Seven restaurants in one Dallas hot spot: Hudson House CEO invests big in Snider Plaza
, a Snider Plaza shop that Pond opened over a decade ago, when he was 24 years old.
Pond says he used to ride his bike to Snider Plaza with his best friend since kindergarten. They’d buy Christmas presents for their siblings. Three decades later, he wants to take his own kids to the shopping center.in a side-by-side space on Hillcrest that’s a former Lucky’s Hot Chicken and former frozen yogurt shop.
“The owner had a picture of my little girl’s soccer team up since the first day they opened,” says Jerry Washam, a longtime property manager at Snider Plaza. Washam’s grandfather helped develop Snider Plaza in the 1920s. When Brentwood opens in University Park, the restaurant will be at 6833 Snider Plaza. This rendering shows its corner spot on Rankin Avenue.
The patchwork style of architecture throughout Snider Plaza makes it uniquely homey yet uniquely challenging: Dozens of people own buildings throughout the complex. Because of that, Snider Plaza will possibly never have a uniform look, like, say, Highland Park Village nearby.The company’swill open last, on the ground floor of a new three-story, $12 million structure in Snider Plaza.