A pair of competing south Dallas homebuilders have teamed up to make a bigger impact together. Their first project is about more than just neighborhood transformation. It’s also about making home ...
The building was previously in foreclosure, as First United Bank sold the property after posting a winning bid of $27.2 ...
COVID-19 has caused a host of problems for the homebuilding industry. Along with worker safety issues on building sites and social distancing at new home models, builders across the country are seeing ...
DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) - Builders of Hope, a Dallas non-profit, is fighting to face two quality-of-life challenges: building houses people can afford, and helping them get into those houses. Alisha Hill ...
In booming North Texas where homebuilders can make big money, non-profit homebuilders are rare, and affordable workforce housing is scarce. Builders of Hope is the calling of a West Dallas pastor who ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. The median age of a home in Dallas County is 41 years old ...
To continue reading this content, please enable JavaScript in your browser settings and refresh this page. Preview this article 1 min Builders of Hope will work with ...
This summer, Dallas city manager T.C. Broadnax went from almost losing his job to tacking on a big raise to his six-figure salary. For months, a huge backlog of building permit applications was ...
City Manager T.C. Broadnax has until May 18 to produce a plan to fix Dallas’ broken permitting system, which for the past two years has caused months of delays for developers trying to build homes and ...
The city of Dallas’ system for approving residential, single-family building permits does not appear to be improving, despite months of frustration from the development community and council members.
In the early 20th century, the stretch of Ross Avenue leading into downtown was lined by mansions built for the city’s elite.
Dallas will move forward with a plan to remodel the former Itemizer-Observer building into city hall through a fee on utilities.