Dallas, Texas
The Dallas Guide

Dallas

North Texas's flagship city — the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, Klyde Warren Park and the Dallas Arts District, the Bishop Arts District, Deep Ellum, and the Cowboys and Rangers in nearby Arlington.

TexasRedAwning · Vol. 01
A Field Guide

What Dallas actually feels like.

Dallas sits on the Blackland Prairie of North Texas, the core of the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex — the fourth-largest metro in the country at 8.1 million people. Downtown gathers Dealey Plaza, where the Sixth Floor Museum in the former Texas School Book Depository tells the Kennedy assassination story, the 561-foot Reunion Tower with its geodesic observation ball, and Pioneer Plaza's bronze longhorn cattle drive. North of downtown, the 19-block Dallas Arts District — the largest contiguous arts district in the nation — packs the Dallas Museum of Art, the Nasher Sculpture Center, the Crow Museum of Asian Art, and the Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center, all stitched together by Klyde Warren Park's 5-acre deck built over the Woodall Rodgers Freeway. The walkable Bishop Arts District in North Oak Cliff and the Deep Ellum music-and-mural quarter east of downtown hold the city's independent restaurants and live-music rooms, Fair Park's art-deco campus hosts the State Fair of Texas and Big Tex each September–October, and the Cowboys' AT&T Stadium and the Rangers' Globe Life Field sit 20 minutes west in Arlington.

From Dealey Plaza to the Arts District

Activities in Dallas

Tour the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza, walk Klyde Warren Park into the Dallas Museum of Art and the Nasher, ride the Reunion Tower ball, stroll the Dallas Arboretum on White Rock Lake, and catch a Cowboys or Rangers game in Arlington.

01

The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza

In the former Texas School Book Depository on Elm Street downtown — the sixth-floor exhibit reconstructs November 22, 1963 and the Kennedy assassination from the window perch, with the grassy knoll and the X on the road just outside. About $18 adult admission with audio guide; the cited Dallas history anchor.

02

Klyde Warren Park & the Dallas Arts District

The 5-acre deck park built over the Woodall Rodgers Freeway, linking downtown to the 19-block Arts District — food trucks, a reading room, and lawn games, steps from the Dallas Museum of Art (free general admission), the Nasher Sculpture Center, and the Meyerson Symphony Center. Park free; the cited Dallas first-morning walk.

03

Reunion Tower GeO-Deck

The 561-foot tower with the lit geodesic ball over downtown — a 360-degree indoor-outdoor observation deck with telescopes and the cited best skyline view in the city. About $19 adult admission; pair with a walk to Pioneer Plaza's cattle-drive sculpture two blocks away.

04

Dallas Arboretum & Botanical Garden

66 acres on the east shore of White Rock Lake — the Rory Meyers Children's Adventure Garden, the spring Dallas Blooms tulip display, the fall pumpkin village, and lake-and-skyline views. About $20 adult admission; the cited Dallas family-and-garden day, 15 minutes from downtown.

05

Perot Museum of Nature and Science

The cubed Victory Park museum just north of downtown — the dinosaur hall with the Alamosaurus, the gems-and-minerals hall, and a hands-on kids' floor, all behind a glass-walled exterior escalator. About $25 adult admission; the cited Dallas rainy-day family pivot.

06

Cowboys & Rangers in Arlington

Twenty minutes west on I-30 — the Cowboys' 80,000-seat AT&T Stadium (with daily tours of the field and art collection) and the Rangers' retractable-roof Globe Life Field next door, alongside Six Flags Over Texas. Game tickets vary widely; the cited Dallas sports-weekend draw.

07

Deep Ellum Murals & Live Music

The historic warehouse district just east of downtown — 40+ outdoor murals, the live-music rooms (Trees, the Bomb Factory/Factory in Deep Ellum), and independent bars and tattoo shops along Elm and Main. Free to wander; the cited Dallas nightlife-and-art quarter.

Dallas rewards a rental over a hotel — a Bishop Arts townhome puts you walking distance to the city's best independent restaurants, ten minutes from the Arts District and Klyde Warren Park, and a straight shot down I-30 to a Cowboys game in Arlington.
Marcus Reilly, RedAwning Southwest Markets Lead
Dallas
Beyond downtown

Things to Do Around Dallas

Fair Park and the State Fair of Texas, the George W. Bush Presidential Library at SMU, the Dallas World Aquarium, NorthPark Center, White Rock Lake, and a Fort Worth Stockyards day-trip west.

Outdoors & Adventure

01 · 2 spots
  • 01

    White Rock Lake Park

    A 1,015-acre lake just northeast of downtown — a 9.3-mile paved loop for runners and cyclists, kayak and paddleboard rentals, and skyline views across the water at sunset. Free; the cited Dallas outdoor-morning escape, next to the Arboretum.

    Address
    8300 E Lawther Dr, Dallas, TX 75218
  • 02

    Fort Worth Stockyards Day Trip

    40 minutes west in Fort Worth — the twice-daily Longhorn cattle drive down Exchange Avenue, the historic rodeo at Cowtown Coliseum, and Billy Bob's Texas honky-tonk. The cited Dallas–Fort Worth day-trip for the real Old West Texas.

    Address
    131 E Exchange Ave, Fort Worth, TX 76164

Family & Local

02 · 2 spots
  • 01

    Dallas World Aquarium

    A downtown aquarium-and-rainforest in a converted West End warehouse — a walk-through Orinoco rainforest with sloths and toucans, a shark tunnel, and a tropical-bird canopy. About $30 adult admission; the cited Dallas downtown family stop.

    Address
    1801 N Griffin St, Dallas, TX 75202
  • 02

    State Fair of Texas at Fair Park

    The art-deco Fair Park grounds southeast of downtown — host to the State Fair of Texas each late September through October, with Big Tex, the Texas Star Ferris wheel, fried everything, and the Cotton Bowl. The cited reason to book a Dallas fall weekend; the park's museums are open year-round.

    Address
    3809 Grand Ave, Dallas, TX 75210

Arts & History

03 · 2 spots
  • 01

    George W. Bush Presidential Library

    On the SMU campus in University Park — the 43rd president's library and museum, with a full-size Oval Office replica and a piece of World Trade Center steel. About $26 adult admission; the cited Dallas presidential-history stop, paired with the Katy Trail nearby.

    Address
    2943 SMU Blvd, Dallas, TX 75205
  • 02

    Bishop Arts District

    A walkable North Oak Cliff district just across the Trinity from downtown — independent boutiques, bakeries (Emporium Pies), murals, and a dense restaurant row. The cited Dallas neighborhood-stroll, and where several of our rentals sit.

    Address
    Bishop Ave & 7th St, Dallas, TX 75208

Markets & Shopping

04 · 1 spot
  • 01

    NorthPark Center

    An upscale enclosed mall north of downtown — Neiman Marcus and Nordstrom flagships, a rotating contemporary art collection (Warhol, Lichtenstein) in the corridors, and a central garden. Free to walk; the cited Dallas hot-or-rainy-day shopping pivot.

    Address
    8687 N Central Expy, Dallas, TX 75225
Brisket, Tex-Mex, and the Bishop Arts row

Where to Eat in Dallas

Pecan Lodge for the Deep Ellum brisket, Lockhart Smokehouse in Bishop Arts, Mi Cocina and El Fenix for Tex-Mex, Uchi for sushi on Maple Avenue, and Velvet Taco for the late-night bite.

Iconic BBQ

01 · 2 spots
  • 01

    Pecan Lodge

    The Deep Ellum BBQ destination — the cited best brisket in Dallas, the 'Hot Mess' sweet-potato plate, and a line that forms before the 11 AM open. Counter service, cash and card; the most-recommended Dallas BBQ meal.

    Address
    2702 Main St, Dallas, TX 75226
  • 02

    Lockhart Smokehouse (Bishop Arts)

    A Bishop Arts smokehouse in the Lockhart, Texas tradition — brisket and shoulder clod served on butcher paper, no forks, with the famous jalapeño-cheese sausage. Walkable from the district's rentals; the cited Oak Cliff BBQ stop.

    Address
    400 W Davis St, Dallas, TX 75208

Tex-Mex

02 · 2 spots
  • 01

    El Fenix

    The original Dallas Tex-Mex restaurant, downtown on McKinney Avenue since 1918 — the combo plates, the enchiladas, and the cited birthplace of the Dallas 'combination dinner.' Family-easy, cash and card; the most-historic Tex-Mex room in the city.

    Address
    1601 McKinney Ave, Dallas, TX 75202
  • 02

    Mi Cocina (Highland Park Village)

    The Dallas Tex-Mex institution in Highland Park Village — the brisket tacos, the enchiladas, and the famous (and famously strong) Mambo Taxi frozen margarita. Reservations recommended on weekends; the cited Dallas Tex-Mex go-to.

    Address
    77 Highland Park Village, Dallas, TX 75205

Upscale & Late-night

03 · 2 spots
  • 01

    Uchi Dallas

    Tyson Cole's Japanese room on Maple Avenue near downtown — the omakase and the cited best sushi in the city, in a converted bungalow. Reservations book out; the cited Dallas special-occasion dinner.

    Address
    2817 Maple Ave, Dallas, TX 75201
  • 02

    Velvet Taco (Henderson Avenue)

    A globally-spun taco counter on Henderson Avenue — the rotisserie chicken, the falafel, and the weekly 'WTF' special taco, open late for the post-Deep-Ellum crowd. Counter service; the cited Dallas late-night bite.

    Address
    3012 N Henderson Ave, Dallas, TX 75206
Before you book

Trip Planning, Answered

Best season, the DFW-vs-Love Field airport question, the Bishop Arts-vs-suburbs neighborhood choice, the car-dependent reality, and what a Dallas stay costs.

When is the best time to visit Dallas?
Spring (March–May) and fall (October–November) are the prime windows — 65–85°F days, the Dallas Blooms tulips at the Arboretum in spring, and the State Fair of Texas filling Fair Park each late September through October. Summer (June–September) runs 95–105°F and humid, so plan indoor stops (museums, NorthPark, the aquarium) midday. Winters are mild, 45–60°F with occasional ice storms — the value season.
What's the closest airport to Dallas?
Two. Dallas/Fort Worth International (DFW) is the larger hub, 20 miles northwest, a global American Airlines hub midway between Dallas and Fort Worth. Dallas Love Field (DAL) is 6 miles northwest of downtown — smaller, closer, and Southwest Airlines' home airport. Rideshare to a Bishop Arts or downtown rental runs $30–$55 from DFW, $15–$30 from Love Field.
Do I need a car in Dallas?
Yes — Dallas is a car-dependent, spread-out metro. The DART light-rail and the downtown M-Line streetcar cover downtown, the Arts District, Deep Ellum, and the Bishop Arts area, and rideshare is plentiful, but reaching Arlington's stadiums, the suburban rentals in Richardson and Rowlett, or the Fort Worth Stockyards realistically requires a car. Most of our Richardson, Garland, and Rowlett homes assume a vehicle.
Where should I stay in Dallas?
Bishop Arts / North Oak Cliff is the walkable, restaurant-dense pick — independent shops and bakeries, 10 minutes from downtown. Downtown and Uptown put you near the Arts District, Klyde Warren Park, and the M-Line streetcar. The Richardson, Garland, and Rowlett homes north and east are the larger group-and-family pick — 4- and 5-bedroom houses with pools, built for reunions and Cowboys-weekend crews with highway access to Arlington.
How long should I stay in Dallas?
A long weekend (3 nights) covers the Sixth Floor Museum, Klyde Warren Park and the Arts District, a Bishop Arts dinner, and a Cowboys or Rangers game in Arlington. A full week adds the Dallas Arboretum and White Rock Lake, the George W. Bush Library, Fair Park, and a Fort Worth Stockyards day-trip west for the cattle drive and rodeo.
How much does a Dallas vacation rental cost?
Bishop Arts and downtown-area homes and townhomes run roughly $150–$300/night. The larger 4- and 5-bedroom suburban houses in Richardson, Garland, and Rowlett — several with pools and game rooms, sleeping 10 to 16 — run $250–$500+/night and are strong value per head for groups. Rates climb around big Cowboys home games, the State Fair, and major convention weeks.
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