Finding a new home is one thing...but here is our new house. Brand new and even with some personal touches in it we have found a house that we plan to be in for a very long time...check out how it progressed....
And progressed...
And progressed-until we came to the final product....
With everything in its place-just don't look in my closet...it is feeling more and more like home everyday...which means...Open for visitors! Come on down to Texas ya'll!
Friday, December 10, 2010
New home
Now that you are caught up on everything that happened in the last 6 months-thought I would fill you some small details....our house. While Andrew works in Plano we originally planned on moving back to Frisco and planting down some sturdy roots there. But-I just moved from the awesome little town of Erie and after we arrived I was really wanting to find a special community similar to Erie....well, I think we found it.
We settled in Prosper, Texas...never heard of it...well here are some facts
ABOUT THE TOWN OF PROSPER – The Town of Prosper is a fast-growing suburb with small town charm, located 30 miles north of Dallas at the crossroads of U.S. 380, Preston Road and the Dallas North Tollway in Collin and Denton Counties. Prosper sits on 27 square miles and is home to more than 9,000 people. A home-rule municipality, governed by a council-manager form of government, the town has full-time fire and police departments, including its own dispatch service. As the Town grows to its projected build-out population of 90,000 residents, Prosper’s vision is to remain a “Place Where Everyone Matters."
As a matter of fact in June of 2010-Prosper was named by D Magazine
The 10 Best Dallas Suburbs
Take our tour of the greatest places to live outside of Dallas.
5. Prosper
Population: 9,350
Annual growth since 1990:11.7%
Average home sales price in 2009: $328,452
Median age of residents: 32.5
Families with kids under 18:50.3 %
Median household income:$64,063
Annual growth since 1990:11.7%
Average home sales price in 2009: $328,452
Median age of residents: 32.5
Families with kids under 18:50.3 %
Median household income:$64,063
What they say: Residents move here primarily for the schools and the wide-open spaces. These are people who like to work in the yard and grow gardens. They don’t mind seeing their neighbor’s house from their porch, but they’d rather not. One resident has a neighbor with buffaloes and enjoys the cows in the pasture near her children’s school. Speaking of, the school district is rearranging things next year. Instead of three elementary schools feeding into a middle school, then a high school, the three lower-level schools will feed into a fifth- and sixth-grade campus, a seventh- and eighth-grade campus, then a high school. Parents like it. The town doesn’t have much (you’ll always see someone you know at Palio’s Pizza Cafe and Ernesto’s Mexican Restaurant), but residents seem content to drive to Frisco for more varied dining and shopping. In 2008, the Prosper Eagles beat the Celina Bobcats for the first time in 25 years, going on to win the Class 3A football state championship. They beat the Bobcats again last season. People talk about it like the birth of their first child. Even Prosper’s most famous resident, Deion Sanders, has been spotted at an Eagles game. Houses here start at $130,000 and go up to, well, keep reading. Average is in the $400,000s.
What we say: Prosper was so close last time we did this. The town came in at No. 11 then but would not be denied this year. When you come into Prosper, past the corn fields, you’ll see a Sonic, a couple of restaurants, a dentist, an eye doctor, a couple of gas stations—then Sanders’ $21 million estate, which happens to be on the market. Whether you’re looking for Friday night football or “your own Dave & Buster’s” with an indoor basketball court, bowling alley, and Hall of Fame gallery (as Sanders’ listing touts), Prosper is for you.
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What we say: Prosper was so close last time we did this. The town came in at No. 11 then but would not be denied this year. When you come into Prosper, past the corn fields, you’ll see a Sonic, a couple of restaurants, a dentist, an eye doctor, a couple of gas stations—then Sanders’ $21 million estate, which happens to be on the market. Whether you’re looking for Friday night football or “your own Dave & Buster’s” with an indoor basketball court, bowling alley, and Hall of Fame gallery (as Sanders’ listing touts), Prosper is for you.
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The downtown of this tiny town will make you feel right at home.
Published 7.07.2010
Published 7.07.2010
In many ways, Prosper epitomizes the tiny Texas town. It claims fewer than 10,000 residents and harbors a whole lot of wide open space, but it doesn’t offer much by way of entertainment.
There’s plenty of shopping to be done — in nearby Frisco or McKinney — and nightlife mostly consists of dinner at Palio’s Pizza Café or Ernesto’s Mexican Restaurant. Among the more impressive drive-by sights in town are the new Prosper High School, which looks like the campus of a private college, and ex-NFL star Deion Sanders’ massive 100-acre estate, currently on the market for $21 million. But there is one spot, known as downtown Prosper, where you can get a feel for what small town business is all about.
The word “downtown” might be a bit of a misnomer. It’s small and the business mix is odd, with the municipal courthouse sharing a building with a real estate office, while a hair salon operates just a few doors down.
Nestled behind a simple white-brick storefront is Maggie’s, a women’s boutique that owner Margaret Gurley guesses is the only retail store in town. Not being particularly fashionable or particularly female, I know I stick out like a sore thumb before I even walk through the door.
“Hi there,” Gurley says with a smile as I make my way inside. “Are you lost?”
She knows I’m new — if I weren’t, she’d recognize me. Having settled in downtown Prosper seven years ago after moving the store from Carrollton, Gurley has developed a loyal clientele, and she knows her niche.
“We don’t buy big box items,” she says. “We look for something unique that they won’t find at Wal-Mart.”
Gurley’s store carries women’s items that range from wedding formal to weekend casual, as well as goods for teens and babies. You’ll also find spirit wear supporting Prosper High football (the Eagles won the 2008 3A state championship, as anyone in town will gladly tell you), and the store is expanding to include Corral boots.
But the goodies that really make Maggie’s a convenient stop for residents are the often the cheapest pieces you’ll find in the store. Greeting cards, lip balm, and forget-me-nots are side items that can be tough to track down in an undersized city, while selections of stationery, shea butter soap, picture frames, and other similar items make for painless gift shopping.
On the opposite end of downtown — but still only a minute’s walk away — is the Cotton Gin Café. Owned by longtime Prosper residents Sondra and Steve Channell, the Cotton Gin has been in business for nearly a decade, first opening its doors in 2001. The dining area holds fewer than a dozen tables surrounded by mixed-and-matched blue and beige chairs, and the menu is scrawled out on a giant whiteboard that hangs behind the cash register. Steve serves as a handyman when needed, but most days you’ll find Sondra holding the fort and mingling with regulars.
“There’s a group of men that come in every morning to get their coffee and gossip,” Sondra says.
The café opens promptly at 7 am every day but Sunday. For $4.59, you can order the Gin Breakfast Platter — a country breakfast of eggs, biscuits and gravy, hash browns, and bacon or sausage. Like any respectable small town café, the Cotton Gin serves a killer chicken fried steak, and Channell recommends the pork tenderloin sandwich, a specialty she brought with her from her native Kansas.
Even if you can’t handle an entire meal, it’s worth checking in to see the desserts of the day, which range from sopapilla cheesecake and pumpkin cake to old standbys like pecan pie.
As I pulled out of my parking spot in front of the Cotton Gin, I caught a final glimpse of downtown Prosper. It occupies all of one city block of simple one-story buildings that, anywhere else, would seem underwhelming. But somehow, in the charming, close-quartered confines of Prosper, it feels right.
What a whirlwind!
I've decided that it is simply impractical to try to recap our summer since we are already getting ready for the holidays. I will put into a few words what the last 6 months have been like...LOTS OF MOVING AROUND!
May 31st-We moved out of our house in Colorado
June 1st-moved into a hotel for a week
June 11th-drove to El Paso and visited my parents for 2 weeks
June 18th-drove to Plano and moved into a corporate apartment
June 20th-Zach fly to NY for the summer
July 13th-drove to back to El Paso
July 14th-flew to Las Vegas to celebrate Andrew's 40th birthday
July 19th-flew back to Dallas
July 20th-moved into another temporary apartment
July 23rd-flew to Denver
July 24th-drove to Cheyenne for Frontier Days (rodeo)
July 25th-flew back to El Paso to pick up the kids
July 29th-drove back to Dallas and settled into new apartment
August 12th-flew to Las Vegas for a girls only trip
August 23rd kids started school
Breathe, Breathe, Breath.....
School, the first lost tooth, lots of time with Grandma, soccer games, swim practice and swim meets, fun with friends old and new, a new house....
Needless to say it has been a little busy around here. We are settling in fine and getting well adjusted.
We are home....
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