-contrast barium enema every five years | CT colonography (virtual colonoscopy) every five years
Learn more at www.TulsaSooners.com The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution. www.ou.edu/eoo
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TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
OU-Tulsa_TPVert_Camp4.indd 8
ulsa children’s author Cindy Lou Barraza is best known for enlightening young people about diversity through her educational book, “Mexiroo.” But nearly three years ago, she found another issue worth discussing: colon cancer. In her mid-50s, Barraza fell victim to the disease and blames it on her failure to have a recommended routine test for the 50-plus set — a colonoscopy. Now, she’s on a journey to promote the importance of the procedure by sharing her story. “My oncologist made it clear that if I had had a colonoscopy at age 50, it (cancer) would MARCH 25 have been caught as a polyp, removed and Get Your Rear in never made it to the cancer stage,” Barraza Gear Tulsa says. “I made every excuse in the book and 6:30 a.m., registration; 7:45 a.m., if I can be an advocate to other people to get kids’ fun run; 8 a.m., 10K and colonoscopies, I’ll feel like my job on earth is 5K; 10 a.m., awards and closing fulfilled.” ceremony. Guthrie Green, 111 E. M.B. Brady St. $25-$35, entry fee Most insurance carriers consider a colobefore March 22; $25-$40, after noscopy a wellness exam at age 50. March 23. Benefits Colon Cancer Her first symptom was pain in her right Coalition. Visit facebook.com/ abdomen near the appendix. “That’s where getyourrearingeartulsa. the tumor was growing, and it was pushing on the appendix,” Barraza says. In August 2014, over a period of one or two weeks, the pain became more intense. Her doctor did a scan, scheduled an appendectomy, and after realizing that it was a tumor, removed it that month. “I was in the hospital six days and the day I was released, the doctor told me I had colon cancer and referred me to an oncologist,” she says. She began chemotherapy in November 2014, and finished in April 2015. A colonoscopy followed to make sure everything was clear. “I always wonder if the cancer has come back or when it will come back,” she says. “I do not take anything for granted, and I am so grateful to be here.” Colon cancer works silently and is the No. 2 leading cause of cancer deaths among men and women in the United States, with lung cancer being No. 1, according to the Centers for Disease Control. — MINNIE PAYNE
1/26/17 4:45 PM
CREATIVE DIRECTOR Todd Pyland
WARDROBE STYLIST Shannon Schroeder
PRODUCTION ASSISTANT Rubria Rose
PHOTOGRAPHER Jeremy Charles
MAKEUP & HAIR ARTIST Jordan Best
ASSISTANT CAMERA Tanner Albert
ART DIRECTOR & PRODUCER Tony Li
PHOTOGRAPHY ASSISTANTS Jamie Alsabrook Marissa Burger Kyle Bell
EXTRAS Hasset Reshedo Quincy McSpadden Daniel Henry for Linda Layman Agency
CINEMATOGRAPHER Grant Sweetwood SET DESIGN & DECORATOR Stacy Suvino
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SPECIAL THANKS TO Beshara’s Formal Wear Cohlmia’s Dillard’s Woodland Hills Mall Ever Something Integrity Lighting Jo and June Linda Layman Agency Safari’s Sanctuary Saks Fifth Ave Tulsa Stems TPC Studios (Talmadge Powell Creative)
COX BUSINESS CENTER | BESTPARTYINTOWN.ORG
Congratulations and thank you.
Saint Francis Health System is very proud to acknowledge and congratulate the Warren Clinic physicians named among Tulsa People’s Best Doctors for 2017. For their dedication to patient care, commitment to excellence and improvement of lives in our community, this honor is well deserved. We are thankful to have them as members of the Saint Francis family.
Cardiovascular Disease R. Douglas Ensley, M.D. Michael Spain, M.D. Geriatric Medicine Insung Kim, M.D. Internal Medicine James K. Bailey, M.D. Janis Finer, M.D. Robert B. Hauger, M.D. Joe L. Reese, M.D.
918-494-2200 | saintfrancis.com
Medical Oncology and Hematology Joseph P. Lynch, M.D. Obstetrics and Gynecology Patricia A. Daily, M.D. J. Stephen Jones, M.D. Lora J. Larson, M.D. Teressa J. McHenry, M.D. Pediatrics/General Anne M. Harrington, M.D. J. Perry Ward, M.D.
Gallup® has audited and certified Best Doctors, Inc.’s database of physicians, and its companion The Best Doctors in America® List, as using the highest industry stan-
dards survey methodology and processes. These lists are excerpted from The Best Doctors in America® 2015-2016 database, which includes over 40,000 U.S. doc-
tors in more than 40 medical specialties and 400 subspecialties. The Best Doctors in America® database is compiled and maintained by Best Doctors, Inc. For more
information, visit www.bestdoctors.com or contact Best Doctors by telephone at
800-675-1199 or by e-mail at research@bestdoctors.com. Please note that lists of doctors are not available on the Best Doctors Web site.
Best Doctors, Inc., has used its best efforts in assembling material for this list,
but does not warrant that the information contained herein is complete or accurate, and does not assume, and hereby disclaims, any liability to any person or other party
Copyright 2017, Best Doctors, Inc. Used under license, all rights reserved. This list, or any parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form without written permission from Best Doctors, Inc. No commercial use of the information in this list may be made without the permission of Best Doctors, Inc. No fees may be charged, directly or indirectly, for the use of the information in this list without permission. BEST DOCTORS, THE BEST DOCTORS IN AMERICA, and the Star-in-Cross Logo are trademarks of Best Doctors, Inc., registered in the U.S. and other countries, and are used under license.
for any loss or damage caused by errors or omissions herein, whether such errors or omissions result from negligence, accident, or any other cause.
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Best Doctors, Inc. is transforming and improving health care by bringing together the best medical minds in the world to help identify the right diagnosis and treatment. The company’s innovative, peer-to-peer consultation service offers a new way for physicians to collaborate with other physicians to ensure patients receive the best care. Headquartered in Boston, MA, the global company seamlessly integrates its services with employers’ other health-related benefits, to serve more than 30 million members in every major region of the world. More than a traditional second opinion, Best Doctors delivers a comprehensive evaluation of a patient’s medical condition — providing value to both patients and treating physicians. By utilizing Best Doctors, members have access to the brightest minds in medicine to ensure the right diagnosis and treatment plan.
ANESTHESIOLOGY David L. Akers Center for Plastic Surgery 1844 E. 15th St. 918-749-7177 John L. Aldridge Associated Anesthesiologists 6839 S. Canton Ave. 918-494-0612 Scott E. Ames Associated Anesthesiologists 6839 S. Canton Ave. 918-494-0612 William P. Bailey Associated Anesthesiologists 6839 S. Canton Ave. 918-494-0612 James S. (Jim) Day Tulsa Spine and Specialty Hospital Olympia Anesthesia 6901 S. Olympia Ave. 918-388-5723 Jonathan D. Friend II St. John Medical Center Department of Anesthesia 1923 S. Utica Ave. 918-744-2333 Thomas D. Gillock Associated Anesthesiologists 6839 S. Canton Ave. 918-494-0612 Dennis W. Morris Associated Anesthesiologists 6839 S. Canton Ave. 918-494-0612 74
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Richard W. Smarinsky St. John Medical Center Department of Anesthesia 1923 S. Utica Ave. 918-744-2333 Mark Waller St. John Medical Center Department of Anesthesia 1923 S. Utica Ave. 918-744-2333 William Watson II St. John Medical Center Department of Anesthesia 1923 S. Utica Ave. 918-744-2333 Kent Woolard Associated Anesthesiologists 6839 S. Canton Ave. 918-494-0612 CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE R. Douglas Ensley Warren Clinic - Cardiology of Tulsa 6151 S. Yale Ave., Suite A100 918-494-8500 Michael Spain Warren Clinic - Cardiology of Tulsa 6151 S. Yale Ave., Suite A100 918-494-8500 COLON AND RECTAL SURGERY Craig S. Johnson Surgical Associates 2448 E. 81st St., Suite 1100 918-505-3400
Best Doctors’ team of researchers conducts a biennial poll using the methodology that mimics the informal peer-to-peer process doctors themselves use to identify the right specialists for their patients. Using a polling method and balloting software, that Gallup® has audited and certified, they gather the insight and experience of tens of thousands of leading specialists all over the country, while confirming their credentials and specific areas of expertise. The result is the Best Doctors in America® List, which includes the nation’s most respected specialists and outstanding primary care physicians in the nation. These are the doctors that other doctors recognize as the best in their fields. They cannot pay a fee and are not paid to be listed and cannot nominate or vote for themselves. It is a list which is truly unbiased and respected by the medical profession and patients alike as the source of top quality medical information.
DERMATOLOGY Lynn A. Anderson Midtown Dermatology Herman Kaiser Medical Building, Suite 702 1725 E. 19th St. 918-728-3100 Mark D. Lehman Tulsa Dermatology Clinic 2121 E. 21st St. 918-749-2261 Scott William Meyers The Dermatology Surgery Center 1440 Terrace Drive 918-293-9966 Donald R. Seidel Tulsa Dermatology Clinic 2121 E. 21st St. 918-749-2261 Edward H. Yob Oklahoma Cancer Specialists and Research Institute Skin Cancer Center Hillcrest South Medical Plaza 8803 S. 101st E. Ave., Suite 335 918-307-0215
Trudy Milner St. John Clinic 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 100 918-748-7890 GERIATRIC MEDICINE Insung Kim Warren Clinic - Geriatrics Springer Building 6160 S. Yale Ave. 918-497-3650 INFECTIOUS DISEASE William J. Lewis Inter I.D. Kelly Building, Suite 912 6565 S. Yale Ave. 918-494-9486 INTERNAL MEDICINE
Terry Lee Mills Jr. St. John Clinic 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 100 918-748-7890
Robert B. Hauger Warren Clinic - Internal Medicine Warren Clinic Tower, Suite 600 6600 S. Yale Ave. 918-491-5990 T. Karl Hoskison OU Physicians - Hospitalist Service 4502 E. 41st St. 918-660-3467 John E. Hubner Hubner Health Internal Medicine Specialists 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 108 918-742-5533
James K. Bailey Warren Clinic - Internal Medicine William Medical Building, Suite 1150 6585 S. Yale Ave. 918-494-9425
Martina J. Jelley OU Physicians - Internal Medicine Schusterman Center Clinic 4444 E. 41st St. 918-619-4173
Jon P. Cox St. John Clinic 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 402 918-748-7877
David M. Nierenberg St. John Medical Center Department of Internal Medicine 1725 E. 19th St., Suite 501 918-745-6990
FAMILY MEDICINE Curtis Coggins St. John Clinic 402 W. Morrow Road, Sand Springs 918-245-1328
Michael S. Gebetsberger Cedar Ridge Internal Medicine 9001 S. 101st E. Ave., Suite 200 918-392-5600
Janis Finer Saint Francis Hospital Division of Hospital Medicine 6161 S. Yale Ave. 918-502-1900 Stephen J. Gawey St. John Medical Center Department of Internal Medicine 1819 E. 19th St., Suite 302 918-742-0552
Joe Lyndle Reese Warren Clinic - Internal Medicine William Medical Building, Suite 1150 6585 S. Yale Ave. 918-494-9425 Ronald Barry Saizow OU Physicians - Internal Medicine 1111 S. St. Louis Ave. 918-619-4400
William H. Yarborough Oklahoma Pain and Wellness Center 6048 S. Sheridan Road, Suite A 918-935-3240 INTERNAL MEDICINE/HOSPITAL MEDICINE Michael S. Gebetsberger Cedar Ridge Internal Medicine 9001 S. 101st E. Ave., Suite 200 918-392-5600 MEDICAL ONCOLOGY AND HEMATOLOGY Alan M. Keller Oklahoma Cancer Specialists and Research Institute 12697 E. 51st St. S. 918-505-3200 Joseph P. Lynch Warren Clinic - Medical Oncology Saint Francis Cancer Center 11212 E. 48th St. 918-556-3000 Mark R. Olsen Oklahoma Cancer Specialists and Research Institute 12697 E. 51st St. S. 918-505-3200 Charles Martin Strnad Oklahoma Cancer Specialists and Research Institute 12697 E. 51st St. S. 918-505-3200 NEPHROLOGY Robert M. Gold Nephrology Specialists of Oklahoma Warren Medical Building, Suite 507 6465 S. Yale Ave. 918-712-5000 Pranay Kathuria OU Physicians - Nephrology and Hypertension Wayman Tisdale Specialty Clinic 591 E. 36th St. N. 918-619-8700 Thomas C. Kenkel Nephrology Specialists of Oklahoma 1145 S. Utica Ave., Suite 364 918-712-5000 NEUROLOGICAL SURGERY David G. Malone Bernsen Medical Plaza 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 706 916-794-5542 NEUROLOGY John Ernest Cattaneo OU Physicians - Neurology Wayman Tisdale Specialty Clinic 591 E. 36th St. N. 918-634-7817
OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Judith Blackwell The Women’s Health Group SouthCreek Medical Plaza 9001 S. 101st E. Ave., Suite 350 918-293-6200 Grant R. Cox OB/GYN Specialists of Tulsa Bernsen Medical Plaza 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 700 918-712-8700 Patricia A. Daily Warren Clinic - OB/GYN Warren Medical Building, Suite 815 6465 S. Yale Ave. 918-502-4848 Rupa K. DeSilva The Women’s Health Group SouthCreek Medical Plaza 9001 S. 101st E. Ave., Suite 350 918-293-6200 Lynn Edward Frame Utica Women’s Specialists 1725 E. 19th St., Suite 401 918-749-1413 Paul J. Gehring OB/GYN Specialists of Tulsa Bernsen Medical Plaza 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 700 918-712-8700 Michael Alan Gold Oklahoma Cancer Specialists and Research Institute 12697 E. 51st St. S. 918-505-3200 Marsha Kay Howerton-Engles 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 300 918-794-0701 J. Stephen Jones Warren Clinic - Maternal and Fetal Medicine Kelly Medical Building, Suite 601 6565 S. Yale Ave. 918-502-4636 Lora J. Larson Saint Francis Hospital Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology 6161 S. Yale Ave. 918-494-2200 Teressa Joan McHenry Warren Clinic - Gynecology 2605 W. Main St., Jenks 918-298-2336 Daron Gene Street Oklahoma Cancer Specialists and Research Institute 12697 E. 51st St. S. 918-505-3200
OPHTHALMOLOGY Mark J. Weiss The Eye Institute 1717 S. Utica Ave., Suite 107 918-742-2428 OTOLARYNGOLOGY Stephen M. Brownlee Eastern Oklahoma Ear, Nose and Throat 5020 E. 68th St. 918-492-3636 David W. White Eastern Oklahoma Ear, Nose and Throat 5020 E. 68th St. 918-492-3636 PATHOLOGY A. Neil Crowson Pathology Laboratory Associates 4142 S. Mingo Road 918-744-2553 PEDIATRIC AND ADOLESCENT GYNECOLOGY Rupa K. DeSilva The Women’s Health Group SouthCreek Medical Plaza 9001 S. 101st E. Ave., Suite 350 918-293-6200 PEDIATRIC DEVELOPMENTAL AND BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS Donald R. Hamilton Behavioral Pediatrics of Tulsa 5110 S. Yale Ave., Suite 103 918-933-4005 PEDIATRIC ENDOCRINOLOGY David H. Jelley OU Physicians Pediatric Endocrinology Schusterman Center Clinic 4444 E. 41st St. 918-619-4400
Anne M. Harrington Warren Clinic - Pediatrics 2950 S. Elm Place, Suite 256, Broken Arrow 918-449-4061 Franz Moncada Warren Medical Bldg, Ste 408 6465 S. Yale Ave. 918-481-4880 S. Sandra Wan Pediatric and Adolescent Care Williams Medical Plaza 2000 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 300 918-747-7544 J. Perry Ward Warren Clinic - Pediatrics 2950 S. Elm Place, Suite 256, Broken Arrow 918-449-4061 PLASTIC SURGERY Eugene B. Garber Jr. 1784 S. Utica Ave. 918-745-2117 Archibald S. Miller III Tulsa Plastic Surgery William Medical Building, Suite 315 6585 S. Yale Ave. 918-492-2282 Brent A. Rubis 10119-A E. 80th St. S. 918-254-6793 PSYCHIATRY Michelle Hubner Psychiatric Associates of Tulsa 4612 S. Harvard Ave., Suite A 918-747-5565 Bryan K. Touchet OU Physicians - Psychiatry Schusterman Center Clinic 4444 E. 41st St. 918-619-4400 RADIOLOGY
PEDIATRIC SPECIALIST/ABUSED CHILDREN Sarah Passmore OU Physicians - Abused Children Schusterman Center Clinic – Fostering Hope 4444 E. 41st St. 918-619-4400 PEDIATRICS/GENERAL Patrick J. Daley 1589 E. 19th St. 918-743-8941 Donald R. Hamilton Behavioral Pediatrics of Tulsa 5110 S. Yale Ave., Suite 103 918-933-4005
Michael A. Lawless St. John Medical Center Life Access Center 1819 E. 19th St., Suite 410 918-744-2442 Timothy A. Lind St. John Medical Center Tulsa Radiology Associates 1923 S. Utica Ave. 918-744-2171 W. Jordan Taylor Tulsa Vascular Specialists 6151 S. Yale Ave., Suite 1302 918-749-8346 Thomas Wallace White St. John Medical Center Life Access Center 1819 E. 19th St., Suite 410 918-744-2442
SURGERY Justin T. Atherton 1725 E. 19th St., Suite 800 918-301-2505 Stephen D. Bruns 1725 E. 19th St., Suite 800 918-301-2505 John R. Frame Breast Health Specialists of Oklahoma City Plex Tower 60, Suite 1500 2448 E. 81st St. 918-392-7950 Timothy Hepner 1725 E. 19th St., Suite 800 918-301-2505 Steven B. Katsis Surgical Associates 2448 E. 81st St., Suite 1100 918-505-3400 Mark R. Meese Surgical Associates 2448 E. 81st St., Suite 1100 918-505-3400 Rocky Max Morgan 1725 E. 19th St., Suite 800 918-301-2505 W. Christopher Sutterfield Surgical Associates 2448 E. 81st St., Suite 1100 918-505-3400 Brandon D. Varnell Surgical Associates 2448 E. 81st St., Suite 1100 918-505-3400 THORACIC SURGERY Robert C. Garrett St. John Clinic 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 602 918-712-3366 UROLOGY Robert R. Bruce Urologic Specialists of Oklahoma 10901 E. 48th St. 918-749-8765 Marc Milsten Urologic Specialists of Oklahoma 10901 E. 48th St. 918-749-8765 VASCULAR SURGERY John Blebea OU Physicians - Vascular Surgery Bernsen Medical Plaza 1919 S. Wheeling Ave., Suite 600 918-634-7500 Mark R. Meese Surgical Associates 2448 E. 81st St., Suite 1100 918-505-3400 TulsaPeople.com
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The treatment for misdiagnoses Most Americans will encounter at least one diagnostic error in their lifetime. —National Academy of Medicine Medical error is now considered the number three cause of death in the United States. —The BMJ (formerly known as the British Medical Journal) Medical misdiagnosis is a big problem—often with severe consequences for a person’s physical and mental health. Best Doctors is focused on ensuring members get the right diagnosis and treatment by providing world-class medical expert reviews, treatment guidance and answers to medical questions. Best Doctors’ services are offered nationwide as an employee benefit of over 260 clients, big and small. Ask your benefits department if your company offers Best Doctors.
Best Doctors—solving diagnostic error with second opinions Real solutions for real people. Marion began experiencing headaches, neck pain and dizziness after a serious car accident. Medical test results revealed nothing, yet her condition worsened. A Best Doctors specialist reviewed her case and discovered an undetected brain injury, a soft tissue injury and possible concussion. The expert provided a step-by-step plan to put Marion on the right course for treatment.
A lump on Simon’s hand was diagnosed as a noncancerous ganglion cyst. Less than two weeks after surgery to remove it, the lump grew back, larger than before. A Best Doctors specialist reviewed Simon’s case and found Simon was positive for a cancer called fibrous histiocytoma. The specialist recommended further surgery and Simon avoided the consequences of a life-threatening situation.
Alex, a runner and mother of two, lived for years with a malfunctioning heart valve. She always took the precautionary steps recommended by her cardiologist to watch for changes in symptoms, such as fatigue, fainting and shortness of breath. Alex felt healthy, but knew something was wrong when she struggled to complete a race. She decided to have her case reviewed by a Best Doctors cardiology expert. The expert recommended an immediate valve repair, noting that Alex’s condition had become severe and was endangering her heart. She had the surgery and is on the path to recovery, grateful for the services Best Doctors provided.
www.bestdoctors.com
If you are an employer and would like to learn more about Best Doctors’ services, call 310-601-7962 If you represent a health plan and are considering including Best Doctors, call 847-977-8559
NEWS TO YOU
Blue Sky Bank’s Boxyard branch
Citizens Bank of Oklahoma, with more than 100 years in the banking business in Tulsa, Osage and Pawnee counties, announced a new name for the bank in November 2016 — Blue Sky Bank. The ownership and locations of Citizens Bank remain unchanged. The name change was the result of a desire to better communicate to the public a new vision for the bank. “The new name reflects the Oklahoma values and infinite possibilities that have made the bank a recognized leader in Tulsa, Osage and Pawnee counties,” says Gentner Drummond, principal owner. Blue Sky Bank originally was chartered in Osage County in 1905 as the Bank of Commerce in Pawhuska. Over the last 112 years, it has grown and changed names several times, but is and always has been 100 percent Oklahoma owned. Blue Sky Bank has a strong niche in commercial lending and community banking, and has gained recognition for being a bank with an entrepreneurial spirit and creative solutions for its customers. The bank currently has locations in Pawhuska, Cleveland and Tulsa. In December, Blue Sky Bank opened a branch in Tulsa’s East Village in the Boxyard to meet the growing needs of Tulsa’s downtown businesses, residents and young professionals. The bank hosted a Tulsa Girls Arts School exhibit during January and plans to host local artists at its downtown location. Visit bluesky.bank for more information.
OBF NAME CHANGE HONORS BROWN
It’s not often prestigious awards of organizations like the Oklahoma Bar Foundation are given a new name. But past President Jack Brown and his efforts to improve and modernize the foundation on all fronts have earned him a namesake among the Oklahoma Bar Association’s award list. In November 2016, the OBA announced at its annual meeting it had renamed the Gerald B. Klein Award to the Gerald B. Klein – Jack L. Brown Award. The Gerald B. Klein Award was christened in 1968 by the OBF to honor one of its founding fathers and to recognize others who are committed to demonstrating the Jack Brown is a partner/shareholder in the Tulsa law firm of Jones, Gotcher and Bogan P.C. same values and service he brought to the foundation. The name change comes as a shock and honor to Brown, who served as the foundation’s board president from 2014-2015. In that short time, he gave the OBF a much-needed facelift in the areas of fundraising and communications. “I felt like we needed to change direction, bring in bigger staff and new leadership to ensure the board’s objectives would be pursued and ultimately satisfied,” Brown says. His first act as president was hiring a communications professional: Director of Development and Communications Candice Jones. Brown then determined a company retreat was necessary to assess these problem areas and determine key objectives. And the team came away with a written game plan on how to proceed and work toward those goals. Brown’s efforts have benefited the foundation by way of strong leadership and a shifted focus to provide grant funding to law-related service organizations that might not have access to the justice system otherwise. But the foundation has given something to Brown in return. His big takeaway? “Personally, the people and the relationships,” Brown says. “Not only with the trustees, but also with the staff and lawyers across the state.” — LAURA DENNIS 78
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Dr. Huan Nguyen Vu
Dr. Pragatheeshwar Thirunavukarasu
CANCER TREATMENT CENTERS OF AMERICA ANNOUNCES GROUNDBREAKING STUDY Cancer Treatment Centers of America at Southwestern Regional Medical Center in Tulsa welcomed the addition of two new surgical oncologists – Pragatheeshwar Thirunavukarasu, M.D. (known as Dr. Prag) and Huan Nguyen Vu, M.D. In addition, Dr. Vu also serves as medical director of surgical services. Also happening at CTCA is a groundbreaking new study. All five CTCA hospitals are enrolling patients in the Targeted Agent and Profiling Utilization Registry Study — the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s first-ever clinical trial. The study will evaluate molecularly targeted cancer drugs and collect data on clinical outcomes to learn about additional uses of these drugs outside of indications already approved by the Food and Drug Administration. “(CTCA’s) national reach allows us to provide access to the trial to a diverse group of patients,” says ASCO Chief Medical Officer Dr. Richard L. Schilsky. “With TAPUR, CTCA patients have the potential to benefit from targeted therapies that have already demonstrated effectiveness in other cancer types.” CTCA Tulsa is located at 10109 E. 79th St. Visit cancercenter.com/southwestern for more information.
Art Deco Lofts and Apartments
PRICE FAMILY PROPERTIES CLAIMS KANBAR GROUP In February, Tulsa developer Stuart Price announced the purchase of Kanbar Properties, a property portfolio that has more than 13 sites including the Pythian building, First Place Tower, Bank of America tower, the Adams building and many more. The property group — now named Price Family Properties — represents about 50 percent of downtown’s commercial space. Price became associated with the group in 2012 when he became a stakeholder in Kanbar Properties, which was founded by Maurice Kanbar and Henry Kaufman. Recently, Price opened the Art Deco Lofts and Apartments at 2 W. Sixth St., which transformed the former Transok Building into studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments with a fitness center, onsite parking and 24-hour security.
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HOME
OPTIMISM PAYS OFF The Tulsa real estate market is ripe for buyers and sellers. BY ROBERT EVATT
2016 WASN’T A BAD YEAR FOR HOME SALES, as far as Rodger Erker is concerned. Though the longtime broker at McGraw Realtors says he’s downright optimistic this year will be a great one for buyers and sellers alike. “Over the last few weeks, we’ve had throngs of people looking at new houses,” Erker says. Now that uncertainty in the minds of homebuyers over the election has evaporated and consumers have regained their confidence in the economy, Erker believes greater numbers of Tulsans will take the plunge with their first home or trade up to the dwelling of their dreams. His top advice for buyers this year — sitting on the fence for too long could get costly, as the days of price stagnation are coming to an end. “Prices may go up next year, maybe as much as 4 or 5 percent,” he says. Those boosted prices will come largely due to supply and demand as more people look to buy. On top of that, the number of homes on the market isn’t expected to increase, which will give sellers more power to set higher asking prices. These homes should continue to attract multiple offers and sell quickly. As a result, buyers will need to research homes in the area and ensure their offers will be attractive enough to be considered. However, Erker warns sellers not to get too aggressive because the overall market is expected to move closer to a balance between buyers and 80
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
sellers.
BY THE NUMBERS 2015 CLOSINGS: 13,650 2016 CLOSINGS: 14,243 2015 YEAR-END INVENTORY: 5,170 2016 YEAR-END INVENTORY: 6,742 2015 AVERAGE DAYS ON MARKET: 51 2016 AVERAGE DAYS ON MARKET: 46 2015 AVERAGE SALE PRICE: $176,009 2016 AVERAGE SALE PRICE: $178,005 SOURCE: GREATER TULSA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
“Sellers need to be very conscientious of pricing houses properly within the market,” he says. “If you try to blow up the price of your house compared to others in the area, it’ll just sit there.” Sellers need to keep their homes in good condition, as most traditional buyers no longer want to deal with a fixer-upper, Erker says. It’s mainly
investors who are in the market for homes that need improvement, and they generally look for bargains. However, those hoping to buy some of the biggest, more luxurious homes in the area could run into unexpected deals. Erker says homes in the million-dollar range or higher have sold slowly, and some sellers might be willing to compromise. “I know of over 100 homes in that range that are on the market right now, which is more than usual,” he says. One other factor buyers of all stripes should brace themselves for — interest rates are expected to rise significantly for the first time in nearly a decade. The Federal Reserve is expected to raise the federal funds interest rate now that the country’s economy has stabilized, and interest rates for home mortgages are expected to follow. At least for now, Erker expects mortgage rates to nudge upward rather than skyrocket. “I’ve read some predictions that they’d go up to 5 percent — though that’s still much lower than it had been in the past,” he says. Getting a mortgage, at least in Tulsa, hasn’t been much of an issue, and that shouldn’t change, Erker says. Although banks are ensuring borrowers have the ability to pay back their loans, they continue to lend at a healthy rate. “We’ve found relatively few people who are turned down,” he says. “If you’ve got a good credit rating and a decent job, you can get a mortgage.” TP
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TULSA’S
TOP 150 REALTORS
ACCENT Paul Wheeler
Tulsa
918-665-8559
ALLISON & ASSOCIATES, REALTORS Monte Allison Broken Arrow 918-251-4444 BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES ANDERSON PROPERTIES Stan Gardner Tulsa 918-746-6000 Lisa Mullins Tulsa 918-746-6000 John Smucker Tulsa 918-746-6000 Brenda Woodward Tulsa 918-746-6000 CENTURY 21/GROUP ONE Jeremy Spencer Claremore
918-341-7150
CHINOWTH & COHEN Allison Sheffield Bixby Gayle Roberts-Pisklo Tulsa Missy Hagin-Pittman Broken Arrow Cindy Hand Owasso Robb Hopper Owasso Carrie DeWeese Tulsa John Sawyer Tulsa Shawn Peters Tulsa Deb Wilmoth Tulsa Michelle Poplin Bixby Amy Prosser Tulsa Lindsay Gibson Owasso Allison Hayes Broken Arrow Kellie Garcia Tulsa Pamela Braswell Sand Springs Denise Mink Broken Arrow Bill Lee Tulsa Cheri McLain Owasso Jennifer Miller Morrow Owasso Amanda Dudley Sand Springs Alicia Parker Tulsa Val Gaudet Bixby Susie Genet Tulsa Natalie Richardson Tulsa Jeanette Bagrosky Bixby S.C. Clifford Bixby Janet Youngblood Tulsa
918-943-3009 918-392-0900 918-259-0000 918-392-9990 918-392-9990 918-392-0900 918-392-9900 918-392-9900 918-392-0900 918-943-3009 918-392-0900 918-392-9990 918-259-0000 918-392-0900 918-419-2333 918-259-0000 918-392-0900 918-392-9990 918-392-9990 918-419-2333 918-392-0900 918-943-3009 918-392-0900 918-392-0900 918-943-3009 918-943-3009 918-392-0900
COLDWELL BANKER SELECT Alice Slemp Tulsa Joanna Ford Broken Arrow Corrie Egge Broken Arrow Maureen Kile Tulsa Kevin Rhoades Claremore Deborah McGuire Tulsa Tiffany Martin Tulsa Julie Tetsworth Tulsa Greg Ganzkow Bixby Venesa White Tulsa
918-712-4310 918-251-4142 918-251-4142 918-496-3333 918-343-3822 918-712-4310 918-712-4310 918-496-3333 918-369-0200 918-496-3333
Mary Carter Bonnie Gross Lee Ann Kreps Chad LaFevers Janet Vermillion Paula McGuire Ashley Wozniak Art Jiles Michelle Bradshaw Teri Sherwood Janice Koss Jim Bigelow Josh Rainwater Cindy Read Sally Mulready Trish Allison Donna Borthick
Sapulpa Owasso Sapulpa Sapulpa Owasso Sapulpa Tulsa Broken Arrow Tulsa Sapulpa Sapulpa Tulsa Tulsa Tulsa Tulsa Broken Arrow Tulsa
918-224-5915 918-272-9531 918-224-5915 918-224-5915 918-272-9531 918-224-5915 918-712-4310 918-251-4142 918-496-3333 918-224-5915 918-224-5915 918-496-3333 918-496-3333 918-496-3333 918-496-3333 918-251-4142 918-496-3333
CSEH VOLERE REALTY Amanda Cseh Broken Arrow
918-232-5954
DANIELLE SPRIK REALTY GROUP LLC Danielle Sprik Jenks 918-698-7653 DIVINE REALTY LLC Terry Hassell Broken Arrow
918-550-4663
ERIN CATRON & CO. Erin Catron Tulsa
918-800-9915
GUTHRIE REALTY LLC Brian Guthrie Bixby
918-366-7653
HOME SOURCE REALTY Scott Carter Bixby
918-366-4144
INTEGRITY HOME TEAM Diana Judd Tulsa
918-622-6700
KELLER WILLIAMS ADVANTAGE Heather Lamb Tulsa Max Heckenkemper Tulsa Jennie Wolek Tulsa Brent Clark Tulsa Braxton Thomas Tulsa Kasia Olek Tulsa Sarah Reynolds Tulsa Kara Folkins Tulsa Terry Gobbo Tulsa Kenny Tate Sand Springs Rob Schmidt Tulsa Dustin Thames Tulsa Debra Jones Tulsa Misty Lord Tulsa Keely Gobbo Tulsa
918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-241-7653 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252 918-712-2252
KELLER WILLIAMS PREFERRED Brian Frere Tulsa Ryan Treadway Broken Arrow Suzy Moore Tulsa Tracy Ellis Tulsa Jaybee Hawkins Broken Arrow Deanna Maxwell Tulsa Suzanne Rentz Tulsa Jake Salyer Broken Arrow Jenna Mobley Tulsa Kelly Garcia Broken Arrow Austin Cochran Broken Arrow Bill Whitescarver Tulsa Richard Thompson Tulsa Heidi Bents Tulsa Laura Lawrence Tulsa Kathryn French Broken Arrow John Kaiser Tulsa
918-496-2252 918-251-2252 918-496-2252 918-496-2252 918-251-2252 918-496-2252 918-496-2252 918-251-2252 918-496-2252 918-251-2252 918-251-2252 918-496-2252 918-496-2252 918-496-2252 918-496-2252 918-251-2252 918-496-2252
KELLER WILLIAMS PREMIER Juli Edwards Owasso Julie Mullinax Owasso Lindsay Bippus Owasso Karen Wells Owasso Tim Barnes Owasso Karen Walden Claremore Molly Jordan Owasso
918-272-0809 918-272-0809 918-272-0809 918-272-0809 918-272-0809 918-283-2252 918-272-0809
MCGRAW, REALTORS Carol Brown Tulsa Laura Grunewald Tulsa Richard Pierce Tulsa John Ragan Tulsa Jessica Scott Tulsa Jacki Crews Tulsa Curtis Roberts Tulsa Chris Zinn Tulsa Katy Houchin Tulsa Becky Moore Tulsa Tim Hayes Tulsa Laura Hawkins Tulsa Gordon Shelton Tulsa Vanessa Moctezuma Broken Arrow Judy Stocker Broken Arrow Becky Orr Owasso Frankie Harkey Tulsa Stephanie Joy Tulsa Sherri Sanders Tulsa Rodger Erker Tulsa Diana Patterson Langley Cheryl Thompson Tulsa Larry Harral Tulsa Belinda Tucker Tulsa David Palik Tulsa Kevin Crook Langley Brint Lang Tulsa Jillian Ihloff Tulsa Katie Lieberman Tulsa
918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000 918-592-6000
PEPPER PROPERTIES LLC Randy Pepper Owasso
918- 505-9777
PLATINUM REALTY GROUP David Dumont Broken Arrow
918-258-6161
RE/MAX LIFE JoAnna Blackstock Megan Claiborne
918-254-0600 918-254-0600
Tulsa Tulsa
RE/MAX RESULTS Amy Whitmarsh Owasso
918-376-6400
REALTY CONNECT Angie Cianfrone Tulsa
918-901-9690
SAND SPRINGS REALTY INC. Robert Kleven Sand Springs
918-693-4003
THE GARRISON GROUP LLC Kelly Garrison Tulsa
918-808-3065
TRINITY PROPERTIES Carri Ray Broken Arrow
918-520-7149
WALTER & ASSOCIATES INC. Peter Walter Tulsa Blake Loveless Tulsa Dan Martin Tulsa Barbara Winder Tulsa
918-743-2001 918-743-2001 918-743-2001 918-743-2001
ZION REAL ESTATE SERVICES Steve Wilson Tulsa
918-747-5000
The residential Realtors presented here — in company groupings — were ranked top in the Tulsa area in 2016, according to the Multiple Listing Services (MLS). The rankings are based on the “current volume” (listings plus sales) of individual Realtors. The following pages feature professional profiles purchased by Top Realtors to inform readers about their services. 82
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Congratulations Tulsa’s Top Realtors
Complete Land Title Service • Abstracts Title Insurance • Escrow Closings
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TULSA’S TOP 150 REALTORS BUYING OR SELLING?
Learn more about the Top Realtors in the following informative professional profiles.
Kara Folkins
Kara Folkins
KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY ADVANTAGE Buying and selling, made stress-free and high-tech Kara Folkins uses the latest technological advances to help buyers and sellers succeed. Tools like document sharing and e-signing deliver a seamless endto-end experience. Whether the client is on the road or close to home, Folkins helps them get their transactions closed. Folkins was ranked in the Top 5 of Individual Real Estate Associates in GCI for Keller Williams Realty Advantage for 2016. Folkins most enjoys offering personalized services to each client, and
nurturing lifelong relationships with the buyers and sellers she has represented. “I’m here to help during all phases of the home buyer’s life,” says Folkins.
Kara Folkins Keller Williams Realty Advantage 2651 E. 21st St., Suite 100 918-636-4628 karafolkins.com
Kelly Garcia Kilmer
KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY PREFERRED
Kelly Garcia Kilmer
Treating every deal like a million-dollar deal.
A former teacher, Kelly Garcia Kilmer sense, professional agents that serve the is passionate about helping people in community with care. all areas of real estate. With 20 years of experience — from investments to luxury and everything in between — she efficiently cares for buyers and sellers. This year, Kilmer added an entire team Kelly Garcia Kilmer of skilled professionals to her business, Keller Williams Realty Preferred forming “The Preferred Team” at Keller 4745 E. 91st St., Suite 100 Williams. Along with Chet Wilson, lead 918-808-6621 listing agent and co-owner, Kilmer preferredteamkw.com strives to create a solid brand of no-non-
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Jennifer Miller-Morrow
Jen Miller-Morrow
BROKER-REALTOR ASSOC. • C&C OWASSO
Fourteen years of experience negotiating and successfully closing contracts Broker-Realtor Assoc. Jen Miller-Mor- ings and land, new construction and varow goes far beyond simply putting a sign cant land, has been a Multi-Million Dollar in the yard — she advertises heavily. For Award Winning Top Producer since 2003. 14 years, she has helped clients through Jen Miller-Morrow one of the largest and most important inBroker-Realtor Assoc. - C&C Owasso vestments of their lives. “My clients have 9500 N. 129th E. Ave., become some of my closest friends,” says Suite 110, Owasso Miller-Morrow. “I love my career and I 918-638-7653(SOLD) am truly blessed with the best buyers JenMiller@tulsarealtors.com and sellers.” Miller-Morrow specializes in www.jenmiller.com residential properties, commercial build-
Sarah Reynolds and Shaun Kennedy
KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY ADVANTAGE Hands-on partnerships get properties sold quickly.
In 2008, Sarah Reynolds and Shaun market so we can guide our clients to Kennedy teamed up to better represent the best financial decisions for their real sellers and buyers of residential prop- estate investments,” says Kennedy. erties of every description in the Tulsa Reynolds and Kennedy area — including Keystone Lake, where Keller Williams Realty Advantage Reynolds resides. Kennedy lives in mid2651 E. 21st St., Suite 100 town. Both are full-time and guide their 918-637-7411 • 918-261-8178 clients through every step, from contract reynoldsandkennedy.com to closing. “We continuously study the
Sarah Reynolds and Shaun Kennedy
We want to say Thank You to all of our clients and our real estate community for helping us make 2016 a huge success. Why settle for one Realtor when you can have a team of realtors working for you. • Averaged over $800,000 in combined sales for every month in 2016. • Averaged over 1 closing per week in 2016 so we know what it takes to get to the closing table. • We maintain a close relationship with Allegiance Title to ensure a smooth closing process. Josh and Jenna Mobley Keller Williams Preferred 918-863-4130 86
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THE
MOBLEY TEAM
Diana Riley Patterson
Diana Riley Patterson
MCGRAW REALTORS Making lakeside living a reality
Grand Lake waters run deep for Diana ships and honesty with her clients. Grand Riley Patterson. She came from a family Lake is her home and she loves sharing it who listed and sold Grand Lake for years. with her family, friends and clients. Today, she continues their legacy as McGraw Realtors Grand Lake’s top agent. Patterson says, “I love Grand Lake and want everyone to experience what I have Diana Riley Patterson been so blessed with all my life.” McGraw Realtors While Patterson has had her license P.O. Box 820, Langley since she was 21, she just entered the 918-629-3717 profession ten years ago. She feels her southgrandlake.com success comes from hard work, relation-
Karen (Thomason) Wells
Karen Wells
KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY PREMIER Wells sells!
Karen Wells’ passion for helping people transition from one place to another has kept her in the real estate business for 17 years. A business degree from TU and years of corporate experience have helped this broker associate “bridge the gap” between business ownership and real estate, and the results are impressive. In 2016, Wells was once again ranked among the elite in closed volume in Tulsa Multiple Listing Service (MLS). Wells holds a wide range of designations,
memberships and affiliations, and promises a “full service” approach to real estate, from initial interest to final closing. While business-oriented and results-driven, she enjoys cultivating friendships along the way. Karen Wells Keller Williams Realty Premier 12150 E. 96th St. N., Suite 100, Owasso 918-698-9382 karenwellssells.com
“Selling Tulsa Lifestyle, One Home at a Time”
100 TOP REALTOR
Brent & Vickie Clark The Clark Team
2651 E 21st St, Suite 100 • 918.804.4104 BClarkRealtor@gmail.com ClarkTeamTulsa.com TulsaPeople.com
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Heidi Bents
Heidi Bents
KELLER WILLIAMS REALTY PREFERRED Where the key to your dream comes home Heidi Bents attributes her 26 year career as a Top Tulsa-Metro Realtor to building valuable relationships with those she serves. Achieving client’s goals is her key priority. Bents offers sellers concierge service with proven target-market strategies, setting her apart in our dynamic realty market. An ORU Business Graduate, Bents’ experience in residential design and staging-coupled with her understanding our local economy-are key assets for creating perceived value and getting property sold. Her specialties include luxury, new construction, executive transfers, farm and ranch, downsizing and resale. Heidi discovers a buyer’s needs to pursue a desirable match for their unique vision of “home.” Whether a luxury shopper or first-time buyer, clients can expect the same level of professional polish needed to achieve their dream.
Bents thrives on being a valuable resource during times of transition in people’s lives. Streamlining the sale with creative solutions makes a move less stressful for her clients. “Each adventure is special because of the wonderful people I serve,” says Bents. “For me, a successful transaction is when everyone walks away from the closing table feeling like a winner!”
Heidi Bents Keller Williams Realty Preferred 4745 E. 91st St. 918-313-1786 heidibents.kw.com
Stan Gardner
BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES ANDERSON PROPERTIES Leader in luxury and custom home sales, and Platinum Award Winner Stan Gardner entered the real estate field in Oklahoma after 20 years of entrepreneurial business experience in upstate New York. He spent his first 10 years in Tulsa becoming the top salesman for a local technology firm, selling to business owners, top executives and professionals. “I earned my business education through hard work and experience,” says Gardner. “I took that applied it to the real estate business.” Gardner formed a talented team and, over the past 10 years, has become a leader in luxury and custom home sales in Tulsa and Owasso. The Gardner Home Team sold more than 90 homes in 2016 alone, and today is No. 1 in luxury sales in Tulsa and Owasso, while Berkshire Hathaway is the top luxury broker nationally. “I am blessed to be surrounded by such talented and hardworking realtors,” says Gardner. “Our team is leading the profession in production and sales, both locally and internationally. Our vision is to become the most recognized and highly respected home ownership services brand in the US and worldwide. My team’s competitive spirit, knowledge and dedication are what will help us achieve our goals.” Gardner’s motto has always been “think outside the box, work smart and work hard.”
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Stan Gardner Team
Stan Gardner Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Anderson Properties 8571 N. Owasso Expy, Suite A 918-430-8247 • gardnerhometeam.com
Laura Grunewald & Associates MCGRAW REALTORS Building relationships and lifestyles
Over the past 19 years, Laura Grunewald has built a team of experienced real estate professionals dedicated to helping Tulsans buy and sell properties. The team is made up of both listing and buyer specialists in order to provide a higher level of customer service. “Our backgrounds help anyone — whether you’re buying a $100,000 home or selling a $2 million property,” says Grunewald. Grunewald and her team, including Randy Kay Young, Steve Bullard, Krystie Cupp and Julie Hester, also dominate in land sales in and around Tulsa. The team’s total sales volume was $31 million in 2016 alone. As the daughter of builder Steve Murphy and the wife of builder Greg Grunewald, Laura Grunewald is intimately familiar with the home-building process, from land purchase to move-in day. She says the most rewarding parts of her job are the relationships she develops with her clients. “We work by referral, which means most of our business comes from our past clients recommending us to their friends and family,” she says. The team goes above and beyond for their clients, whether that means working with a seller to make pre-listing improvements, staging interior spaces or providing a home sales and market analysis — whatever it takes to go from listed to sold.
Laura Grunewald & Associates McGraw Realtors 5711 E. 71st St., Suite 100 918-734-0695 • lauragrunewald.com
When mission, vision and values align, results are born.
aussieteamtulsa.com 918.282.3451 Photo taken at the Hotel Ambassador
Who is your Team?
Always accepting new clients.
The Aussie Real Estate Team, Real Estate Reinvented. Why would you trust your real estate transaction to anyone else? —Kasia Olek and The Aussie Team TulsaPeople.com
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Q 918.622.0900 • www.cityscapehome.com
HOWARD DOAK
A
NMLS: 644578
Branch Manager, NMLS #213229 Company NMLS #644578 P: 918.622.0900 • C: 918.851.2950
Going through personal life changes; death of a loved one, divorce, loss of a job? We can assist you in making sound financial choices. Call us for a friendly consultation.
cityscapehome.com
CONGR ATUL ATIONS TO
TULSA’S TOP R E A LTORS! Thank you for trusting us to be your Mortgage Partner. Leave the mortgages to us, so you can keep selling more houses. INTEGRITY • CUSTOMER SERVICE EXCEEDING EXPECTATIONS
Saletha Fuller, right, and Karen Bruns, left. 2530 E 71st St, Suite E • 918-496-0777 • www.dchfinancial.com Advisory Services Offered Through Investacorp Advisory Services, Inc. A SEC Registered Investment Advisory Firm. Securities by licensed Individuals Offered Through Investacorp, Inc. A Registered Broker/Dealer Member FINRA, SIPC
We Are Proud To Recognize Peter Walter • Blake Loveless • Dan Martin • Barbara Winder For Being Ranked Among Tulsa’s
Top Realtors
1319 East 35th Street 918-743-2001 WalterAndAssociates.com 90
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CONGRATULATIONS
TO OUR KW ADVANTAGE TULSA TOP 150 REALTORS
Dustin Thames Brent Clark & Vickie Clark Kara Folkins Kenny Tate
Debra, Doug, Joy & Andrew Jones
Braxton Thomas
Terry Gobbo
Keely Gobbo & Jonathan Gobbo
Rob Schmidt
Jennie Wolek
Heather Lamb
Susan Beach
Sarah Reynolds & Shaun Kennedy
Kasia Olek & Misty Lord
2651 E 21ST ST, SUITE 100 • TULSA, OK 74114 • 918.712.2252
BROKER
Don Beach BROKER
Alice Slemp Team
Maureen Kile Team
Joanna Ford
Corrie Egge Team
McGuire-Cooley Team
Tiffany Martin Team
The Rhoades-Foster Team
Greg Ganzkow
Tetsworth-McClain Team
Realty Sisters
Mary Carter
Janet Vermillion
Bonnie Gross
Venesa White
Lee Ann Kreps
TULSA’S TOP 100 AGENTS of COLDWELL BANKER SELECT
Chad LaFevers
Paula McGuire Team
The Bigelow Group
Art Jiles Team
Cindy Read
Ashley Wozniak
Michelle Bradshaw
Janice Koss
Trish Allison
Jay Miller
Sally Mulready
Teri Sherwood
Melanie Coon
Josh Rainwater
Donna Borthick
3010 S HARVARD STE. 200 • TULSA, OK 74114 • (918) 712-4310
ALICE SLEMP & THE SLEMP TEAM
TIFFANY MARTIN TEAM
Recognized as Coldwell Banker’s #1 team in Oklahoma, Alice Slemp & The Slemp Team have been serving the housing needs of our community for over 34 years with sales in excess of $500 million. Combining a long-standing connection to the Tulsa market with an energetic and hands-on approach to marketing and negotiating, The Slemp Team provides exceptional representation for both buyers and sellers. We have a profound understanding that buyers and sellers have unique personal goals and different objectives when they look for a real estate professional. We insure that each clients’ needs are met with our unique blend of experience, education and energy. Alice Slemp • alice@aliceslemp.com • 918.260.3735
Your Real Estate Professional! • Number 1 Realtor Individual and/or Team Coldwell Banker Select Midtown office from 2002 through 2014 and Rookie of the Year in 2001 • Over $19 million in sold real estate in 2016 • Over $135 million in career real estate sales • Utilizing a team concept to better serve our client needs in an ever-changing market • Most of our business is repeat business and referrals from past clients tmartin@cbtulsa.com • 918.852.2326
ASHLEY WOZNIAK
MCGUIRE-COOLEY TEAM
Your Full Time Partner in Tulsa Real Estate
This time, it’s personal. • Taking advantage of the team concept to provide personal service for each of our client’s individual needs. • 40+ years combined experience and a strong selling presence in the Tulsa Area – including Midtown, Union, Broken Arrow, Jenks, Bixby, Owasso, Sapulpa and other outlying communities. • All team members are full service associates and are experienced in listing & selling residential properties. The team caters to clients in every phase of life, from first time home buyers to empty nesters. In addition, team members have individual specialties including Certified Relocation Specialists, commercial properties, and investing. • Top 5 teams with Coldwell Banker Select for the last three years, with $20 million in sales in 2015 and in 2016. • Bringing honesty, integrity and hard work to the real estate industry. • Believers in giving back to the community – team members are involved in multiple charities and philanthropic endeavors that are in line with their passions. 918.695.9711 • 918.639.2590
• Number 1 Individual Agent for overall transactions in Midtown office in 2016 • Number 1 Individual Agent for sales in Midtown office in 2016 • Dedicated to excellent service and overall experience • Knowledgable in all of Tulsa and surrounding areas • Driven by repeat clients and referrals Are you looking to buy, sell or invest in this hot market? ashwozrealestate@gmail.com • 918.232.8052
Congratulations
to our 29 agents included in Tulsa’s top RealtorsŽ Left to Right: Gordon Shelton, Becky Orr, Diana Patterson, Brint Lang, David Palik, Belinda Tucker, Laura Hawkins, Katie Lieberman, Jillian Ihloff, Jessica Scott, Vanessa Moctezuma De LaFuente, Judy Stocker, Frankie Harkey, Gannon Brown, Stephanie Joy, Carol Brown, Sherri Sanders, Tim Hayes, Laura Grunewald, Cheryl Thompson, Rodger Erker
Not Pictured: Richard Pierce, John Ragan, Jacki Crews, Curt Roberts, Chris Zinn, Katy Houchin, Becky Moore, Larry Harral, Kevin Crook
Thank you for your hard work, dedication and professionalism. It is the reason that McGraw Realtors has remained the largest independent Real Estate company in Oklahoma for over 78 years.
McGrawRealtors.com 918.592.6000
“My real estate career began in new construction, but now encompasses all aspects of real estate in all price ranges. I have a passion to provide my clients with the very best customer service experience in the industry,” says Sprik. “We have the tools to deliver results.” Some of those cutting-edge tools include drone video, virtual video tours, professional photography, social media marketing and eyecatching flyers, plus entire teams with expertise in online advertising, search engine optimization and web development. “I enjoy getting to know my clients on a personal level and building lasting relationships,” says Sprik. “I take very seriously the opportunity I am given to walk along side each client through the process.” Despite its youth, Sprik Realty Group made a sizable impact on the Tulsa market in 2016, and Sprik predicts 2017 will be even better. “With all the growth the city is experiencing, it’s an exciting time to be in the Tulsa area,” says Sprik. “We are blessed to be a part of that.”
McGraw Realtors
theEHC
Extraordinary Home Collection
Extraordinary Homes Extraordinary Realtors 10620 S Nandina Court, Jenks
$599,000
Outstanding backyard with covered deck overlooking greenbelt & custom gunite pool! Distressed hardwoods, granite island kitchen, game room with wet bar, study & beautiful master down plus theater & play room up. ◆ 4 Bedrooms
◆ 3 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 5 Living Areas ◆ 3 Car Garage ◆ Jenks Schools ◆ MLS 1635882
7392 E 124th Place, Bixby
$399,000
New Construction boasts transitional design. 2 bedrooms down & 2 up plus game/theater room. Large island kitchen opens to vaulted & beamed great room with stone fireplace & built-ins. Covered patio and firepit! ◆ 4 Bedrooms
◆ 3 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 2 Living Area ◆ 3 Car Garage ◆ Bixby Schools ◆ MLS 1641165
11013 S Joplin Place, Tulsa
$640,000
Inviting outdoor oasis & coveted open plan w/2 bedrooms down. Gunite pool, spa, vaulted outdoor living, chef’s kitchen w/gas cooktop & double ovens, handscraped hardwoods, study, theater room & game room. ◆ 5 Bedrooms
◆ 4 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 4 Living Areas ◆ 3 Car Garage ◆ Jenks Schools ◆ MLS 1631539
Curt Roberts 918.231.0691 96
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Katie Lieberman 918.698.3800
Laura Hawkins 918.260.7885
McGraw Realtors
theEHC
Extraordinary Home Collection
Extraordinary Homes Extraordinary Realtors 11926 S 14th Court, Jenks
$1,850,000
5 acre wooded site with view! 4 outdoor fireplaces, gunite pool, fountains, spa & outdoor kitchen. 2 built-in refrigerators, 2 dishwashers & wine grotto. Home theater, game room, 3 bedrooms down, 3 up all w/private baths. ◆ 6 Bedrooms
◆ 6 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 4 Living Areas ◆ 4 Car Garage ◆ Jenks Schools ◆ MLS 1632092
1502 E 35th Place, Tulsa
$695,000
New construction designed by Jack Arnold steps away from Brookside dining & shopping! Remarkable open plan designed for today’s living offers luxurious amenities and the character you desire. Corner lot w/ mature trees. ◆ 3 Bedrooms
◆ 2 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 2 Living Areas ◆ 2 Car Garage ◆ Tulsa Schools ◆ MLS 1635057
8426 S Phoenix Place, Tulsa
$398,000
Green certified new construction in 55+ gated community! Geothermal & low maintenance. Beautiful open layout & luxurious master w/heated floors. Includes lawn service, pool, putting green, fitness center & more!
◆ 2 Bedrooms ◆ 2 Full Baths ◆ 1 Living Areas ◆ 2 Car Garage ◆ Jenks Schools ◆ MLS 1641374
Pam Case 918.809.3247
Chris Zinn Group 918.994.1235
theEHC
Extraordinary Home Collection
TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors
theEHC
Extraordinary Home Collection
Extraordinary Homes Extraordinary Realtors 8437 S Canton Avenue, Tulsa
$575,000
Beautiful Hollinger built home in desirable location! Wooded back views, easy access to Holland Hall, open floor plan ideal for entertaining, teak hardwoods, safe room, game room, theater, updated master bath & more! ◆ 4 or 5 Bedrooms
◆ 3 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 5 Living Areas ◆ 3 Car Garage ◆ Union Schools ◆ MLS 1630463
2450 E 32nd Street, Tulsa
$719,000
Incredible Mid-century Ranch Remodel! Spacious open floor plan delivers today’s modern design. Caeserstone counters, high-end stainless appliances, hardwoods, luxurious master suite plus insulated doors & windows. ◆ 4 Bedrooms
◆ 3 Full, 1 Half Baths ◆ 2 Living Areas ◆ 3 Car Garage ◆ Tulsa Schools ◆ MLS 1701905
405 N Main Unit 6E, Tulsa
$860,000
Sophisticated Urban Living in the heartbeat of downtown Tulsa. New construction, one level loft with floor-to-ceiling windows, 10ft ceilings, open floor plan, private terrace, Gaggenau appliances & top floor common space. ◆ 3 Bedrooms
◆ 2 Full Baths ◆ Club Room ◆ Fitness Center ◆ 2 Covered Parking ◆ MLS 1700418
Curt Roberts 918.231.0691 98
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
Katie Lieberman 918.698.3800
Laura Hawkins 918.260.7885
6234 S Fulton Avenue, Tulsa
Extraordinary Homes Extraordinary Realtors
$300,000 7275 E 111th Place, Bixby
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$309,000 1315 E 27th Place, Tulsa
$1,300,000
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4729 E 143rd Court, Bixby
McGraw Realtors
theEHC
Extraordinary Home Collection
8422 S Phoenix Place, Tulsa
$398,000 1120 S Florence Avenue, Tulsa
$130,000
Contact an
EHC Group Member today for help finding your Extraordinary...
Pam Case 918.809.3247
Pam Case
Chris Zinn Group 918.994.1235
Chris Zinn
Laura Hawkins
Curt Roberts
theEHC
Katie Lieberman
Extraordinary Home Collection
TulsaPeople.com
Extr Ex 99
McGraw Realtors
Luxury Property Group at McGraw Realtors Gordon sHelTon
918-697-2742 gshelton@mcgrawok.com Gordon@GordonShelton.com
diana PaTTerson
918-629-3717 dpatterson@mcgrawok.com
Tim Hayes
918-231-5637 thayes@mcgrawok.com Tim@TimHayesJr.com
Kelly Howard
918-230-6341 khoward@mcgrawok.com
sHerri sanders
918-724-5008 ssanders@mcgrawok.com 100
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
The esTaTes of hampTon hills 13127 S Yorktown Avenue, Bixby. Fabulous Custom on approximately 5 acres with 2 stocked ponds, salt water pool with hot tub, 6 Fireplaces, gourmet kitchen, butler pantries, formals, study, exercise, game & hobby room. Outdoor kitchen with fireplace. Expansion area. Elevator. Safe room. Shop with quarters and additonal 3 car garage. $2,199,900
BixBy esTaTe 6845 E 181st St S Newer custom estate with exquisite details throughout. Located on 5 acres with outdoor living, kitchen, fireplace, pool, spa, waterfall, sport court, pond & shop. Chef’s kitchen, beamed greatroom, fabulous master, study, mud room, Safe room,1st floor Theater. 2 bedrooms down with 3 up plus gameroom & study niche. $1,500,000.
maple Ridge 1121 E 19th Street Immaculate newer home in Maple Ridge Historic District. 1st floor master suite with luxury bath, double walk-ins. Study off entry with custom bookshelves. Open kitchen and family room with FP. Formal LR with FP overlooks pool & pergola. Master on 1st floor, 3 beds up. 4,917 sq ft AP. $778,000.
Enjoy the Luxury Lifestyle you desire
McGraw Realtors
A Network of Realtors Representing the Finest Properties in NE OK
Grand laKe
BrooKside
Huge price reduction! You will love this Vintage on Grand Lake stunning water front lake home! The 4 BR, 3 BA home has been completely updated. Wake up to incredible views of the sunrise & enjoy the moon rises on the covered deck. 40’ boat slip, gated, & community pool! $539,000.
1248 E 31st Place Exquisite High-end Transitional Style Remodel! One level full brick home situated on .26 acre lot. Hardwood Floors. Gourmet Kitchen with 48� Viking Range. Master with fireplace, Laundry & Garden access. Restoration Hardware lighting, hardware & window treatments. Quaint street. Professionally Landscaped. Walk to Gathering Place! $525,000.
Grand laKe
NEW LISTING - Awesome views from this incredible 3 BR, 3.5 BA contemporary lake home designed by Doug Campbell, located on the Langley Bluff. All finishes are over the top for this one-level home. Tulsa is only one hour away! $565,000
CHimney Hills esTaTes
8623 S 71st East Avenue - Vaulted ceiling in living room with Fireplace. Kitchen opens to breakfast area. Large picture windows overlook backyard with deck. 4 bedrooms down. Game room & office upstairs. $225,000.
sTanford elm
6707 E 112th Street S.- Gated neighborhood. Traditional brick home featuring granite kitchen, newer Trane matching H & A systems, H20 and 2008 roof. Formals + spacious family room/ kitchen combo. 1st floor master suite + office! $419,000
BrooKwood of JenKs
10804 S Sycamore Street - Custom home with numerous upgrades. Jenks Gated Neighborhood. Study. Sun porch. 2 bed on lst floor, 2 up & Gameroom. Covered patio, Expansion area. Neighborhood with pond, walking trails & park. $380,000
CHimney Hills esTaTes
6550 E 89th Street - One level Ranch in Chimney Hills. Large master with walk-in closet. Vaulted living room with beamed ceiling. Kitchen opens to eating area. Outdoor covered patio. $185,000
Call any of the Luxury Property Group Realtors about one of these homes, or any property that you have an interest in. They will provide you with superior personal service with the highest integrity.
The Luxury Property Group TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors
Nancy Kavanaugh 918-625-6260 nkavanaugh@mcgrawok.com
Debra Adamek 918-695-4945 Debbie.Adamek@gmail.com
3528 S Wheeling Avenue - Adams Estates - Beautiful New Constructions in Midtown. 4 Bedroom C/B 5, (2 down), 3.5 Bath. Kitchen Open to Family Room with high cathedral ceiling., dbl. ovens, gas range and knotty alder cabinets. Large Game Room. Hardwood floors throughout downstairs. 3 Car Gar., Fenced Yard, Covered Patio. $709,000
12445 S 18th Circle East - Country Lake Estates - Beautifully updated with new kitchen and Jenn-air appliances in 2012. Kitchen opens to family room with large granite island. 4 Bedrooms, 2.5 Baths w/Jack and Jill upstairs. 3 Living Areas and Formal Dining Rm. Safe Room. Pond View on Greenbelt. Jenks West Elem. $325,000
14444 S 248th East Avenue - Brookwood Farms II - 1.8 acres m/l near Golf Club of OK. New saltwater pool. Private master + 3 bedrooms + study on main level, in-law/split plan. 5th bedroom or Media + full bath up. Storm safe room. Dream kitchen opens to great room with built-ins and fireplace. Fabulous verandas. $689,000
5720 E. 118th Street - Shadow Wood - English Country Mansion designed/built by Mike Dankbar. Featured in John Brooks Walton’s “Tomorrow’s Historic Tulsa Homes”. Wood inlaid ceilings, travertine & hardwood floors. 3 bedroom suites with ensuite baths. 3 fireplaces. Lagoon pool. $974,900
Coming Soon
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· Florence Park - New Kitchen
· Harvard Point - Dankbar Designed/Built
· Southern Hills - 4000+sf / Pool
· Legends - Greenbelt / Pool
· CedarCrest - New Kitchen & Theater
· Southern Pointe - Transitional Update
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
McGraw Realtors
BCOTu l s a . c om br own an dco@ mc gr a w o k . c o m
9 1 8 .9 2 1 .7 9 2 2
2219 E 45th Place Bolewood Acres For the first time in nearly 40 years, this iconic and beloved Estate is now available in coveted Bolewood Acres resting majestically atop 3.6 lush acres surrounded by a beautiful pool & pool house, welcoming verandas & patios, grand circle drive, gated back entrance and majestic trees. Impeccably maintained and with almost 7000 square feet, the main house boasts the ultimate in classic luxury combined with the latest updates. Four beautiful Living Spaces, five Fireplaces, stunning Formal Dining Rm, fabulous Master Suite with two separate Bath and Dressing Areas, three add’l Bedroom Suites each with private bath, updated Kitchen, charming Breakfast Rm with banquet, extensive storage, 3-car Garage with add’l large 3-car covered parking. The Pool House is the perfect Guest House with its full Kitchen, Bath and well-designed sleeping area. The grounds are completed by a large storage building and separate dog run. Truly a must-see! Call today for a private viewing. 5/6.2/3+ $2,950,000
Carol Brown Team Leader
Scott Wuellner Realtor Associate
Jamie Wilson
Listing Manager
W. Ashley Wilson Realtor Associate
Janis Taylor
Jane Luitweiler
Realtor Associate
Realtor Associate
Scott Zittritsch Jenna Boyce
Realtor Associate
Philip Shain
Gannon Brown
Closing Manager
Realtor Associate
Realtor Associate
Brown & Company at McGraw Realtors is honored to continue our tradition as a top-ranking team in Tulsa real estate. BCO intentionally combines the specialized skills of 8 licensed Realtors and 2 real estate professionals, each focused on what they do best in this industry they love. The result is a well-honed team approach that provides top-notch professionalism and trend-setting service for their clients at each step of the real estate process. Brown & Company is dedicated to helping Tulsans realize their real estate dreams and treats those dreams with utmost care. Whether helping folks buy or sell a first home, a luxury estate or even a commercial investment, BCO keeps their clients at the heart of all they do. With deep appreciation for the ongoing trust of their many clients and supporters, Brown & Company looks forward to serving Tulsa and all the surrounding areas for many years to come. Call today and experience the BCO difference!
Honored to continue our tradition as a top Tulsa Real Estate Team TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors 1642 E. 31st $ 750,000 Located in Midtown Tulsa’s newest gated area. Designed by Jack Arnold with an open floorplan having soaring ceilings and hardwood floors. High-end kitchen with granite counters and stainless appliances. Master plus a second bedroom down each having private baths. Private courtyard. 3-car garage. 10625 S. Garnett rd. Gracious Georgian manor home on 5 acres.
A winding drive and a pool with a fountain greet you through the gate. There are over 6000 sq. ft. of pure luxury in this home. Gor3904 E. 64th PlacE $ 360,000 geous woodwork, and deep crown moldings. Marble entry. Large Stunning unit with marble floors 2651 S. S t . L ouiS Orginial home in John Walton Book’s is exceptional in design. granite center island kitchen. Fabulous views and balconies. Saltand high end finishes. The Kitchen water pool.marble $1,350,000 circullar staircase greats you as you enter with has an imprssive 3 story entry breakfast nook andwith eating bar. Three will bedrooms having orginial fixtures. Extensive use of wood and moldings throughout be a feasteach for the private baths and spacious eyes. The kitchen has been updated with large prep island. 4 bedrooms located on thewalkin closets. Master could be up 2nd floor. Master retains the orgianl tile bath. Basement clubroom with laundry and or down. Two different outdoor storage. Guest apartment is updated located over the 3spaces. car garage. Pool. $1,150,000 A private courtyard in the front with French doors off the kitchen and then a spacious back deck area overlooking just one of Point South’s tennis courts.
6010
3727 S. Utica Ave. $ 495,000 Traditional house with beautiful hardwood floors and plenty of natural light. Spacious familyroom on 1st floor with eating space and built-ins. Granite kitchen with stainless applainces and pantry. Flexible bedroom floorplan has 4 beds and 2.5 baths. Gameroom on second floor with private bath could be a 5th bedroom. Beautiful E. 117th St. Beautiful newbackyard listing has in the prestigious covered patio. Call Tulsa neighborhood of River for Oaks. This English your private showing. Estate
South has every amenity possible to make easy. kitchen 6519 S. Gary ave. living - Located on aOpen culdesac behind and familyroom hasSouthernHills. granite and stainless appliances. The masThe hosue is a beautiful drive up with great 2608 E 74th $ 275,000 ter suite offers sitting area with toaStreet cozy up on winter landscaping, extrafireplace parking and rear entry garage. The Traditional center all plan with nights, the spa bathhouse has afeatures salted2 bedrooms soakingon tub. 3first additional bedthe floor each having formal livingroom and dining. rooms. Billards room has full kitchen, media andLarge more. access to $2,995,000 a bath. Spacious granite openkitchen kitchenwith space looks and into tile Call for more information. flooring. Upsatirs has 2eating bedrooms, plus game room spacebath, and familyroom havingoutdoor fireplace. 3 spacious and exercise room. Ultimate kitchen with all the on the 2nd stainless applainces youbedrooms need. Pool.located $510,000 floor. Large master with soaking tub. Library on the 2nd floor has floor to ceiling shelving.
3266 e. 75th St. well - Custom2404 built home with quality 7777 S.front JameStown ave. with - Amazing customchairs built Jack Arnold 60 woodward BLvd. - Boston Cir. SquareThis Condos with close accessbackyard. 6623 S. Evanston could be your This E. 28th St. Wide porch rocking makes craftsmanship. Beautiful frontfeel doorwelcome open to officein home built for thestyle currenthome. owners. Attention to details are in to Riverparks and newwith Gathering Place. First floor features appointed home gorgeous wood, hardware and marble is glassyou this colonial Large open rooms paneling, built-ins with & fireplace. Formal living everymake room ofthe the house. Hardwood beamed ceilings, combo living/dining area having fireplaceisand wetbar. The with situated on 2.8 acres. The ahouse close to 8000 sq. rich ft. beautifully a lots of windows house great floors, for lots of living. and dining rooms. Large center island kitchen with on beautiful cabinetryMaster and lots ofsuite natural plus light make this house kitchen has solidand wood cabinetry Corianlot. countertops. landscaped has a largeandtreed The 6 bedrooms, kitchen Hardwood floors 1st floor. additional high-end opens tobedroom family room. Master one of a kind.up. 6 bedrooms each having walk-inhas closetscenter and full Upstairs featuesliving master suite with double closets, large bath and formal areas are on one-level. There are 7appliances full baths and suite 3 bedrooms Spacious kitchen thekitchen first floor. Upstairs features roomdishwashers. baths. 2 located 3onliving first floor. Lower level has high ceilings, and private Second bedroom pluslevel study,gameroom full bath and located and one balcony. ½ bath. Large lower with on full island andgame double areas. $898,000 plus two additional bedrooms. Wonderful outdoor media room, game room, kitchenette plus work out room. laundry. Calloverlooks for more details and bath a beautiful pool. $1,500,000 entertaining space has stone fireplace. $599,900
All outside surfaces are covered in Pennsylvia bluestone tile. Inground pool. Call for more details.
3126 E. 87th PL- Elegant Gated Wellington 4942 Custom Built in Wexford 10520 S. 91stinE.the Ave. Magnificent home in Royal Oaks home located in E. one103rd of theSt.most prestigious and secure locations heart of Midtown South has view of the pond. Recently by three Murphyfireplaces, has been nicely updated. Formal Legacy Parkamenities! II built by Bill Haynes and Homes. The Tulsa. Four bedrooms, two living areas, three car garage. Breathtaking Designed built 6423 S. indianapoLiS ave. attention Modern twist with a great floorplan 11413floorplan e. 132nd pLis. Custom with attention to 59th pLKitchen . Gated Garden Parkbacksplash, with hardwoodopen remodeled with grabbing living2117 and e.dining. has tile great built for home entertaining with make this in house one ofroom. a kind. Gated courtyard with2koiCall pondRodger detail inroom every room. Located on overfireplace. an acre of land. Master by architect Mike Dankbar in 2007. for appointment. $2,950,000 floorscounters andErker lots of natural light. Combo formal living$3,500,000 andgreat details every 5 bedrooms, granite andan stainless appliances. having stone Granite opens to double front1st doors. Floating formalRedone living and dining plus 2 additional bedrooms appliances down. Upstairs and features game dining. Kitchen double windows overlooking front located on the floor. Study. Familyroom withhasbuilt-ins and fireplace. 3 kitchen has stainless cherry is over a lower with level family stone fireplace. room, 2 other bedrooms and office.onOpen with patio. on Kitchen appliances. bedrooms. 2bedbaths.cabinets. gameroom wet room bar. having Beautifully bedroms 1st Aid floor with 2 2additional Office. 3 bedrooms the kitchen first floor. Spacious eat-in kitchen with pantry. Bedroom wing features Alderwood cabinetry and Expansion granite counters. Saferoom. 4 car used has a studio. landscaped. $760,000 roomsBonus up room + gameroom and $175,000 sitting area. New Plantation Shutters. space upstairs private study. Master suite plus 4 additional bedroomsRoof. and $475,000 garage. Must See! with plans. Call for more details. $334,500
Rodger Erker
pullman baths. Large lot. $419,000
918-740-4663
Wonderful lot to build your dream home on in Woodlar. The property is 1.077 acres. $275,000 104
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
McGraw Realtors TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors
Specializing in Fine Quality Homes 260-1800
11706 S. Erie Avenue, Tulsa
Forest Hills Estates, 3 levels of living. Backs to a pond, Gourmet Kitchen w/Huge center Island. Five bedrooms, 7.5 baths. Office, sun room and living quarters in walk out basement. Recent remodel. Corner lot. Bixby schools. $950,000
11415 S. Sandusky Avenue, Tulsa
4BR, 4 full and 2 half baths. Living & dining rooms with views. Family room opens to Chef’s kitchen with Labradorite granite island. Theater room. In-ground gunite pool & patios. Jenks SE. $1,100,000
Judy Stocker
918.605.0998
11402 S. Granite Place, Tulsa
Gorgeous home and yard. Pool with wrought iron fence around and privacy fence. Four bedrooms on main level, one bedroom up. Large three car garage. Office down, enclosed sun room, fifth bedroom up. $620,000
Adonna Stocker Anderson 918.998.1053
jstocker@mcgrawok.com
adonnaanderson@mcgrawok.com
The
11911 S Cedar Court
742 W 99th StreetStocker S
Great 3 bedroom,2.5 bath, home on cul-de-sac in desireable Beckett Ridge Subdivision. Large kitchen,formal dining,office, 2.5 car garage. Hardwoods,tile,new carpets,ceiling fans throughout.$215,000
Too many extras to list in this 5 BR custom! Family room w/wood beams, FP & built-ins. Granite kit w/induction cooktop, drawer DW & oven new in 2016. Screened back porch + patio on greenbelt. Workshop area in garage w/full size garage door to backyard! $325,000
5429 E 121st Place
12204 S Darlington Avenue
3/2.5/3 w/formal dining & study! This 1 level home boasts stunning hardwoods and extensive wood trim. Must see luxurious kitchen with custom hand glazed,creamy gray cabinets with charcoal accents & a Butler’s Pantry you’ll swoon over. Gorgeous in person! $340,000
Master + 1 down, study,game room, loft, 3 bedrooms and 2 full bath up.; Hand scraped hardwoods & extensive wood trim abound,exotic granite kitchen w/6cm chiseled edge island,soft close cabinets, and built-in appliances. Wine room! $435,000
Group
McGraw Realtors proudly congratulates Judy Stocker, for being recognized by Tulsa People Magazine as one of the 2016 Top 100 Realtors in Tulsa. 106
TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
918-640-1073 scoffman@mcgrawok.com
LD
2813 E 56th Place - New Price. One level ranch with creek view. Very private, large yard, new driveway, 4 or 5 bed, flexible plan with possible mother in law or extra study/hobby room. Very unique original Jay Rambo retro kitchen. Amazing yard and trees. $309,000
SO
2533 S Birmingham Ave New Listing. Stunning 2 bed with totally remodeled kitchen in 2012, granite, soft close cabinets, Chef’s closet, 5 burner Dacor stove, kitchen open to 2nd living, breakfast bar, updated baths, huge yard. Newer windows. $277,000
Wind River Lot Perfect to build on. This extra large lot is two smaller lots combined. Jenks Schools. $99,000
mike Keys 918.808.4780
Wooded 1.73 acre property in Jenks SE Schools 11305 S Granite Avenue Almost 7,000 sq ft on one level - corner lot. Pool, Spa, Koi ponds, outdoor kitchen, lighted tennis court. Great views from each room, multiple living, 4 bed, 6 full, 2 half baths plus guest quarters. $995,000 TulsaPeople.com
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McGraw Realtors
Scott coffman
McGraw Realtors
Sandy Rupe 918-691-1100 Bob David 918-808-6792 Angie Gregory 918-645-1974 Laura Mills 918-693-0568
65 Home Sites with New Homes starting from 65 Home Sites with New Homes starting from
$500,000’s to up $1,000,000 $500,000’s to 800,000’s
Located in one of South Tulsa’s most prestigious
Located in one of South Tulsa’s most prestigious neighborhoods
12013 S Toledo Ave. - Jenks SE, 4 Bds, 3,5 Ba, New construction, Gated, Office, stone fireplace in Great Rm & Breakfast Rm, Media Rm off Kitchen, Game Rm & Bonus Rm up covered patio and more... Leadership Team. $599,000
11915 S Toledo Ave. - Jenks SE, 4 Bd, 4.5 ba. New construction, Gated, Office, Great Room with stone fireplace, Media Room off Kitchen, Game Room up, covered patio and more....Leadership Team. $569,900
NEW neighborhoods Jenks Southeast School District
12029 S Toledo Ave. - Jenks SE, 4 Bd, 3.5 Ba, New construction, Gated, Office/Game Room down, Great Room, Transitional, Mud Room, Game Room up, oversized covered patio and more....Leadership Team. $539,000
In theJenks Southeast School District 6 Exclusive Builders Castlerock Builders
6 Exclusive Builders LaBella Homes
Castlerock Builders Labadie Construction Company Cobblestone Homes LaBella Homes Signature Homes LabadieLee Construction Company Brad Dunlap Properties
Cobblestone Homes
Lee Signature Homes For more information call Brad Dunlap Properties The Leadership Team McGraw Realtors Bob David 918-808-6792 Sandy Rupe Exclusive Marketing by: 918-691-1100 The Leadership Team Angie Gregory 918645-1974 Laura Mills 918-693-0568 McGraw Realtors
Bob David 918-808-6792 Sandy Rupe 918-691-1100 Angie Gregory 918-645-1974 Laura Mills 918-693-0568
11904 S. Toledo - Jenks SE, 5 bd, 5.5 ba, New construction, 12016 S. Urbana Ave. New construction, 5 bd (3 bds down), gated, custom finishes, great room and more! Bob David 808- 5/5 ba, custom finishes, dbl sliding door off back patio. Bob David 6792. $699,000 808-6792. $649,000
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live!
Sue Ann Blair Real Estate Agent since 2002
See for yourself! Stop in during our open houses Thursdays 4-6pm—Saturday/Sundays 2-5pm
Bovasso
& Beal Team
Sharna Bovasso (918) 605-2995 | sbovasso@mcgrawok.com Dee Ann Beal (918) 688-5467 | dbeal@mcgrawok.com
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3107 E. 88th Street Custom gorgeous dream home w/chef’s kitchen & new high end appliances. 2 masters down & all beds have private baths! Recording studio and 14 seat theater room. Backyard oasis w/ pool, spa, waterfall, Koi pond & outdoor kitchen. Located in beautiful gated Wellington South.$915,000.
Designer Showcase Chair since 2011 Top 100 Tulsa Realtor
2638 E. 65th Place Beautifully remodeled home with upscale design. Chef’s kitchen w/ state-ofthe-art appliances. Entertainer’s dream home w/ open floor plan & 3 living areas. Updated baths. New windows throughout & exterior paint. Large patio overlooks saltwater pool. Walk to Southern Hills CC. $439,000.
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421 W. 77th Street Pristine home w/ flexible layout. Granite kitchen opens to great room. Master +2 beds down, gameroom & 1bed up. Master closet connects to laundry. Custom features and beautiful hardwoods. Neighborhood park & pool. Close to Tulsa HIlls.$369,000.
S 177th East Avenue Rare opportunity to own property in a prime location just east of Indian Springs Golf and Tennis County Club. Build your dream home or subdivide. Five beautiful acres with paved county road access. $200,000.
BENEFITS + CAUSES + VOLUNTEERS Event patrons with Demand Project Co-founder Kristin Weis.
DEANNA SPYRES/INSPYRED IMAGES
DEMANDING ATTENTION S
upporters of the Demand Project gathered Dec. 9 to raise funds for the restoration of sex trafficking victims in Oklahoma. More than 120 guests were welcomed to the McBirney Mansion by hosts Wendy and Gentner Drummond. The event raised $35,000 for the nonprofit dedicated to the eradication of sexual exploitation, with an emphasis on children.
Event sponsors included Blue Sky Bank, QuikTrip and The Vintage Pearl. The Demand Project’s founders Kristin and Jason Weis organized an event that featured a silent auction, a raffle and hors d’oeuvres catered by POSTOAK Lodge and Retreat. Guests heard from Cori Duke, emcee, and the Weises. TP
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COMPILED BY JUDY LANGDON
Greenwood Community Spirit Awards Gala On Dec. 2, the Historic Greenwood Chamber of Commerce hosted the inaugural Greenwood Community Spirit Awards Gala at the Doubletree Hotel Downtown Tulsa. Award recipients were individuals who have demonstrated excellence in education, business, humanity, community and innovation. The gala launched the Chamber’s Historic Black Wall Street Scholarship Fund, which will award five African-American high school students $1,000 scholarships at Juneteenth 2017. 1. KKT Architects was one of the night’s sponsors. 2. Greater Tulsa Hispanic Chamber of Commerce President Francisco Trevino and Greenwood Chamber of Commerce President Sherry Gamble-Smith 3. Jamaal Dyer, Greenwood Chamber Young Professionals president; Candice Nyan; DeVon Douglass; Ashley Philippsen, Chamber Young Professional of the Year; Carlisha Williams; Clarence Boyd 4. Top row: Awardees Bill White, Dr. Rodney Clark, Marq Lewis, Tim Smallwood, Pastor Wendell Hope Bottom row: Ashley Philippsen, Sherry Laskey, Jane Malone, Nicole Smallwood, Event Chair Donna Jackson, Sherry Gamble-Smith
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11 St. Patrick’s Day Run Benefits Special Olympics Oklahoma. SOOK .ORG
3 Harwelden Awards Luncheon Benefits Arts and Humanities Council of Tulsa. AHHATULSA.ORG / PROGRAMS / HARWELDENAWARDS
18 Vintage O-State Benefits Oklahoma State University. ORANGECONNECTION.ORG
3 Memory Gala: Untold Stories Benefits Alzheimer’s Association. MEMORYGALA.ORG
22-24 Aberson’s and Friends Warehouse Sale Benefits Family and Children’s Services. FCSOK .ORG / SALE
3 Overture: A World Passport in Food and Music Benefits Signature Symphony of Tulsa Community College. SIGNATURESYMPHONY.ORG / OVERTURE 4 BUNCO for Breast Cancer 2017 Benefits Breast Cancer Assistance Program. BCAPFUND.ORG 4 CASA Casino 2017: Feathers and Fedoras Benefits Tulsa CASA Inc. CASACASINO.ORG 4 Red Ribbon Gala Benefits Tulsa CARES. REDRIBBONGALA.ORG
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4 Sapphire Celebration Benefits Riverfield Country Day School. RIVERFIELD.ORG
23 Oysters and Ale Benefits Hospice of Green Country. HOSPICEOFGREENCOUNTRY.ORG / OYSTERSANDALE 24 Will Rogers High School Hall of Fame Induction Dinner Benefits Will Rogers Community Foundation. ROGERSFOUNDATION.NET 25 Carnivale 2017 — Tribalé Benefits Mental Health Association Oklahoma. BESTPARTYINTOWN.ORG 25 Operation A.R.T. Gala Benefits Operation Aware of Oklahoma Inc. OPERATIONAWARE.ORG / EVENTS 30 Tulsa Rescue Gala Benefits American Red Cross. REDCROSS.ORG / LOCAL / OKLAHOMA
4 Splash: Loggerhead Launch Benefits Oklahoma Aquarium. OKAQUARIUM.ORG
31 2017 Tulsa St. Jude Dream Home Benefits ALSAC/St. Jude Children’s Research Foundation. DREAMHOME.ORG
4 Tulsa Opera Ball Benefits Tulsa Opera. TULSAOPERA.ORG
31 Broadway Bash Benefits Theatre Tulsa. THEATRETULSA.ORG / BROADWAYBASH
8 Youth of the Year Banquet Benefits the Salvation Army. SALARMYTULSA.ORG
31 Doris Niles Night at the Round-Up Benefits Will Rogers Community Foundation. WILLROGERSFOUNDATION.NET
9 30th Anniversary Celebration Benefits Mend Pregnancy Resource Center. MENDPREGNANCY.ORG
31 Popping Bottles Benefits Emergency Infant Services. EISTULSA.ORG
11 Sip for Sight 2017 Benefits Vizavance. SIPFORSIGHT.COM
VISIT TULSAPEOPLE.COM for a complete calendar of events.
EDITOR’S NOTE: HIGHLIGHTED EVENTS ARE SPONSORED BY TULSAPEOPLE. TulsaPeople MARCH 2017
LOUIS BESSES/BESSES PHOTOGRAPHY
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2 Be the Story Benefits Happy Hands Education Center. HAPPYHANDS.ORG
A PARK GROWS IN TULSA A GATHERING PLACE – PART 18
Construction progresses at A Gathering Place.
SITE PROGRESS THIS MONTH Steel framing complete on Williams Lodge; stonework underway ONEOK Boathouse community deck concrete complete Backfill of soil continues on the underground maintenance building as well as work beginning on the interior finishes. Mist Mountain concrete vault complete Land bridge headwall construction continues Wetland Garden construction continues North and south bumpout construction continues, including armoring of the shoreline (pending reduced Keystone Dam water releases). Stabilization of the slopes throughout the elevation changes of the park continues Playground equipment installation beginning, particularly in the Skywalk Forest and Ramble areas Four Seasons Garden walls construction underway Continue fabrication of site-wide stone walls
COURTESY A GATHERING PLACE FOR TULSA
City of Tulsa is finishing up the two major stormwater projects on north and east sides of site. City of Tulsa’s reconstruction of Riverside Drive continues Editor’s Note: Construction plans subject to change.
For more information, visit agatheringplacefortulsa.com.
MARKING DIVIDENDS The Leinbach Family sees A Gathering Place for Tulsa as an asset for the city. BY ANNE BROCKMAN
Living near the construction site of A Gathering The Leinbach Fami ly Place for Tulsa, Ed and Kathy Leinbach have done what anyone would do when it comes to the biggest construction project in recent city history. They regularly walk down South Cincinnati Avenue and take a peek through the construction barriers at A Gathering Place for Tulsa. As construction progresses, the Leinbachs have literally watched the park take shape. The fact that the park is geared for all the citizens of Tulsa — especially the youth — is what prompted the Leinbachs to donate $50,000 to the park. “Many don’t realize what Mr. Kaiser has done for the city and this part of the state. It’s going to be a huge asset for the city,” Ed Leinbach says. “If he was willing to put forth a huge amount of money that would do good for Tulsa, we thought we wanted to participate in some modest way.” It’s the spectrum of donors who make this project a reality. “We are so grateful for the Leinbachs’ generous donation to the park,” says Jeff Stava, executive director and trustee for A Gathering Place. “Their story is actually really special because they came to us without any prompting with a donation check in their hand — no questions asked. They just knew they wanted to be a part of making this park a reality for our community.” The park’s final goal of $200 million has not yet been met. Anyone wishing to make a donation of any size can send checks payable to the Tulsa Community Foundation | FBO Tulsa’s Gathering Place Fund at 7030 S. Yale Ave., Suite 600, Tulsa, OK 74136. TP TulsaPeople.com
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La Pure Tradition TULSA OPERA BALL 2017
2017 Debutantes
Anna Patricia Albright
Allison Nicole Bruns
Clair Nicole Castleberry
Blair Montgomery Dieterlen
Molly Noel Fischer
Mary Ella Heinrich
Kaitlyn Ashley Hurst
Rebecca Makenzie Nickel
Sarah Ann Pixley
Claire Katherine Raschen
Laurel Ann Salisbury
Livia May Ross Seigel
Carly Alyssa Stewart
Grace Ann Wood
Carmen Marc Valvo
Julie Nickel and Suzanne Albright
Honor ary Chair
Event Co-Chairs
Kathy Raschen
Mary Lou Doudican
Debutante Chair
Squire Chair
Tulsa Opera Ball 2017 March 4, 2017 • The Mayo Hotel
For more information, please call Tulsa Opera at 918-582-4035, ext. 111.
2017 Squires
Jack Edward Adelson
William Dune Beard
William Hale Bollinger
Brenden Jeffrey Broermann
Kadar James Cohlmia
Thomas Chandler Doudican
Jack Toole Griffin
Henry Cook Kane
Davis Matthew Lambert
Christian Paul Luessenhop, Jr.
Jackson Scott McCormick
Cannon Bailey Montgomery
Sawyer James Steinke
Todd Parker Webb
Cooper Thomas Williamson
Jesse Kinyon Wood
VOLUNTEER SPOTLIGHT:
PASSIONS
WANDA SATROM
CARNIVALE TRIBALÉ
6:30 p.m., March 25 Cox Business Center, 100 Civic Center Black tie $2,000-$60,000, sponsorships. bestpartyintown.org
Phil and Adriane Lakin will celebrate at Carnivale 2017, “the best party in town.”
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BY TARA RITTLER
hil and Adriane Lakin have a creative Although Phil grew familiar with MHAO way of involving their sons — Brooks, through his work at the Tulsa Community Foun18, Alex, 15, and Cooper, 11 — in their dation, Adriane learned about the organization philanthropic activities. when she attended her fi rst Carnivale in 2003. “Every year, I withdraw cash from the bank, The theme was Cirque Le Masque, and it was bring it home and lay it on the table,” Phil held at the University of Tulsa Reynolds Center. Lakin says. Together, the family decides how Since then, she has developed a deep appreciation to allocate the money — to church, universities for its work. and nonprofits like Mental Health Association On the second Friday of every month, MHAO Oklahoma — in the coming year. offers public tours of its housing complexes. After “I want our sons to know that this is our taking a tour, Adriane was impressed by the sense responsibility to our community,” Phil says. of community and responsibility that MHAO’s But to the Lakins, philanthropy is more than housing clients have. a financial investment. In addition to his work as Although MHAO doesn’t ask for anything the CEO of the Tulsa Community Foundation from its clients, “Once they get off the streets, and as a city councilor, Phil, alongside Adriane, and they have a home and a purpose, they want a fitness instructor at the St. to start volunteering, they get a Francis HealthZone, is chairjob. And everybody takes care HISTORY: The first ing “the best party in town” — of each other,” she says. Carnivale, then called Le Carnivale 2017, a gala benefitAs Carnivale chairs, the Masquerade, was held in 1990. ing MHAO. Lakins also got to pick this The funds from this event Chairing the event is a yearyear’s theme: Tribalé. Attendallowed MHAO to establish its long effort, as the Lakins’ priees will be immersed in an first housing program, Walker mary responsibility is to raise exotic, Polynesian-inspired Hall. Le Masquerade became $1 million with the help of a environment, including tropiCarnivale in 2006. committee. Th is money will cal cocktails — and of course, support MHAO’s mission to great food and dancing. One provide housing for the homeless, particularly reason guests enjoy Carnivale is that all the fundthose with mental health issues or veterans. It raising is completed beforehand. also will help fund other services provided by “It’s a celebration of the work that MHAO MHAO, including suicide prevention screening does and will continue to do,” Phil says. TP and training.
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Nonprofi t: Christians Against Trafficking Human trafficking is a global issue. There are an estimated 21 million people trafficked in the world. Through a coalition of Tulsa-area churches, Christians Against Trafficking is raising awareness of the issue. Wanda Satrom has been involved with the nonprofit for four years. When was Christians Against Trafficking founded and what is its purpose? Christians Against Trafficking was established in 2013 as a coalition of local churches seeking to raise awareness of human trafficking around the world, but especially as it occurs in Tulsa. We address legislative and law enforcement issues, support after-care needs and educate churches about the market for trafficking. We are especially focused on teaching about the role pornography plays in sexual trafficking. Why is this organization a personal passion of yours? I first became aware of the problem of human trafficking around 20 years ago, but I believed it only happened in third world countries. I became a supporter of the International Justice Mission as a way of helping to fight slavery internationally. I am now the Oklahoma Volunteer Advocate for IJM. It is a very successful and professionally run Christian ministry that is active in 17 countries. It works closely with the government and law enforcement in every country where they have offices and helps protect 21 million people globally from violence. — JUDY LANGDON
Christians Against Trafficking meets the second Thursday of each month at 6:30 p.m. at Kirk of the Hills Church, 4102 E. 61st St.
VOLUNTEER SPOTLIGHT: COURTESY WANDA SATROM
WHEN THE FUNDRAISING’S OVER...
CHARITABLE EVENTS SUPPORTED BY
SED IN 2015; HAYLEY (L), DIAGNO
SED IN 2008
LYNNE (R), DIAGNO
WALK MS: TULSA SATURDAY, APRIL 8 GUTHRIE GREEN REGISTER TODAY! WALKMS.ORG | 1-855-372-1331
S a t u r d ay, M a r c h 1 1 3920 S. Peoria, Tulsa
w w w.SOOK .org / 918-481-1234 Presenting Sponsor
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TAKE ME BACK
DOWNTOWN TULSA’S CLOSE CALL BY JUDY LANGDON
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lmost 90 years ago, the USS Los Angeles, designated as the ZR-3 by the U.S. Navy, was the first airship, or Zeppelin, designed for intercontinental flights. She was completed in August 1924 and delivered to the U.S. Navy that October. She was 656.2 feet long, 90.68 feet in diameter, with a maximum speed of 79 miles per hour, powered by Maybach 12-cylinder engines. She had a range of 5,770 miles. On Oct. 9, 1928, the USS Los Angeles flew over the downtown Tulsa skyline (the Exchange National Bank, now 116
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known as 320 South Boston Building, on the left, and the Philtower on the right). The two towers are only 492 feet apart, and the bank’s central tower had just added a new feature, a spire reportedly known as a “mooring tower” for airships. Apparently due to its length, the airship did not attempt mooring at the Tulsa bank because of its close proximity to the Philtower. At the time of the Zeppelin’s pass-over, it was enroute to Lakehurst, New Jersey, from a visit to the helium plant in Fort Worth, Texas.* TP
BERYL FORD COLLECTION/ROTARY CLUB OF TULSA, TULSA CITY-COUNTY LIBRARY AND TULSA HISTORICAL SOCIETY *INFORMATION COURTESY: HTTP://WELWEB.ORG/THENANDNOW/ZR-3.HTML
The USS Los Angeles flies over Tulsa on Oct. 9, 1928.
TRUE BLUE Tulsa Spine & Rehab is a successful, growing Oklahoma business. When owner Sean Riley, DC decided to take his practice to the next level, he knew he could count on Michael Holt and the team at Blue Sky Bank to provide the solutions necessary to make that growth happen. Dr. Riley’s patients count on him for a proactive, sound treatment plan. Similarly, Dr. Riley counts on Blue Sky Bank to support his professional ambition with creative, resultsdriven financial direction. Our goal is to build a dynamic working relationship, focused on your success. We’re on top of it for Dr. Riley; we’ll be there for you, too.
Let’s get to work. Dr. Sean Riley (above, right), owner of Tulsa Spine & Rehab with Michael Holt, Vice President, Blue Sky Bank
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