Apartments that actually feel like city apartments?
Posted by thequietzombie@reddit | Dallas | View on Reddit | 137 comments
I don't know if it's just me, my dream is to live in an apartment that actually feels and looks like a city apartment. High-rise (at least 3 stories), not part of some sprawling complex, tall windows, and ideally with red brick on the interior or exterior, it doesn't matter. Does that exist in Dallas? Or is that from a byegone era or only uber-rich? Or am I just looking in the wrong city for aesthetically pleasing "New York style" apartments?
Complete noob question, I know. Humor me here.
swaroop_19@reddit
OP, did you find something?
Ok_Dream_583@reddit
there are plenty of high rises in Dallas, and one in the colony. Finding apartments like these is my specialty as a real estate agent! Message me if you'd like (free) help finding your perfect building! :)
DifferentGanache1050@reddit
Try here:
https://www.tiktok.com/@dallashomepro?_t=8p8O0gGaEcJ&_r=1
I keep seeing them on my fyp and they have great deals they were very helpful and found me a place quick
elisabethofaustria@reddit
Yes. There are at least a dozen apartment buildings in Dallas that have at least a dozen stories. I live in one and pay $1145 for a one-bedroom.
jcythcc@reddit
? That's cheap. Which building?
elisabethofaustria@reddit
Manor House.
Dagr8reset@reddit
im interested as well
Razor1834@reddit
3 stories as high rise has me cracking up.
Ravioverlord@reddit
I'm glad I wasn't the only one. Where I'm from it isn't a high rise if it has any less than 12 stories. Most are more like 15-25 with penthouses on the top floor to be in the high rise category. Even when old and shitty those top floor people got the big living spaces.
1987-2074@reddit
Yeah per google & the top two results, 5-10 or 5-12 is a mid-rise, 11 of 13+ is high rise.
We lived in a 12 story building before kids, doorman & included a valet that would park your car if you didn’t want to do it yourself, big city vibes that OP described. We called it a mid-rise, regardless of 8th floor balcony feeling pretty high up for someone who had never lived past a 2nd floor.
Ravioverlord@reddit
It is kind of cute that they think three stories is a big city vibe. They have never been to Seattle or another city with so many tall AF buildings I guess. Even Portland where I am from has a large swath of them on the waterfront/pearl that are even higher than 12. I remember visiting my dad's friend, they were in a fancy building on the 28th floor and had all glass walls facing out. Scared the butts off me and her the kids slept right beside them because they loved/were used to it.
Zealousideal_Car1811@reddit
Exactly! 3 stories isn’t even a MID-rise.
Razor1834@reddit
3 stories is what all apartment buildings are, as it’s the max before an elevator is required.
Zealousideal_Car1811@reddit
Plenty of apartments exist that are less than 3 stories.
My point was simply that 3 stories is not even a mid-rise, much less a high-rise, as the OP stated.
ArmWarm8743@reddit
Same…i literally snickered.
Human_Emotion_654@reddit
You mean similar to a brownstone? Check out The Argyle on Oak Lawn. It’s a restored historic building in a walkable neighborhood that checks most of your boxes.
CatchIcy1011@reddit
Suburbs are all new builds and I wouldnt hold my breathe finding something with character or that isn’t some nondescript new build. I would try downtown Dallas, oak cliff, and deep Ellum area.
FearlessFrolic@reddit
This kind of question really goes to show how the suburban majority on this subreddit has almost nothing in common with people who actually live in urban Dallas. They actually seem to imply that we don't even exist.
Ferrari_McFly@reddit
r/suburbsofdallas is a more accurate name for this subreddit.
LicksMackenzie@reddit
people need to stop complaining. We need it all in one sub or it gets diluted and less content and people leave.
Joxemiarretxe@reddit
hence the constant "oh there isn't anything to doooo" or constant fear mongering abt deep ellum. We don't all get our to-do's from Dallasites or ~~fearmongering~~ news from DTXTV. No one hates Dallas as much as people from just outside Dallas.
SkyScreech@reddit
“What part of Dallas are you from”
“Plano”
Every time
unk214@reddit
I lived in actual Dallas for half my life then moved to Plano. I don’t see the difference. Has some nice places, has some places you should stay away from.
Speaking of Plano lvl29 is a nice place to consider OP. Legacy is right there and has plenty of places to visit. Overpriced but I spent a year there a while back. I don’t regret it.
EcoMonkey@reddit
You know it’s fucked because we have to say “urban Dallas proper, the city, AKA downtown Dallas” just to clarify that we don’t reside in Celina.
And then when questions about things in the Dallas area come up, we’re pedants because we want to delineate that something is or isn’t actually in our city. Because, you know, we’re all longing for the place we live to have some defined identity or something.
Next time someone gets stabbed in Dallas, I’ll say it was in whatever the nearest suburb is, if it’s closer to that suburb than to downtown Dallas. Why shouldn’t it work in both directions?
kabob21@reddit
What? So downtown Dallas is the only part of Dallas that counts as Dallas proper? I guess north Dallas where I live was annexed by Plano.
EcoMonkey@reddit
No, I’m referring to how suburbanites are so out of touch from their gated communities in Durant that they equate being within the Dallas city limits and being downtown.
I’ve explained that I live in north Dallas and they say, “oh, like Frisco?”
“No, North. Dallas.”
“Oh, like below 635. Downtown.”
It’s that bad.
Machine_Terrible@reddit
Whut? Seriously? Have these people ever been in the Dallas city limits???? Hmph...I live in Dallas near Eastfield College. It's good enough (would love a close good grocery store), easy enough to get around, and fairly bicycle friendly so long as you're comfortable with side street traffic.
Wafflehouseofpain@reddit
Only part of Dallas is really compact. Even in Dallas proper, the north side, especially out towards Garland, is pretty spread out.
spacedman_spiff@reddit
That's the point. That's not urban Dallas.
its_kgs_not_lbs@reddit
Adam Hats lofts in Deep Ellum. Lived there. Very urban feel both outside and inside. Bonus, The Factory is across the street for concerts and everything in Ellum is within walking distance.
Odd_Champion_9293@reddit
Rip the little girls
Dagr8reset@reddit
what happened
its_kgs_not_lbs@reddit
Yeah, tragedy for sure. I moved in slightly after that happened and on the same floor, just several doors down. It was a corner loft IIRC, facing downtown.
Cute_Stock582@reddit
Amen and Amen! God bless those innocent so innocent babies!🕊️✝️🕊️
Stove-Top-Steve@reddit
Lived here for about 5 years. Building is cool, westdale is not.
its_kgs_not_lbs@reddit
Yeah I don’t remember any issues specifically with ownership. But I do remember the parking situation which sucked big time.
liberal_texan@reddit
Lived in Hats from like 08-09. Good times.
its_kgs_not_lbs@reddit
Lived there in 2000-2001. Agree, good times indeed.
DMH_75032@reddit
I live at The Statler. Not quite the New York vibe, but living in a hotel is a tremendous amount of fun. I love it.
Adventurous_Essay763@reddit
I didn't realize this was something that real life people did or was feasible other than for the uber rich! I'm so curious to hear more if you are willing to share. I'll be honest the only thing that pops in my mind is The Sweet Life of Zach and Cody lol
DMH_75032@reddit
Floors 1-7 are a Hilton Curio Collection hotel. Floors 8-18 are the residences. Floors 8-17 are in line with market rent for other apartments. The finish out is nicer. 18 is a different story. The penthouses are a little more expensive, but the finish out is incredible. Marble countertops, a built in oven with separate cook-top, hardwood floors, sold core doors, a soaking tub, Hans Grohe fixtures, insulated walls . . .. I'm going through a divorce and took a smaller penthouse. I'm moving to a larger one a week from Friday. I love the place. You get access to all of the hotel amenities, except housekeeping. I arrange that separately through the management company.
Adventurous_Essay763@reddit
Lived in the American Beauty Mill Lofts about a decade ago and they had more of that feel while not being as expensive (still wasn't cheap, but we were young and broke and made it work albeit less privacy than ideal for roommates). There are several exactly like what you want mixed in with the high-rise office buildings - Park District is the first that comes to mind, and they would be probably what you are imagining, but come with a hefty price.
lord_luxx@reddit
Any of the buildings that are actually downtown. Not farmers market. Victory park, downtown,
p8nt_junkie@reddit
My wife and I used to live in what is now the SoCo lofts and it was the absolute best! Constant stream of strippers and dancers going to our upstairs neighbors unit or the rooftop pool. We had a musician adjacent to us; he was cool as hell. Our windows looked out onto the frontier bronze longhorn installation at Founders; there was always something going on there. And the apartment was a loft ‘shell’, like decorate and arrange it however you want. It was so cool! So just look downtown, OP. Only thing that sucked is during the Dallas Marathon, you are stuck like chuck, so do your shopping/ going out the day before.
alligatorcreek@reddit
Downtown has places like that but as you can imagine they get scooped up fast.
KitchenCabinetIsOpen@reddit
Case Building checks off the brick interior/exterior that you’re looking for in a high rise
anonty26@reddit
The Crosby in Deep Ellum has some good feelings about it. The indie is close by to that. Otherwise places by the farmers' market downtown, but those can be on the pricier side.
MagicManTX84@reddit
Plenty of those in uptown. And now there’s a Sjyhouse in Frisvo near The Star.
AmberGlow@reddit
There are some right next to the unt Dallas College of law campus that are really high up. They are connected to the underground too and that section has easy access to the light rail, Starbucks, dry cleaner, and restaurants. There are also the victory station apartments as well as the Statler hotel itself, which is half Apartments, and is super glamorous feeling.
Gloomy_Ad_7885@reddit
Vitruvian West in Addison.
DoubleBookingCo@reddit
Downtown Fort Worth too lol. wtf is this post?
rowdee_rathore@reddit
Not sure if mentioned already, check out Gables Park 17, they have some unbelievable views of the skyline in the corner units
jcythcc@reddit
I think you can get better bang for your buck than gables park 17. I didn't like the layout or the style of the apartments
jcythcc@reddit
Uptown. I lived near downtown and it was nice having a short walk in, and there's some cityish things there like seeing tourists exploring from the hotels and office workers getting lunch, but also that was kinda it, it didn't feel very urban to me.
Uptown feels more cityish even though it doesn't have a city grid kinda layout. It's very dense and there's a lot of towers, including far, far superior apartment towers (with balconies which are hard to find downtown).
I didn't want to move there initially because I thought it's just big roads and no city feel, but there's still lots of people, including office workers and hotel people, around but also lots of residents of the area.
And the quality of things like the restaurants and bars is much higher.
Warning: the workers in the area are a very certain type of person. They all kinda dress similar and look similar and behave similar. It's kinda funny.
Try to be near the Tom thumb. That part of uptown. Then you can walk to victory park and downtown too. And the area around Klyde Warren
cjgrtr2@reddit
No brick but mosaic has a very industrial feel, concrete floors metal ceilings huge windows, I get to look at the Pegasus every day from my 18th floor apartment which is fun, there are downsides to the building but overall I enjoy my apartment
ImpossibleHamster120@reddit
How has your experience been with security, maintenance, the elevators? (if you don't mind me asking)
I toured the Mosaic a couple years ago, and loved the vibe and the aesthetic, but man there are sooo many bad reviews. :(
I'm looking to move to Dallas from across the country, and it's just so difficult to know what reviews are legit and what's overblown.
cjgrtr2@reddit
Elevators: Bad
Security: largely no problems but our neighbors ex tried to kick her door in twice at like 4AM so that was quite the wake up
Maintenance: the maintenance team themselves have been decent(responding quick and usually fixing the problem right away) but we just went without AC for 21 days straight from June into July.
ImpossibleHamster120@reddit
Thanks for your insight! Yeah that sounds just about in line with everything I've read lol. Oof I can't imagine going that long without AC in Texas heat.
DallasAustinLasVegas@reddit
Addison Circle
SkyScreech@reddit
Have you looked into the area just north of the Arts District? I believe it’s still considered uptown. Feels very Urban and reminds me of Brooklyn style apartments, with the stairs outside and walkable area. Very nice area, I started wondering if maybe I wanna move there when I was in that area this past weekend. Very nice area
pradafever@reddit
Yes! I forgot to mention this in my comment, too. There is an area to the north border of uptown, only 2 miles from downtown (walkable if you’re a real city person, but the Dart has a stop there too if not) called West Village. It’s modeled after the west village in NYC with brownstone style architecture (though they’re mostly businesses and not townhomes). None of it is very tall/max about 4 floors but that’s the way it is in Brooklyn and in the west village in NYC anyway.
unique162636@reddit
I’m gonna get on shit on for this I know, but that areas is not anything like Brooklyn. Its like, closer to a random mini-mall in Queens. West Village is like a parking lot wrapped in a strip mall surrounded by a traffic moat. Love Dallas btw, that area is just not Brooklyn.
pradafever@reddit
I know it’s not anything like Brooklyn, that’s just the visual model they used to design the area. I’ve spent a good amount of time in NYC and no other city in Texas comes close. The OP was just asking for ‘red brick’ style buildings ‘like NYC’ and west village (called west village by the planners specifically to emulate the one in New York) is all we got.
Chewy96@reddit
State Thomas part of Uptown! Lived there for a few years and loved it. Very walkable, and insulated just enough to feel quieter than everything else around it.
lokilise@reddit
Butler brothers building, lived there for years and loved my unit. Skyline view and brick on some of the interior walls
c-glez@reddit
Don’t forget kids that Dallas is an entire county
MichiganBlue02@reddit
What? First, 3 stories is not a hi-rise anywhere in the world. That’s a walk up. This can’t be a serious question. Anywhere in the Arts District. Atelier. Harwood. Right downtown on Elm or Main, The National or Drakestone? How about Uptown. What are you talking about? You want older buildings, with window air conditioners and fire escapes? You want a manual elevator like buildings in Astoria or Flushing? I question whether you know what an apartment building even looks like.
VeViArgh@reddit
Adam Hats and Futura Lofts.
gavmcd@reddit
Check out the drakestone
Ok_Skin4479@reddit
If it’s red brick you want, South Side on Lamar. Historic building that used to be home to Sears. Best view of the city you can get, walkable in the daytime. Lived there for years and loved every minute of it.
scroto_gaggins@reddit
Honestly great question! I’m looking for apartments and there are some great options in this thread
HJAC@reddit
Downtown! One thing that's great about living downtown is you can live in a historic building at rates surprisingly equal to or slightly lower than new builds of the city, especially the early 20th century buildings built between 1900 and 1930. If you look you can find studios as low as $1,200/month -- not cheap, but still more affordable than other parts of the city. Plus downtown is the most walkable part of the city.
To name a few:
The Kirby
Dallas Power & Lights
The Wilson
The Henry
Manor House
nihouma@reddit
Shhh, you'll give away our secrets! Also, all those buildings are nice, but I recommend against the Manor House. I've heard about roach horror stories from too many people there to think it's coincidence. And we're talking the Germans, not the Americans, so the worst kind of roach (German humans are nice people though)
WatercressFine2338@reddit
Heard about the Kirby, can anyone comment who may have lived there?
dieselgeek@reddit
Lots of stuff like this downtown.
pgoc111971@reddit
What I like to do for any apartment search is first go on google maps and find an area I’m interested in, zoom in on it and then search apartments in that area. You can see what’s in the area along with reviews, a link to the website and also do street view.
SipoteQuixote@reddit
New York style apartment? I can tell you where you can find those. But if moving to New York isn't in the budget, I can go to wherever you live and dumb some garbage around and hassle you. Might even get a couple friends and sit on the stairs so you can't get through and then we'll get mad at you for asking us to move.
Check out Austin Ranch, they're pretty good but not in the city.
pradafever@reddit
This sounds like you have never been to New York. Is your only perception of NYC what has been shown to you in movies or in right wing propaganda?
pradafever@reddit
There are many buildings that fit this criteria in Dallas. You mentioned red brick so im assuming you’re looking more for a historic building than a modern glass hire-rise. Look in downtown at buildings like The Kirby, The Drakestone, 1200 Main, 1900 Elm, and many more. None of these are particularly RED but they’re older stone and concrete buildings with beautiful moulding and carvings in them. If you want the old southern style town vibe with red brick buildings and roads, look in West End District, which is directly west of downtown. 555 Ross is a great option for something that is new, tidy and luxurious but still has that older charm on the exterior and its bright red brick.
fridahl@reddit
What’s your budget…
Greedy_Campaign_2150@reddit
Urby
MrVladmirPoopin@reddit
1400 hi line
zHydro@reddit
I live downtown and there are a dozen buildings like that
acorneyes@reddit
dozens!
StringSurfer1@reddit
Sinclair Residences is very new, Dallas power and light is an old building but has some unusual layouts.
InsulinandnarcanSTAT@reddit
Uptown exists….west of central expressway below lemon all of those are what u just described
Goingthedistance88@reddit
There are some nice apartments on Preston road that gives a vibe that you’re in the city but not in the middle of the craziness. I forgot the names it’s been awhile since I’ve lived there.
Ok-Fruit3504@reddit
Southside at Lamar has that exposed brick and almost railroad like layout inside. Goes up 10 floors, has a coffee shop and small food mart inside. Walkable to surrounding restaurants. Very close and walking distance to the dart train. Lived there a few years and loved it definitely got my city living feel before I bought a house.
andreezy93@reddit
It’s a bit out of downtown, would have to bike into the city. But south side on Lamar has tall ceilings , wide open lodts, brick and concrete, and some stores in the basement.
Ok-Fruit3504@reddit
Second Southside.
Icy-Charity5120@reddit
It does exist but it's often way too pricy for it to be worth it.
Tyforde6@reddit
I’d stay away from downtown and deep elm personally. There’s a lot of good stuff in the victory park area. I lived in Skyhouse for a bit and loved it. The Alexan, 23 and some other good stuff over there. In that same area
NewUsernamePending@reddit
I haven’t seen Oak Lawn mentioned much but there are some good finds in that area in the upper class to Uber rich range.
The Argyle is modeled after New York apartments so the vibe is definitely what you’re looking for. Less NYC vibes but more modern urban vibes are The Windsor and Gallery at Turtle Creek. Uber rich options include Aster and The Alton.
the_u_@reddit
check out the urby in design district. If you want to use my referral to save you and me some money just DM me
ChelseaVictorious@reddit
It exists downtown yeah. Look at like 1900 Elm for instance or The Wilson.
blacktoise@reddit
The Wilson is IT!!
Gijora@reddit
Not anymore it ain't. Lived there for 5 years, and got to witness it circle the crapper for the last 2.
DMH_75032@reddit
Its a great building. Not well insulated. Had a top floor unit many years back. The electric bill was about as much as the rent.
krollAY@reddit
I lived there for a year, it was great except for the parking situation. But I had free parking at a garage a few blocks away through my work.
hotairballonfreak@reddit
Uptown near turtle creek
kelseyhart24@reddit
State Thomas and Uptown
GeniusPhilanthropist@reddit
Here are some options for you to check out in uptown area :
-3700M, Ardan, Maple terrace residence, The Katy - victory park, The Victor, The Hudson
gurdoman@reddit
I had this issue last year, I was looking to live in a city, not a suburb (and 95% of this city is a glorified suburb).
What I found:
Uptown from 75 to oak lawn has a lot of places that feel like that, take a look at McKinney Ave around West village, also you can take a look at State Thomas, feels like a different city. So basically downtown and uptown, another place that is cool is in Addison, all the neighborhood that has the circle park feels like NY and tbh the best restaurants I've tried in the city are near there, I wish I had moved there instead of where I ended up moving to.
Check victory park too and some of the buildings in the Katy trail
gentlegreen95@reddit
Seconding Addison. While it’s not quite Dallas proper, it is a fun little transitional area that has great access to the park (which often has free or paid events that gather crowds). I see a good mix of younger professionals and families taking advantage of the park and the businesses located just outside their door. Only gripe is that the restaurants here are good, but I always need to drive out for good Asian food. It is located pretty well for driving to most of Dallas without much effort.
gurdoman@reddit
That's the bane of my existence in DFW, no way to live without a car, even on "walkable" areas, but the food in Addison I believe it to be "in general" better than the rest of the metroplex.
There are bars, restaurants, movie theaters, entertainment centers, parks, etc all "walking" distance or a short 10 min drive.
krel08@reddit
So have you not looked at all and just posted the question? Uptown/Downtown is the pretty easy to find and obvious answer......
elyptaneht@reddit
Eastline Residences isn’t downtown but it has great views and floor to ceiling windows
nerdyguytx@reddit
Have you looked around Deep Ellum? There's a new development just west of Good Latimer and a few buildings south that match your description.
EastDallasMatt@reddit
Have you ever driven South of LBJ?
theerniebop@reddit
I like The Argyle on Hall and Oaklawn
Subject_Education931@reddit
Check out Addison! Loads of apartments and townhomes over there. I lived in a beautiful townhome close to Addison Circle for 2 years and loved it.
Subject_Education931@reddit
I'm a homeowner today (God bless), but I have stayed in some beautiful apartments overseas, earlier in my life. Great sound proofing, super low maintenance, spacious, and typically had good amenities (pool, gym, security etc)
If I was living alone, I would absolutely chose to live in a nice apartment or a townhome.
In the United States, I have not really found truly spacious apartments that do a good job with sound proofing but to be honest, I have'nt really looked as I moved to a townhome a couple of months after marriage.
screamingfrommyeyes@reddit
there are a bunch of cute buildings in the arts district of Dallas too. more modern high doses but gorgeous and great views
probablecuzurscum@reddit
Stay away from The Merc and Element. Looks nice and affordable and once was nice and affordable but now it's section 8 on select floors. 1900 Elm is nice and right across. Reside in DPNL right now. Not as affordable but nice.
nacidalibre@reddit
where are you looking that you can’t find any?
LordOfHorcruxes@reddit
Why is this a dream of yours
nacidalibre@reddit
Why not?
IFR_Flyer@reddit
Interurban building
PumpkinCarvingisFun@reddit
Mockingbird Station Lofts
Canton Lofts
Neither of these are tall but they have the aesthetics you are looking for.
TengoCalor@reddit
Some of the lofts at mockingbird station have really high ceilings
PumpkinCarvingisFun@reddit
Yeah, they both have high ceilings and big windows, the buildings themselves aren't super tall though. MS goes up to like 5 or 6 stories I think. I used to live in a corner on the third floor and it was awesome. Old Dr. Pepper factory.
EcoMonkey@reddit
A trick I like to do when I want to find something with a city vibe is to look where the tall buildings are.
CorbinDalla5@reddit
Lolol
CorbinDalla5@reddit
Dallas has so many of these… I’m guessing you aren’t in the city though.
Adam hats, deep ellum lofts, Seville, and there are so many of these on main as well.
socochannel@reddit
We lived at MAA McKinney Ave and I loved it. The street car ran under our window and there was lots of foot traffic. An easy walk to the Katy Trail and restaurants. If I sold my house I would move back there in a heart beat.
horsy12@reddit
Have you looked at downtown? They’re everywhere
CubedMeatAtrocity@reddit
All of the lofts downtown.
chickiepippen@reddit
The Case Building in Deep Ellum is pricey but has the tall ceilings, exposed brick (at least in the 2 apartments at which I’ve had friends live), NYC loft feel. Also has a bar located inside of it and has a cohesive art deco style throughout. I would def tour it; it’s so pretty to me.
Interalpen84@reddit
Lots of this in Uptown and Downtown. The Argyle on Oak Lawn would be good to visit as well. MAA Square and Heights have lofts with large windows.
In Addison, MAA Addison Circle (Once Post) has plenty of well-done loft-style apartments. Buildings 2, 5, and 8 all have some amazing options.
I worked for Post back in the day, so sorry for the MAA plug. 😂 They are great apartments but I hear MAA sucks compared to what Post offered in terms.of service and maintenance.
KeKamba1@reddit
Im a locator living Downtown, you have plenty of options!
If you would like a few videos sent your way or to work together, please reach out!
I also offer a $200 move-in rebate to my clients as well :).
NYerInTex@reddit
You actually have a good number of options, specifically in downtown/uptown/arts district.
Downtown is the most “east coast older city” feel with more tightly located often historic buildings - it also has the most “city type” issues/nuisances such as generally more noise, some late night street shenanigans, homeless (all relatively minor compared to many of not most major cities but they exist).
Uptown is an evolving neighborhood with a number of high rises - those near west village provide what is arguably the best newer urban fabric in the region for a few blocks, but options toward victory park in the area near Pearl, Olive etc.
Arts District has some great options though pricey (as are the nicer options in uptown, and the top of the line in downtown such as the National building) - I LOVE my building which is called Atelier. Very quiet immediate surroundings with stunning views and sick amenities (you can find similar at others like park district, the Christopher and more). Feels like a Miami high rise condo but it’s a rental in the heart of the nations largest contiguous arts district.
I’m in real estate and have friends who help with apartment locating - not looking to sell you on their services but could be very helpful so feel feel to PM if you want and either way good luck with your search - imo you’ll be pleasantly surprised with both the array of high rise urban living options and the walkable neighborhoods in which many are located.
technic_aguilar@reddit
The Kirby Downtown
Typical_Alarm5679@reddit
1900 Pacific Apartments rock
noonie2020@reddit
Downtown and uptown. I liked essence on maple and 4110 fairmount
YaGetSkeeted0n@reddit
Uptown and downtown have a lot of high rises.
On the other end of it, you might look in areas like near Bishop Arts and Lower Greenville for small, old apartments. I live in one myself. You’re nestled within a typically quiet, leafy residential neighborhood and walking distance to restaurants, services, retail, etc. Sort of like the contrast between living in Manhattan and living in a quiet Queens neighborhood in some respects (just at a different scale, of course).
Cool_Afternoon_182@reddit
There is a bunch of them being built in Dallas. Look in Design district
HRApprovedUsername@reddit
Have you tried searching in the actual city part of dallas? Such as downtown? Potentially uptown too.