Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Location: 6025 Royal Lane (Preston Hollow) and 3130 Knox Street (Knox District) Sushi, martinis and a bougie yacht club. Hey, Vandelay Hospitality is just giving the people of Dallas what they want.
Knox / Henderson is a neighborhood in Dallas, Texas . It is north of the Uptown neighborhood and east and south of the enclave of Highland Park. It is centered on Knox Street, Henderson Avenue, McKinney Avenue, and Cole Avenue. The area is home to many bars, restaurants, and shops. The Katy Trail also runs through the neighborhood.
Deep Ellum is a neighborhood of Dallas, Texas, composed largely of arts, restaurants, bars, and entertainment venues near downtown in East Dallas.Its name is based on a corruption of the area's principal thoroughfare, Elm Street.
A second Gas Monkey Bar N' Grill location was opened in International Terminal D at Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport in March 2014. [14] [15] [16] The chief executive has indicated a desire to open a third Texas location somewhere other than the Dallas–Fort Worth metropolitan area. [17] [18]
Knox–Henderson station is a proposed DART light rail station that would serve the Knox-Henderson and Vickery Place neighborhoods of Dallas, Texas.The station would be located in an underground tunnel at the intersection of North Central Expressway and Knox Street, and it would serve the Red Line, Orange Line, and Blue Line.
Highland Park is a town in central Dallas County, Texas, United States. The population was estimated to be 8,719 in 2022, dropping from the previously recorded 8,864 in 2020. [4] It is located between the Dallas North Tollway and U.S. Route 75 (North Central Expressway), 4 miles (6 km) north of downtown Dallas.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Homes had to be a full two stories, cost at least US$2,000 and no house could face a side street. The infrastructure featured such amenities as sidewalks, paved streets, shade trees, sewers, gas mains, and electric street lights. Many of the Dallas' leading businessmen and social elite soon called magnificent Munger Place home.