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Horner Ballpark is a baseball field in Dallas, Texas.It is the home park of the Dallas Baptist Patriots baseball team of the NCAA Division I Conference USA.It opened on February 15, 2013, [1] and has been highly acclaimed by national media, including D1Baseball.com. [2] [3]
The Dallas Downtown Historic District is a 555-acre (225 ha) area in downtown Dallas, Texas, United States that was designated a historic district in 2006 and expanded in 2009 to preserve the diverse architectural history of the area. [3]
Dallas Scottish Rite Temple: 500 S. Harwood Street: 1910-1913 First Presbyterian Church: 401 S. Harwood Street: 1912, 1948 Dallas Municipal Building and Annex: 106 S. Harwood Street: 1914, 1954 Majestic Theatre: 1923 Elm Street: 1920 Lone Star Gas Company (south building) 1915 Wood Street: 1924 Dallas Hilton: 1933 Main Street: 1925 Film ...
The road also connects to Dallas Love Field and provides access to its terminal. It also once was a major thoroughfare through central Dallas and the Turtle Creek area in the early 1900s. Dallas Area Rapid Transit bus route 39 traversed much of the length of this road; however, in 2022, bus route 103 replaced it. [1] [2] [3] [4]
2009 Map of the Dallas Pedestrian Network. The Dallas Pedestrian Network or Dallas Pedway is a system of grade-separated walkways covering thirty-six city blocks of Downtown Dallas, Texas, United States. [1] The system connects buildings, garages and parks through tunnels and above-ground skybridges.
Swiss Avenue Historic District map. The entire district, Swiss Avenue between Fitzhugh and La Vista, was listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places on March 28, 1974, and is a Dallas Landmark Historic District, the city's first, established in 1973. [12]
Klyde Warren Park is a 5.2-acre park [5] that connects Downtown Dallas with Uptown. The park is located above the freeway (which travels through a tunnel under the park, much like the Deck Park Tunnel in Phoenix ) between Pearl and St. Paul streets to the west and east, and the frontage roads to the north and south.
Less than a mile later at an intersection with Oak Lawn Avenue, the highway designation turned northeast up Oak Lawn, which it followed into Highland Park. There, it was known as Oak Lawn Avenue until an intersection with Armstrong Parkway, where it became Preston Road. On October 30, 1958, SH 289 was extended northward 3.6 miles.