Re: Here you go
Subject: Re: Here you go
From: Karen Lancaster <lancaster.karen@gmail.com>
Date: 11/15/10, 16:07
To: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com>

BTW, you ID'd him as "Louis Reese III". That was his father -- If you're trying to get him updated name recognition then you shouldn't use his father's name. Your friend is "Louis Reese IV."

On Wed, Nov 10, 2010 at 3:41 PM, Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Thanks, I used this version. Going to dad's for dinner tonight, see you Friday.


On Mon, Nov 8, 2010 at 5:24 PM, Karen Lancaster <lancaster.karen@gmail.com> wrote:
 
Deep Ellum gets its groove back
In a way, Deep Ellum’s turn-of-the-century fall from grace was prompted by a sudden spate of competition from other nearby neighborhoods, such as Knox-Henderson and West Village, which had managed to achieve the sort of walkable recreational status that had so long eluded Dallas as a whole. But in another, more accurate way, the music district’s collapse was entirely the fault of a few dozen stab-happy club patrons and a gaggle of disinterested landlords who couldn’t care less that the venues to which they rented were quickly bringing down one of the city’s most important cultural nodes.

 

The offending clubs are gone now, thanks to a decade of legal wrangling led by several of the same developers who presided over Deep Ellum’s golden age and who are intent on bringing about its revival by employing the Planned Development card. One of them is real estate developer and entrepreneur Lou Reese III, whose father was instrumental in shaping the area’s original appeal by renting to such major draws as Monica’s Aca Y Alla. Reese has lately brought in a new crop of anchor venues such as Tucker’s Blues and has another round of eateries and bars coming into place relatively soon. “Deep Ellum is getting its live music roots back,” Reese told D in October, “and people are making significant investment and inroads in bringing back the right acts and the right types of establishments to actually create a vibrant music zone in Dallas.”

 

The conditions are already in place for the coming revival. Trees reopened in 2009 and the Green Room did likewise in 2010 (and has since expanded its dining service to Sunday evenings, with plans for brunch on the horizon). Neighborhood booster John Reardon recently received final approval to open a microbrewery, which should pair well with the two-year-old Calais Winery that appeared in the area in 2008. Destination district rebirths have been built on much lesser foundations than those upon which Deep Ellum now rests.




--
Regards,

Barrett Brown
512-560-2302