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Register here for the November 15th public forum, "Reimagine Dealey Plaza and the Triple Underpass" Got a tip? Email Jerome Weeks at [email protected]. You can follow him on Twitter @dazeandweex.
Dealey Plaza, the Triple Underpass and Martyr’s Park “could represent the next step,” Reed contends, conceding that uniting the three would be dramatic and game-changing.
A jogger (far left) passes by Martyrs Park (left) on Thursday, Jan. 23, 2020 in Dallas. At right is the Triple Underpass, and behind it is Dealey Plaza.(Ryan Michalesko / Staff Photographer) At a ...
The Sixth Floor Museum has produced a cellphone walking tour of the plaza that begins in front of the Book Depository and ends atop the triple underpass. By the standards of Dealey Plaza's ...
“The time has come for Dallas to redesign Dealey Plaza and the Triple Underpass, which together represent one of the city’s most profound urban failings. “These spaces define Dallas.
Dealey Plaza is a depression ... from east to west and converge beneath a rail line in what is known as the triple underpass. That’s where President and Mrs. Kennedy were headed, on Elm ...
Critic's Notebook: Dealey Plaza, ... Museum has produced a cellphone walking tour of the plaza that begins in front of the Book Depository and ends atop the triple underpass.
But long before that, Dealey Plaza defined Dallas. Its significance has been lost. ... So, for the art deco city park with the innovative triple underpass to bear his name made perfect sense.
When we think of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy 40 years ago this weekend, many of us are transported to Dealey Plaza in Dallas, the open, park-like space with its wide boulevards ...
They also searched the rail yard in back of the pergola on Dealey Plaza, ... 23 feet and 4 inches from the Triple Underpass on the south side of Main Street.
If any of them visited Dealey Plaza or even drove through the triple underpass, there’s no record of it. ... That is to say, Johnson didn’t drive through the triple underpass.
The plaza is finished by a grand, proud, dignified statue of Mr. Dealey himself, the Civic Benefactor, who gave the place its name—the last statue J.F.K. ever saw as he looked to his left—and ...