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    Awesome in Oak Cliff

    You’d spend $2.1 million for this Dallas house if only for the closet

    Candy Evans
    Nov 13, 2015 | 9:05 am

    This midcentury modern beauty at 626 Rainbow Dr. comes on 2.1 acres in East Kessler, nestled next to a stunning stone bluff that says, “Dorothy, we’re not in Dallas anymore.” But just wait until you see the master closet — which they sure did not have in 1958, when the house was built.

    Perched in the center of the neighborhood’s largest residential expanse, the home first belonged to Liz Hart, a sculptor and the first female photographer for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. It has been extensively, compulsively updated by the talented and well-resourced current owners and a few owners in between.

    In fact, the ownership lineage of this home is rather a who’s who in the building and design world of Dallas. The current owner is Jarrett Ouellette, a Dallas Design District and Atlanta entrepreneur and investor; he and his wife clearly took the house to soaring new levels.

    Past the gate is a huge circular driveway that lands you in front of the house and onto an outdoor relaxation patio with seating for four. The expansive backyard (approximately 1.2 of the 2.1 acreage) is visible from this little Zen garden through the glass, which is a trick that opens the house up to the outdoors.

    Enter into the spaciousness of the original era design: a large living area with the fireplace and brick wall as focal point with a mounted flat-screen TV. This long room — the entire home is 4,439 square feet — connects to the open dining room and the pièce de résistance kitchen.

    Cook here? Hell, this room is museum-worthy: antique granite slab, sleek white custom cabinetry, huge stainless sink, Miele gas stove, double fridge, SubZero wine captain, and a nook around the corner from the stove with built-in coffee maker and espresso machine. There also is counter seating for up to six.

    Off this room is a private guest suite, created with space stolen from the garage. Nearby are the laundry room and mudroom, and this entrance from the driveway leads to another little side garden and patio with a copper water sculpture now patinated blue — a treasured leftover from the home’s first owner.

    Proceed back into the main heart of the home, and go up a contemporary flight of oak steps, where on the other side of the wall-to-wall brick fireplace is the upstairs media/game room. Views of the bluff are priceless.

    Down that first-level hall are two bedrooms with en suite baths and the master(piece). Here is where the magic begins.

    There’s another brick wall behind the master bed across the expanse of the wall. A freestanding, two-sided fireplace serves double duty for a sitting area. Beyond that fireplace is a sanctuary of glass, the perfect place for a couple to sit and chill.

    The Ouellettes took the master bath to the next level too. An extra-deep, square, jetted bathtub built into a corner window overlooks a private fenced courtyard. You’ll find dual vanities; a huge step-down shower; and a dressing room/closet with built-ins, mirror, cubbies, and shelves. That master closet is a retreat unto itself.

    Out back find a large patio and enough space for an Olympic-size pool, as well as a wonderful children’s play ark and swing set.

    Melissa O’Brien, with Dave Perry-Miller’s Hewitt Habgood group, has this property listed for $2,100,000.

    ---

    A version of this story originally was published on Candy’s Dirt.

    The property at 626 Rainbow Dr. is listed for $2,100,000.

    626 Rainbow Dr.
    Photo courtesy of Dave Perry-Miller
    The property at 626 Rainbow Dr. is listed for $2,100,000.
    home-for-sale
    news/real-estate
    news/home-design

    Prep to Protest

    Texas homeowners have one month to protest and lower their property taxes

    Brianna Caleri
    Apr 15, 2026 | 11:25 am
    Jessie Street home front Austin tour of remodeled homes
    Photo courtesy of Austin NARI Tour of Remodeled Homes
    Here's how Texans can correct their property taxes when they feel their home appraisal is too high.

    Texans who are unhappy with their home appraisal this tax season have a chance to do something about it if they get the process going in the next month. The deadline for most people to protest their property valuation — thus lowering their property tax — in Dallas County is May 15.

    If you haven't done it before, don't worry: There are steps to follow online and companies that do it for you at no cost unless you save money.

    Why protest?
    Texans pay the 7th highest property taxes in the country, according to personal finance website WalletHub. If your county has overappraised your home, you are paying more than you need to in property taxes.

    Protests are especially important and easy for people who closed on their homes in the past year, because the value of the property upon sale is accepted as the true value of the property. This assumes that if the property were worth more, it would have sold for more. The more recently the home sold, the more likely it is that homeowners haven't meaningfully altered the property since the purchase.

    Submitting a protest is free, and there is almost no risk in doing so. The Appraisal Review Board is prohibited from raising the property value in a hearing. Homeowners may decide it's not worth their time if their appraisal barely changes and they don't save a significant amount of money.

    When to submit
    Most homeowners whose home has increased in value according to the county should have received a Notice of Appraisal in the mail by now. It tells them how much the county believes their home is worth this year. To check online, homeowners can search for their property at dallascad.org.

    The deadline to submit a protest is May 15 or 30 days after the notice is mailed — whichever comes later. However, the notice may have been lost or delivered to the wrong place, so it is important to check before May 15 just in case. Notices are also sent later for property owners whose primary residence is somewhere else.

    There are lots of ways homeowners can try to prove their home value has not increased, or even that it has decreased due to damage on the property. Whether the evidence is photos of damage or "comps" around the neighborhood — comparing the home's value to others of a similar quality in the same area — homeowners submitting their claim themselves should be prepared to meet with an appraiser or even a review board.

    Set it and forget it
    Homeowners who don't want to deal with the paperwork, phone call, or hearing can hire service to protest on their behalf. For them, savings are essentially passive income; the service uses data from past years and the surrounding neighborhood to argue the client's case. It is easy to find a service that works on a contingency fee, so the cost is only a portion of the successful savings. Ownwell is a popular choice, but it's not the only one.

    Finally, homeowners should also make sure they're not leaving money on the table by applying for a homestead exemption. This is available to people who own the homes they live in, as opposed to people who own homes and rent them out to others. It subtracts $140,000 from the total valuation of the home before applying the tax rate.

    first time homebuyershome appraisalproperty taxesstarter hometaxes
    news/real-estate
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