Showing posts with label expansion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expansion. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Heat, Wild Fires, Water Conservation, Power Grid worries,

This is not a typical North Texas Summer. It may be closer in between events but it's not an overall typical time. 

This morning, while it was relatively cool, I made a trip out to see how things were going outside my neighborhood. Plus, I've been in the house for going on ten days and I can only take so much before this old buzzard has to ride the thermals. And, riding the thermals has a whole new meaning of late. Three days of 109°F highs. Two were new records and one was a tie of an old record. Anyway you cut it, record or not, it was still 109° F three days in a row. When I went to bed last night it was still 100°F.

Usually, about this time, I'm saying, "come on September". I'm afraid that this year it might be October. The wild fires are coming much earlier with no rain for 48 days. Remembering, of course, that rain in these terms means the rain must fall in the bucket at DFW. That's the official reporting station. I got about a quarter of an inch about two weeks ago and my grass is already in dormant mode. 

Water conservation and power conservation has already been in discussions. Up until yesterday, we had not had much wind and wind helps to generate power along with solar. With no wind, the grid dropped reserves almost 1,000 Mega Watts. 

Still, I'll take Texas weather like wedding vows---in sickness and in health, blah, blah,blah! Although, it's been a bit more taxing this year. I have always found it interesting how we talk about the weather on earth. We have only been recording records for a bit over one hundred years and a decade or so on a planet that is some 4-Billion years old. I don't worry about the weather records for the past century--- it's the previous 4.9999 billion beforehand that worries me. You know what I mean, Vern? You know what I mean. Vern knows what I mean. 

                                            Checking the rails for safety in this heat
It isn't just the light rails that  experience expansions, the commuter and Amtrak have the same problems in this heat.


Monday, May 30, 2022

The Pneumatic Nail Guns are going wild with no end in sight.

Four years ago I still recall thinking: is there any empty ground available in Dallas? Since then, I have seen 30-40 houses built on a half block empty lot. Same thing, where a couple of warehouses once stood. Two empty lots and a for sale sign next to one of the lots. About a year later, a 8,000 sq foot home stood on the two lots and the third one with a house on it was bulldozed down giving enough area to build the 8K square foot home. This sight has gone on for the past four years since I really started paying attention to the need for new homes and we have not even begun to go back in the archives and check on the massive residential apartments pattern, although I can say that when I came back to Dallas, apartments were three stories. Then they stood four stories. Then five. This past weekend, I came across not one, but several projects where six stories are now a pretty common sight on the current horizon. 

I recall my mom telling me about the new DFW airport. Then she told me about the expansion of a couple of terminals. I flew into DFW to visit mom and my brothers. Downtown was building the tower with the 7 story hole in the center. The Bank of America building was just then going up. I viewed that from the 50th floor of my sister-in-laws office that provided the view next door. Then, the developments began of the land that was DFW owned surrounding the runways and operational field. Larger than Manhattan, This piece of property with 7- active runways. with the plans for number 8 are there already. When you see the layout of the runways, one can see clearly where number 8 could, should, would go in the future. The airport property on the North end of the airport is filled and construction has been going on for sometime now with large warehouses on the South end. The growth it generated has now shifted toward the south properties of the airport. Some 40 years later continues today and is spreading throughout the Metroplex. Of course, the hay fields between the airport property and the George Bush Turnpike are covered in black roofs of new homes now. 

Now, with the TEXrail line complete and active from Ft. Worth to terminal B at the big airport. The Silver Line, DART's  love,  currently under construction from the northern corridor across the old Cotton Belt rail lines, will arrive to Terminal B as Dallas' cousin to the TEXrail it will park along side. Dallas' Dart light rail system has been active for a few years, already next door and a short foot walk from Terminal  B  to Terminal A. But, that was the genesis of were this story really began and actively continues to this day. Dallas really started growing after DFW's ground breaking, the active charcoal that turns raw meat into BBQ so to speak. Developers have been hot on the rail path ever since.  Where the rail lines are, the developments follow in short order. It's happening at Dart's Lake Highland Station. It's happening at Dart's City Line Station. Along the Silver Line construction path. The end of the line at I-20 were the UNT (University of North Texas, Denton) built it's southern campus, the area is seeing growth and construction not seen in years. In fact, nearly twenty years ago while doing some research for a Fortune 50 company near downtown Dallas, I had ask one developer where would they be silently grabbing up property 20 years from then. His answer was, twenty miles north of McKinney. Jokingly, said to the developer,"not much land left to the Red River". His rely to that was a wake up call. He then said, "I'm not worries about the Red River. Engineers design and build bridges to solve that problem of keeping my customers' feet dry". South Dallas has paid a price in some ways, but the tides are turning in that direction, finally. The growth isn't as fast as it has been to the North. It seems more still believe in Santa Clause than we thought.

Today, downtown Dallas has it's 5th green space park that just opened. Deep Ellum has it's first high rise in the past couple of years with several more high rises following it's completion. Now, Texas Department of Transportation just held  one of a few more public meetings to discuss their desire to tear down the I-45 stretch that connects US Highway 75 (Central Expressway) and I-35E via the Woodall Rodgers expressway that reconnected downtown with Uptown District with the highly successful Klyde Warren Park built over the top of Woodall Rodgers. If the I-45 flyways are eliminated are placed sub-terrain, it will re-unite Deep Ellum with downtown.   I just hope there are enough nails to fill those pneumatic nail guns where ever the next project pops up and the supply chain is strong enough to support another 40 year growth that now includes suburban growth as it connects to the mother ship, Dallas/Ft/ Worth Airport.






It All Started in the wee hours of May 28th when 80 MPH winds was tossing everything against the side of my house.

 Those winds were substained for well over 40 minutes. The results were trees everywhere down or large branches broken off. One of my bus ro...