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Vitruvian Park is a multi-family, retail and commercial development in Addison, Texas. [1] The development is just west of the Dallas North Tollway, approximately one mile north of I-635/LBJ Freeway between Midway Road and Marsh Lane in Addison's southwest quadrant.
The Addison Athletic Club is a 52,000-ft 2 residents-only facility that features indoor and outdoor swimming pools, a gymnasium, fitness equipment, and racquetball courts. [33] Addison Circle Park was built in the early 2000s. Vitruvian Park includes commercial and recreational sections. There are approximately 27 works of public art throughout ...
Kaboom Town is a nationally recognized fireworks show in Addison, Texas that takes place at Addison Circle Park every July 3 to celebrate the Independence of the United States. With over 400,000 visitors and 1,500 pounds of fireworks, it is the largest fireworks display in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex.
Blueprints at Addison Circle is a steel sculpture located in Addison, Texas officially unveiled on April 13, 2000. [1] It is one of approximately 20 works of public art throughout the town. [ 2 ]
Shelby Park in Eagle Pass, Texas — the current epicenter of a standoff with the federal government — was named after a Confederate military leader who fled to Mexico in 1865 rather than ...
Addison Transit Center is a bus-only mass transit station located along Arapaho Road in Addison, Texas. It is part of the Dallas Area Rapid Transit system. The station services downtown Addison, including Addison Circle Park and Addison Airport .
Air Park-Dallas was built in 1965 as a privately owned, public-use airport by Milton Noell, former mayor of Addison, Texas, and his son David Noell.Lots were sold and many homes were built at the airport, but the Noells' plans to develop the remainder of the property as a country club-type facility never came to fruition.
Dallas Grand Prix of Texas Inc. entered bankruptcy in March 1985, ending any possibility that a follow-on F1 race would take place at Fair Park. [2] [5] Another major factor in the cancellation of future F1 races was pushback from residents of the nearby, populous Fair Park neighborhood, [2] which was majority Black and low-income. [6]