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    Your Expert Guide

    West Richardson: Where charming homes and a close-knit, creative community collide

    CultureMap Create
    Rachel Watkins
    Nov 20, 2023 | 2:32 pm
    Realtor Nikki Barringer

    Agent Nikki Barringer.

    Photo courtesy of Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty

    There are so many great places to live in Dallas that it helps to have an expert on your side. The Neighborhood Guide presented by Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty gives you insider access from the agents who live and work there, providing in-the-know info about your possible new community.

    ---

    Welcome to actual Pleasantville — or something very close to it, if you ask Realtor, resident, and Arapaho Heights Home Tour co-founder Nikki Barringer.

    “West Richardson is the cutest. It’s a close-knit community, neighbors are neighborly, and everyone is out on a walk in the morning — powerwalkers, joggers, stroller-pushers, and four-legged buds,” she says. “There is definitely a vibe in Richardson; people are creative, laidback, go with the flow, and we’re super supportive of our schools, music and arts festivals, events, and local businesses.”

    She also credits the big lots and wide streets, abundance of trees and parks with trails, playgrounds, waterfalls and ponds, and "pretty much every home style you can imagine" for making the area so special.

    “I love our architecture — we have everything from adorable midcentury homes to Atomic Ranch styles, ramblers, split-levels, and traditional designs along with modern farmhouse and Mediterranean styles.”

    It’s one of the reasons Barringer — and fellow neighbor and architecture enthusiast Matt Giese — decided to start a home tour that benefits the local elementary school, Arapaho Classical Magnet.

    "We love our neighborhood and our city," Barringer says. "They’re both total gems. But they’re also a little under the radar. I feel like anytime my Dallas friends come up for the first time they’re like ‘whoa.’ That’s one of the reasons we wanted to start the tour: to show people what Richardson truly offers. The other is our schools need our help right now. Budgets are continually being cut and things like the home tour are a great way to help bridge gaps in funding. Super granular, but the reason we decided to donate to the PTA is they have fewer restrictions on how they spend their funds. This way if a teacher has a specific need for markers, specialty supplies, whatever, the PTA can make it happen."

    The location is also “killer,” says Barringer, with most things south in Dallas or north in the 'burbs just 15 minutes away. But there’s plenty to do in West Richardson, too, and Barringer knows all the pockets, inside and out.

    You’ll often find her always exploring and enjoying the neighborhood — when she’s not surfing, that is. She recently picked it up in Costa Rica and is heading out on another surfing adventure in Nicaragua in 2024.

    Barringer offered up a few of her personal favorites about life in West Richardson. Here's her guide to the area:

    Where to eat & drink
    “Real talk? We have the best ice cream at Tongue in Cheek – I’m team Cookies & Cream, but you kind of have to try the Caramel Crack,” says Barringer. “Then there’s La Casita Bakery. It’s freaking amazing and every pastry is seriously a little work of art. Or if you’re up for an old-school tearoom with chicken salad sandwiches and all the usual suspects, head to Chocolate Angel.”

    Another local favorite is Bagel Café 21. “They are delicious and every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, they make rainbow bagels!” she says. “Bambu Thai is in the same shopping center and seriously so good.”

    Richardson has plenty more to dish up, including favorites like Sueño Modern Mex-Tex, Whistle Britches, Haystack Burgers & Barley, and Roman Cucina. Café Amore and Aboca for old-school, authentic Italian. Plus, Partenope just opened in East Richardson — “so freaking good!” adds Barringer.

    Make sure to get the chicken fried steak at The String Bean, recommends Barringer. “This is a Richardson institution and has been around since 1977,” she says.

    “If you have kids, we have your new favorite restaurant: Hat Creek Burger Company,” she adds. “It’s like a grown-up McDonald’s. There’s a playground and burgers for the kids and beer and wine so Mom and Dad can make it through another day. Kidding!”

    When it comes to drinks, Barringer highlights Lockwood Distilling Co. for its great atmosphere and house-made hibiscus vodka, among other spirits.

    Happy Hippie Brewing Company recently opened next to Lockwood, where they brew their own ales and wheat beers with local Texas honey, along with IPAs that include a watermelon and habanero-infused version called Wa-Hotter Melon.

    Richardson also has DFW's first alcohol-free bottle shop and tasting room: Beyond the Bar.

    Where to play
    “We go hard on kid spots,” says Barringer. The top of her list includes Free Play Arcade (fun for kids and a bar for adults), Urban Air Adventure Park, Altitude Trampoline Park, and Kids Empire, which she calls the “cleanest indoor play place I've experienced.”

    For outdoor fun, “the neighborhoods of Arapaho Heights, Richardson Heights Estates, and Richardson Heights all share a park we call Big Slide Park, but it's really called Heights Park,” adds Barringer. “Behind it, there's a little hidden creek that's so fun to hike.”

    Other lovely green spaces include Cottonwood Park, Mimosa Park, Hillcrest Village Green, and Prairie Creek Park, which has a “waterfall, paved walking trails, green space for cartwheels, and, inexplicably, an abandoned journal near a shade tree,” says Barringer. “It’s also the go-to backdrop for senior class pictures for many students in the area.”

    Another secret spot that’s technically Addison is White Rock Creek Trail.

    "It’s tucked in a neighborhood of million-dollar homes and it’s a very short, but — I’m just going to say it — magical trail," Barringer says. "Along the way there are tree stumps carved to look like animals, decked lookouts carved into the cliff that overlook the creek, and if you go in the beginning of summer it’s the most incredible firefly festival."

    Barringer also loves that there are so many public and private pools in the area, including Fretz Park Pool which has “slides that rival Hurricane Harbor.”

    Greenwood Hills Country Club is a members-only pool and has been around since the 1960s. “Canyon Creek Pool is a sparsely-attended secret when you’re up for a crowd-free splash day,” she says.

    What to see
    “A secret spot that's technically North Dallas, but so dang close is Valley House Gallery & Sculpture Garden,” says Barringer. “It's the 'oldest modern art gallery in Dallas,' and you can bring your kids to wander the garden.”

    Events like the bi-annual Cottonwood Art Festival and the annual Wildflower! Arts + Music Festival bring in top-tier talent. “This year, Wildflower! had Joan freaking Jett — hello!” exclaims Barringer.

    During the holidays, the JJ Pearce Pacesetters Holiday Bazaar and Senior Center Holiday Bazaar are beloved community shopping events.

    Don’t miss the “cutest gift shop, Lone Chimney Mercantile, either,” says Barringer. “They host fun and funky events at their space next door, brillintly titled LCM Next Door, like Bedazzling Your Bra, tarot readings, plant workshops, and more.”

    Where to live
    Barringer gave us the rundown on some of her favorite neighborhoods in West Richardson. “I obviously love them all; they are my children, my babies, and there are no favorites… except these — kidding!” she says.

    1. Arapaho Heights, where Barringer lives, is full of adorable 1950s homes that have largely been updated with great landscaping and backyards. “My favorite street, aside from my own (Chadwick Drive), is Northlake Drive. It has huge trees on either side of the street that create an amazing tunnel canopy as you drive down the road,” she says. “The houses are all solid, too. Not a dud in the bunch.”

    For her, the most charming thing about Arapaho Heights happens in the fall on Friday nights, when you can hear the football games, and on Saturday mornings, when you can hear the Richardson High School Band practice from your backyard.

    “This is a neighborhood where kids run over to one another’s houses, bike to the small pond off Newberry Drive, and use real fishing poles to catch approximately zero fish (that I know of), but see tons of turtles instead,” she adds. “Moms take turns lugging the neighborhood kids to the pool and we take a massive trick-or-treat photo every year.”

    2. Located within Arapaho Heights, Waterview Preservation is “super-cool,” according to Barringer, because of the variety of homes. “They’re larger and there’s a little bit of everything architecture-wise, from Spanish, Colonial, and straight-up traditional to the clean lines of the midcentury era, grand two-stories, and some you just want to call ‘stately.’” Homes on the east side back to a creek.

    3. Canyon Creek boasts some of the largest homes in the area, with varied architecture. “Growing up in Plano, this is the neighborhood I heard about the most,” says Barringer. “Part of it sits along Canyon Creek Country Club, which is currently undergoing a multi-million-dollar renovation, so if you’ve ever wanted to live on a golf course, now is a great time to make it happen because as soon as that renovation is complete, prices are going to go up and up.”

    4. The Reservation. “It’s so funny, because every neighborhood in Richardson has its own personality and draws its own crowd,” says Barringer. “The Reservation is the Golf Cart Crowd. You might even call them the Party People. The houses are bigger and there’s a mix of original homes, remodels, and new construction."

    A prime example of a West Richardson home is 1217 Magnolia Drive, where Barringer represented the seller.

    "It’s an adorable home I helped the sellers purchase two years ago," she says. "The kitchen and bathroom updates were already in place, but Landon and Melanie took it to the next level. In our cute little vintage homes, storage is at a premium and these two added a sleek cabinet right inside the front door and roll-out drawers in the kitchen pantry to maximize every inch of the space.”

    The sellers also swapped out the fixtures and painted the lower kitchen cabinets a deep navy to take the home to a more modern place.

    "Then they knocked it out of the freaking park by painting the exterior the same deep navy and wrapping the porch posts in cedar. It’s beyond adorable," Barringer says. The updates plus the impeccable staging of East Dallas Modern — an absolute must for any vacant home — helped this home sell in a single weekend. With multiple offers no less!"

    It all supports what Barringer knows to be true: When you have an incredible home in a desirable area and it’s listed at the right price, it’s still very, very much in demand, no matter the interest rate, if it’s a buyer’s market, or whatever else might influence the market at that time.

    ---

    Nikki Barringer works and plays in West Richardson. For more information on buying and selling a home in the area, click here, email nbarringer@briggsfreeman.com, or call 214-394-7840.

    Realtor Nikki Barringer
      
    Photo courtesy of Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty
    Agent Nikki Barringer.
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    Neighbor news

    Blooming Dallas suburb ranks as America's 7th most livable small city

    Amber Heckler
    Jul 11, 2025 | 3:54 pm
    Flower Mound, Texas
    flowermound.gov/
    Flower Mound has skyrocketed into the top 10 most livable small cities in 2025.

    One Dallas-area city continues to attract the national spotlight: namely Flower Mound, whose latest accolade comes from SmartAsset, the financial technology company, which ranks it as the No. 7 most livable small city in the U.S. for 2025.

    This ranking represents a big jump for this family-focused suburb less than 30 miles from Dallas, which skyrocketed into the top 10 after coming in at No. 29 on the same list last year.

    SmartAsset's annual study compared 279 U.S. cities with populations between 65,000 and 100,000 residents across seven metrics, including a resident's housing costs as a percentage of household income; average commute times; the percentage of residents living below the poverty line; and the proportions of entertainment, food service, and healthcare establishments.

    Flower Mound boasts a population of more than 79,000 residents who earn a median $147,490 in yearly household income, the report found. These residents spend just under 20 percent of their income on their housing costs, which add up to a median $2,454 per month.

    The city is sprawling with employment opportunities on both local and corporate levels, comprising more than 20,000 businesses, and nearly 97 percent of Flower Mound residents have health insurance. Residents spend about 25 minutes on average commuting to their jobs.

    Flower Mound has the second-lowest unemployment rate out of all 20 Texas cities in the report, at just 1.95 percent. The report also added that only 3.3 percent of the city's population is living below the poverty line.

    Earlier this year, Flower Mound's appealing size and relative affordability landed the No. 1 slot on Livability.com's list of best places to live in the U.S. in 2025.

     Rheudasil Park in Flower Mound Flower Mound has nearly 1,000 acres of parks for families and visitors to enjoy.Town of Flower Mound, Texas-Government/Facebook

    According to the city's website, Flower Mound prides itself on being a tight-knit, family-oriented community that embraces its small-town feel while still encouraging "a dynamic economic development environment."

    Flower Mound came in as the highest Dallas-Fort Worth city to earn a spot in the top 50, but three other cities also made the list including North Richland Hills, which took a major leap from its 2024 ranking at No. 139 and is now the 48th most livable small city nationwide.

    The two other Dallas-Fort Worth cities that earned spots among the 279 most livable small cities in the nation: Mansfield (No. 138) and Rowlett (No. 181).

    Reducing household expenses or escaping from noise pollution are just a few of the many reasons Americans may choose to move to a smaller city. But the report says not all families are willing to trade a lower cost of living for the convenience of living in a major urban epicenter.

    "Ultimately, a local economy where infrastructure, business, financial prosperity and convenience all intersect may offer the best of all worlds for everyone in the household," the report's author wrote.

    The top 10 most livable small U.S. cities in 2025 are:

    • No. 1 – Plymouth, Minnesota
    • No. 2 – Bloomington, Illinois
    • No. 3 – Livonia, Michigan
    • No. 4 – O'Fallon, Missouri
    • No. 5 – Ankeny, Iowa
    • No. 6 – Lakeville, Minnesota
    • No. 7 – Flower Mound, Texas
    • No. 8 – Eu Claire, Wisconsin
    • No. 9 – Appleton, Wisconsin
    • No. 10 – St. Charles, Missouri
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