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Building Sales And Medical Growth Boosts Property Along Dallas’ Stemmons Freeway

One of Dallas’ first business districts is seeing a robust revival.

Construction of Stemmons Freeway, which started in the 1950s, sent office development northwest of downtown Dallas.(PHOTO CREDIT: Tom Dillard / Dallas Morning News Photographer)

Starting in the 1950s, office construction spread northwest of downtown along Dallas’ new Stemmons Freeway. By the 1960s, the Interstate 35E corridor between downtown and Dallas Love Field was seeing a building boom with dozens of new business addresses popping up along the highway. But the Stemmons Corridor was loslifeing its shine by the 1990s, with many of the big office employers headed to newer pastures in North Dallas, Irving and Plano.

Now the area is seeing a rebound, with multiple property sales and plans for construction.

 “It’s amazing how things have transitioned over there — it’s all of a sudden gentrified,” said Gary Carr, vice chairman of Newmark Group.

Newmark has recently handled several office building lfie sciencessales along Stemmons Freeway and Mockingbird Lane The commercial real estate firm is marketing the two Mockingbird Towers, one of the largest office properties in that area.

“The growing interest in the area is due to the local boom in medical and life science operations,” said Carr. “A big part of it is the hospital district and the growth at Parkland Hospital, UT Southwestern and Children’s Medical. They’ve taken a ton of office square footage over there. Development is also a result of Love Field expanding and everything moving in that direction.”

The centerpiece of the Pegasus Park project is this 18-story office tower that was once the headquarters of jeweler Zale Corp. and, before that, Exxon Mobil.(PHOTO CREDIT: Elias Valverde II / Dallas Morning News Staff Photographer)

Redevelopment of the former Exxon Mobil office tower on Stemmons at Commonwealth Drive has spurred other investments along the highway.

Small Investments and Lyda Hill Philanthropies converted the vacant office high-rise into a mixed-use office campus for biotech firms and nonprofit organizations called Pegasus Park. UT Southwestern Medical Center, Massachusetts-based BioLabs and Taysha Gene Therapies along with other firms have taken space in the building.

“Pegasus Park is growing as we expected and attracting lots of new activity,” the owners said in a statement. “It is truly becoming the center of the life sciences cluster here in North Texas, and we are excited about continuing to build the ecosystem.”

Small Investments acquired a second office tower for redevelopment at 2525 North Stemmons.

A Wisconsin-based medical real estate firm, Hammes Partners, has purchased the largest office building in Dallas’ Stemmons Freeway corridor northwest of downtown — the 20-story Trinity Towers at Stemmons and Inwood Road.

Ricchi Tower along North Stemmons recently sold to the city of Dallas for more than $14 million.(PHOTO CREDIT: Shafkat Anowar / Dallas Morning News Staff Photographer)

The city of Dallas spent more than $14 million to buy the Ricchi Tower at 7800 North Stemmons to be used for “city services and operations.”

And a California-based medical real estate firm, Alexandria Real Estate Equities, bought a vacant block at the northeast corner of Mockingbird and Harry Hines Boulevard where it’s planning a medical campus, real estate brokers say.

The Alexandria site is across the street from Exchange Park, where UT Southwestern is eyeing a major expansion.

“What’s happening in the area is truly exciting,” said Kolby Dickerson, vice president of TXRE Properties. “When I got down there 10 years ago, it seemed like nobody else wanted to work there. You have new and well-capitalized owners putting money into the buildings and providing great quality office space at a discount to the overall market. It’s probably the most affordable office space in Dallas. The activity is growing as people are getting priced out of Uptown, Las Colinas and even buildings on Central Expressway.”

TXRE Real Estate has bought and sold offices in the Stemmons Corridor and still has properties in the area. Dickerson said developers are taking a look at the locations for building sites for apartments and other projects.

An Austin-based apartment builder is buying a vacant office at 8001 Stemmons that will be demolished to make way for rental units.(PHOTO CREDIT: Shafkat Anowar / Dallas Morning News Staff Photographer)

OHT Partners, an Austin-based apartment builder, is buying a vacant office building at 8001 Stemmons Freeway and plans to demolish the property and put up rental units.

“You can get a lot of land down there that is already zoned at prices that are way less,” said Jake Milner, who is working with J. Scott Lake of Davidson Bogel Real Estate to broker the property sale to OHT Partners. “We are already getting calls from other owners in the area saying, What is my dirt worth?’ ”

 

Source: Dallas Morning News

$1 Million Dollar Grant Awarded To Support Construction Of Parkland’s New RedBird Health Center In South Dallas County

The Bank of America Charitable Foundation has awarded a $1 million grant to support construction of Parkland Health & Hospital System’s new RedBird Health Center, Parkland Foundation and Bank of America just announced.

The new health center will provide residents in southern Dallas County access to a variety of preventive vital health services close to home when it opens in September 2021.

“Guided by Bank of America’s commitment to helping our communities move forward, we deeply appreciate the opportunity to partner with Parkland and the RedBird Health Center,” said Jennifer Chandler, Bank of America Dallas President. “We understand the persisting challenges many areas of our city face in accessing quality healthcare, including southern Dallas County, and we are honored to play a part in this project and support Parkland’s mission to serve the most vulnerable in our community.”

As the population grows in Dallas County, there has been a disproportionate growth in the number of vulnerable populations and, in turn, an increase in the need for affordable, accessible health services. Parkland’s most recent Community Health Needs Assessment (CHNA) found that disparities in access to medical care are contributing to a nearly 25-year gap between ZIP codes with the highest and lowest life expectancies.

The CHNA further indicates there is also a geographic divide, with our neighbors in southern Dallas County being underserved by existing healthcare services needed to get healthy and stay healthy. A high percentage of patients from these ZIP codes come to Parkland’s emergency department for basic primary care, need specialized care to manage their diabetes and associated complications, and require life-saving cancer treatment at later stages because they did not have access to screenings and early intervention to treat the disease.

Fighting The Inequities In Healthcare

“Today in Dallas County your ZIP code is a better predictor of health than your genetic code,” said Christina Mintner, Senior Vice President Of Population Health At Parkland. “We believe that where you live should not define how long and how well you live. That’s why we’re building the new RedBird Health Center in the heart of southern Dallas County, to fight the inequities in healthcare.”

Located at U.S. Route 67 and Interstate 20 in the award-winning Reimagine RedBird development, the new 40,000 square-foot health center will provide care close to home with services including adult and geriatric primary care, specialty care for women, behavioral health, breast cancer screenings, a pharmacy, social work, physical medicine and rehabilitation, and other services targeted to the specific health needs of the residents in the Red Bird area.

The health center will further address transportation barriers by including the technology needed to provide virtual methods of care such as telehealth, e-consults and virtual shared medical appointments.

Projections indicate that once fully staffed, the new RedBird Health Center will provide 18,000 preventive and primary care visits each year and 23,000 women’s specialty health visits each year for people living in southern Dallas County, including Duncanville, DeSoto and Cedar Hill.

‘A Beacon of Hope For Our Neighbors In Southern Dallas County’

“We are grateful to Bank of America for their generous grant in support of our mission to provide equitable access to healthcare for everyone in our community,” said Michael A. Horne, EdD, MPP, President and CEO, Parkland Foundation. “The new RedBird Health Center will serve as a beacon of hope for our neighbors in southern Dallas County. Donor support is critical to helping Parkland provide comprehensive health services close to home. Thank you, Bank of America, for standing for Parkland and providing an opportunity for all residents to live healthy, active lives.”

Donors contributing $100,000 or more to support construction of the new RedBird Health Center include Amazon, Anonymous, Bank of America and The Pollock Foundation. To learn more about the new RedBird Health Center or to make a gift, please contact Parkland Foundation at 214-266-2000 or visit www.IStandforParkland.org.

About Parkland Foundation

Parkland Foundation is dedicated to securing substantial financial resources that advance the goals of Parkland Health & Hospital System. Through this support, Parkland is able to extend its services to reach more people in need and enhance the quality of care available to them. Learn more at www.IStandforParkland.org.

 

Source: Focus Daily News