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Roughly bounded by Pacific Ave., Market St., Jackson St. and right of way of Dallas Right of Way Management Company 32°46′42″N 96°48′26″W / 32.778333°N 96.807222°W / 32.778333; -96.807222 ( Dealey Plaza Historic
Maple Lawn, or Maple for short is an area in North Dallas, Texas, United States, which is home to government owned section 8 projects. The area has long been home to a largely African American and Hispanic community. Maple Avenue is the main road through the area, although the Maple Lawn area is unofficially the area bound to the West/Southwest ...
A baseball game at the park Bridge in Reverchon Park in the Oak Lawn area of Dallas, Texas Steps connecting Reverchon Park to the Katy Trail in Dallas, Texas. Reverchon Park is a public park in the Oak Lawn area of Dallas, Texas. It was named for the French botanist Julien Reverchon. The park lies along Turtle Creek, a tributary of the Trinity ...
Parkland's high volume of patients led to the decision by the Dallas County Commissioners Court to propose replacing the overcrowded, 50+-year-old building with a new 1,700,000-square-foot (160,000 m 2), 17-story, 862-bed facility, along with a new 380,000-square-foot (35,000 m 2) outpatient center, a 275,000-square-foot (25,500 m 2) office ...
Prior to June 28, 1989, SH 289 began north of downtown Dallas in the Oak Lawn neighborhood at its intersection with Pearl Street. From there, the highway designation followed Cedar Springs Road northeast for less than a block, and upon an intersection with Maple Avenue, ran northwest up that street.
Top 15 Japanese Hibachi Restaurants in Dallas, Texas to Satisfy Your Hunger. When we think about all the different kinds of food that are out there, hibachi seems to top many people’s lists.
In October 2018, Dallas made history when it became the first Texas city to get state recognition for its Oak Lawn LGBT neighborhood. [18] There is a large concentration of Hispanic owned businesses, restaurants, grocery stores, nightclubs, and retail establishments on the Maple Avenue corridor between the Inwood Road and the North Dallas Tollway.
Swiss Avenue, at least the portions contained within the Swiss Avenue Historic District, was initially developed by Robert S. Munger, a Dallas cotton gin manufacturer and pioneering real estate developer, as part of a larger development, Munger Place, which was billed as the first deed-restricted community in Texas. [7]