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    Love this Listing

    Modern $1.1 million Dallas home holds eco surprises around every corner

    Joanna England
    Mar 26, 2018 | 1:41 pm
    3846 Lively Cir, Dallas, Briggs Freeman Sothebys
    There are both indoor and outdoor patio areas.
    Photo courtesy of Estately

    A Dallas home that has earned major bragging rights for eco-friendliness went on the market on Monday, March 26. The Northwest Dallas house, at 3846 Lively Cir., is the first internationally certified "passive house" in Texas, meaning it was built to some of the most exacting standards in the world for energy efficiency and air quality.

    “The passive house originated in Germany and results in ultra-low energy usage,” said builder Connor Fagin, who with his father, Kyle Fagin, owns Fagin Partners. “We’ve got 14-inch thick [exterior] walls, an 18-inch thick roof, and even when we have a sharp temperature change outside, it takes about 24 hours for the heating or cooling system to have to turn on inside.”

    The house is 3,230 square feet on two stories. For the past several weeks, the air conditioning as been at 71 degrees and the heat at 69. Lights were burning bright, appliances were buzzing, and people were walking in and out as the property was prepared for sale.

    During all this activity, the house’s electricity usage has averaged $1 a day, about 90 percent less energy than a comparable structure built using standard techniques, says Fagin.

    Built as a spec home, this passive house uses leading-edge materials and “green” technology to create a comfortable, beautiful dwelling.

    “This is a high-quality, well-made house — but it’s just a house if you don’t know anything more than that,” said listing agent Vicki White with Briggs Freeman Sotheby’s International Realty. “But then you find out it’s the best of the best in Texas, something one-of-a kind, and it [creates] a whole different level of appreciation.”

    Low energy bills are just one of the benefits of a Passive House. It also offers extremely high air quality, thanks to the structure being almost completely air-tight and having two systems to deal with air, each with its own ductwork.

    “The typical home has one system to heat, cool, recirculate, filter, and de-humidifying air,” Connor said. “No single system is designed to do this well.”

    This house instead has one system for heating and cooling and a second for air quality management. The latter pulls in fresh air, pre-heats or pre-cools it, puts it through a MERV 13 filter to remove impurities, and pumps it into the house. An intelligent energy recovery ventilator works through the return vents to take in stale air and exhaust it outside.

    Other features include high-performance doors and windows, as well as a water harvesting system that holds 2,500 gallons of rainwater. In the yard, three miles of buried tubing create an irrigation soaker system that does not lose water to evaporation. There’s no roll off, which accounts for about 35 percent waste with traditional watering. Since there are no watering restrictions in Dallas for those using harvested water, a lush lawn is a real possibility, even in August.

    Smart House technology makes almost everything controlled from a smartphone or tablet and the house is pre-wired for solar panels.

    The inspiration for building a passive house started with Kyle Fagin.

    “We were already building more efficient homes and a friend gave me an article about passive houses — I thought, I want to try to do that,” Kyle Fagin said. “You can build a comfortable, healthy house, with really good air quality, low utility bills, and it’s better for the environment.”

    They used Ryall Sheridan Architects in New York City, a firm that is passive house certified.

    “I think what Connor and I hope is that more people will know about passive houses, what they are, that they’re available, and they can have one, too,” Kyle said.

    Kyle and Connor are so passionate about passive houses, they’re already at work on their second on Shorecrest Drive, near Midway Road and West Northwest Highway.

    The Lively house is in the luxury category, listing for $1.145 million. But passive technology and design can certainly be used in houses in the $300,000 to $400,000 range, Kyle said.

    “In the right situation, if a developer bought a bigger piece of land to subdivide, you might be able to get the price down to that range,” he said, noting that the additional cost for the passive designation was about 10 percent over the cost of building a similar, non-passive house.

    There’s a Realtor tour on March 27; those interested can contact agent Contact Vicki White for more information.

    ---

    A version of the story originally was published on Candy's Dirt.

    Smart House technology makes almost everything controlled from a smartphone or tablet.

    3846 Lively Cir, Dallas, Briggs Freeman Sothebys
      
    Photo courtesy of Estately
    Smart House technology makes almost everything controlled from a smartphone or tablet.
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    Mixed Use News

    Mixed-use East Dock will revive 1915 building in Dallas' Oak Cliff

    Luciana Gomez
    Apr 9, 2025 | 1:00 pm
    East Dock
    Courtesy rendering
    East Dock

    A century-old property in Oak Cliff Dallas is getting a makeover: Called East Dock, it's a former industrial site located at 900 E. Clarendon Dr. that is being restored into a retail and studio space.

    The project is being led by Proxy Properties, an Oak Cliff real estate group famous for breathing new life into vacant and often historical buildings. The project is supported by the City of Dallas through their Tax Increment Financing program (TIF), which reinvests property tax revenues on under-performing real estate.

    Proxy Properties' prior 50 projects in Oak Cliff include the Zion Hill Missionary Baptist Church, rebranded as Oak Cliff Assembly, an arts and theatre space with offices and co-work studios; and the Madison Hotel, a building from the 1920s which was restored and opened in 2024.

    "For us, it is important to buy buildings that have been vacant for a long time, ignored, or forgotten about," says Proxy founder AJ Ramler. "East Dock fit in that box. It was not contributing to the neighborhood."

    East Dock is intriguing both for its history and its location. Built in 1915, it has served over the decades as an ice factory, book manufacturing site, and producer of airplane parts, but has been vacant for more than seven years.

    The 62,000-square-foot-retail and studio space is fortuitously located in an area currently under heavy development: near the future Southern Gateway Park and Tenth Street Historical District, and a 7-minute walk from the DART Zoo Station.

    Ramler envisions the space as "an 18-hour campus," with coffee and athletic businesses open in the morning, followed by daytime operators such as offices, studios, and restaurants, then bars and entertainment in the evening.

    East DockEast DockRendering courtesy of JQAQ Atelier, LLC

    There's room for at least 15 businesses, with a few already secured including Barro, a Latin-American restaurant and market from Robert Ramirez, part-owner at Nova restaurant in Oak Cliff, who is partnering with chef Eric Spigner to bring Barro to life.

    “Our vision is to create a rustic, family-style restaurant with a rotating menu every three months, featuring cuisines from different countries in Latin America," Ramirez says.

    In addition to the restaurant, Barro will include a market with fruits & vegetables, imported ceramics, bakeware, and blankets.

    Other tenants
    Local artisans who've already signed include Brazilian-American artist Daniela Flint, who will open a studio there. "I want to surround myself with my community and can see myself bringing in clients to Barro and other places in East Dock," she says.

    Evan L. Court Woodwork, an artisan furniture maker, will take a 3,000-square-foot space and transform it into his personal studio where he’ll be creating custom handcrafted furniture and fine woodworking pieces. The space will have room for multiple projects, as well as an apprenticeship program to train new woodworkers.

    And Carlos Araujo Neto is relocating his Jiujitsu studio from nearby Beatrice Street to East Dock. "I liked the idea of having multiple businesses that everyone can have access to and hang out," he says.

    There'll be parking for 140 cars. The project will be finished in phases, with the first openings in early fall. They're sharing updates on their construction progress on Instagram.

    Rather than work with a broker, Proxy Properties is doing community outreach to find tenants, all from the southern sector: in Oak Cliff, the Cedars, or West Dallas. Soliciting input from the locals is part of their DNA.

    “We want the property to serve the community and also represent the community," Ramler says.

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