The most eye-popping space in the Maple Terrace offices is a broad eighth-floor terrace overlooking Maple Avenue and the surrounding Uptown neighborhood. “It’s intended for employees to come here and do work or have functions,” Brewer said.
Down on the building’s ground floor, there’s a fitness center, golf simulator and conference center with a board room and training center.
Hines has already leased the penthouse office floor to California-based investment firm GI Partners which will start moving in next month. Brewer said his firm is already giving tours and talking to other interested tenants. “Finance and creative firms, I think, would value this the most.”
Out front on Maple Avenue, work will be done soon on two free-standing restaurant buildings that will house a New York City seafood restaurant named Catch and a Doce Mesas upscale Mexican restaurant by Dallas restaurateur Mico Rodriguez.
The eateries and new apartments in the adjoining tower will bring increased street life to the Maple Terrace block, which is across the street from the century-old Stoneleigh Hotel.
“We feel like Maple Avenue is going to be one of the major, exciting streets,” Brewer said. “You are in this pocket of Uptown I call upper Uptown. It’s the gateway from Turtle Creek.”
Maple Terrace’s location between downtown and residential districts across Turtle Creek in Oak Lawn made the building one of Dallas’ most exclusive residential addresses back in the day. Over the decades, the apartments played host to a cast of artists, actors and celebrities, including Greer Garson, Shirley MacLaine, Zsa Zsa Gabor and Judy Garland.
“There are generations of Dallasites who have links to this building,” Brewer said. “Once in a career, you can do something like this — working on a 100-year-old building in a big project that is mixed-use.”