Dallas co-working firm aligns with major North Texas office building owner
Common Desk and Granite Properties will provide flexible, on-demand office space.
Common Desk has a co-working center in Granite Properties Factory Six03 building in downtown Dallas.(Andy Jacobsohn / Staff Photographer)
A Dallas-based co-working firm is teaming up with a major area building owners to offer flexible office space.
Common Desk is one of Texas’ largest shared office space providers, with multiple locations in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
The co-working space provider just cut a deal with developer and investor Granite Properties to provide the landlord’s business tenants with on-demand offices in Common Desk locations.
While many of us will likely want to forget as much about 2020 as possible the moment the clock strikes midnight on New Year’s Eve, it wasn’t all bad. In
Plano gives thumbs up to shopping mall redevelopment plan
Former Plano Market Square retail center will become mixed-use with apartments and offices.
Built in 1980, the mall has been largely empty for years.(Triten Real Estate)
Plano’s City Council has approved a plan to turn a long-vacant shopping mall into a mixed-use project.
The Plano Market Square Mall was built in 1980 on Spring Creek Parkway just east of U.S. Highway 75.
The more than 300,000-square-foot building was originally operated as an outlet mall and later housed a variety of retailers.
But the single-level building has been largely empty during the last few years.
You can now take a gander to see Meander and Yellow Glow
Molly Glentzer December 15, 2020Updated: December 21, 2020, 11:22 am
A cyclist rides on the White Oak trail through Francesca Fuchs’ “Yellow Glow,” an artwork commissioned by the MKT developers for the underpass at N. Shepherd and 6th Street. Photo: Marie D. De Jesús, Houston Chronicle / Staff photographer
Public art serves many good purposes, but heading into a somber winter, projects that lift moods are especially welcome.
Francesca Fuchs’ “Yellow Glow” and Falon Mihalic’s “Meander” cheer up those who encounter them while mirroring the landscape in intriguing ways. Unrelated yet complementary, both new works also embrace Houston’s relationship with concrete and can be seen during a bike ride or a hike around the Heights and downtown.