How a Girl on Top Chose, Kinda, to Move Back to Deep Ellum After Two Years Living in Austin

Lower Greenville, Knox-Henderson or Deep Ellum? That's the question I asked all kinds of folks before moving back to Dallas this month to re-join the Observer. Two and a half years gone while in grad school in Austin, and all kinds of things change in this town. Somebody set off...
Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

Lower Greenville, Knox-Henderson or Deep Ellum?

That’s the question I asked all kinds of folks before moving back to Dallas this month to re-join the Observer. Two and a half years gone while in grad school in Austin, and all kinds of things change in this town. Somebody set off a Banana Republic bomb on Knox-Henderson. Lower Greenville is dry as a bone. And Deep Ellum has a colony of Uptown apartments growing on its northeast side. What?

I picked Deep Ellum, not least because La Grange seemed like the a pretty sweet local bar to potentially become mayor of on Foursquare (and, well, that’s where I lived before when I was a Dallasite, practically above the Deep Ellum tunnel they tore up and put that new damned train on). But as I began checking in to the Foursquare iPhone app around my new-old ‘hood, I noticed some guy named Steve Floyd seemed to be mayor of the whole freaking neighborhood — maybe, now I know, with good reason. Floyd, who owns a Deep Ellum-based software development company called Axzm, is behind a social networking site (now in almost-beta testing) called Deep Ellum Community.

Appropriately, Floyd’s an open source software developer who just figured this would be kind of a neat and useful thing to do. I talked to him on the phone just now, and he said of the site he started building last November: “It started out as a labor of love. I’ve been chipping away at it.”

Will you step up to support Dallas Observer this year?

We’re aiming to raise $30,000 by December 31, so we can continue covering what matters most to you. If the Dallas Observer matters to you, please take action and contribute today, so when news happens, our reporters can be there.

$30,000

So far, the site looks great: It’s got Facebook integration, messaging, blogs, events, really most things you could want in a hyperlocal social networking site. And it’s all from Floyd’s brainy-programmer-brain. He says: “I have I have no direct affiliations with the [Deep Ellum] Foundation or [Deep Ellum] Association. It’s just a completely independent effort.”

Floyd says he saw a demand for “a resource on what business are open, when club nights are,” and started building accordingly. I’m already taking advantage of the site — be sure and RSVP for my appearance at the Megaphone Show this Saturday night at the Dallas Comedy House in — where else? — Deep Ellum.

GET MORE COVERAGE LIKE THIS

Sign up for the This Week’s Top Stories newsletter to get the latest stories delivered to your inbox

Loading latest posts...