Lake Highlands | |||||||||
Style: | Dallas Area Rapid Transit | ||||||||
Address: | 9393 Whistle Stop Place Dallas, Texas 75231 | ||||||||
Coordinates: | 32.8801°N -96.7303°W | ||||||||
Connections: | DART Routes and | ||||||||
Platform: | Two side platforms | ||||||||
Parking: | 68 spaces[1] | ||||||||
Bicycle: | 1 bike rack | ||||||||
Opened: | December 6, 2010[2] | ||||||||
Accessible: | Yes | ||||||||
Owned: | Dallas Area Rapid Transit | ||||||||
Mapframe: | yes | ||||||||
Mapframe-Custom: |
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Lake Highlands station is a DART Light Rail station in the Lake Highlands neighborhood of Dallas, Texas. The station serves the .
The station is located near the intersection of Skillman Street and Walnut Hill Lane at the Lake Highlands Town Center development.[3] The station is about 0.5miles south of Lake Highlands High School and the Lake Highlands Recreation Center, both of which it is connected to via the Lake Highlands Trail.
Plans for the Northeast Corridor, which became the northern leg of the Blue Line, included a station in Lake Highlands under the name Kingsley Road. While concepts were created for the station, it was not built with the rest of the corridor due to traffic capacity issues on White Rock Trail Road (which would house the station entrance), a junior high school being planned nearby, and neighborhood opposition.[4] [5]
In 2005, Dallas created a tax increment financing district for Lake Highlands Town Center, a proposed 769-acre mixed-use development adjacent to the proposed station site.[6] [7] The following year, DART allocated $10 million towards constructing the station.[8] Unlike in the original plan, the station entrance is located on Skillman Street. It was the second infill station to be built by DART, the first being Cityplace station.
The station opened on December 6, 2010, concurrent with the opening of most of the . Lake Highlands Town Center, which had been delayed following the Great Recession, would not open until 2014 following a management change and substantial redesigns.[9]