b
y Dawn McMullan;
statistical analysis by
Clyde Thompson
 |
|
NO. 1
SOUTHLAKE:
Sixty percent of
the families
here have
children under
18, the most
family-centric
in our survey.
Photos by
Dave Shafer |
 |
Go,
Southlake Dragons!
Though win-loss records
of high school football
teams didn’t figure into
our rankings, the town
with the state champs
takes top honors this
year. Good for them.
But what happened to
University Park (No. 1
last time around) and
Highland Park (No. 2)?
How could they have
slipped beneath Highland
Village, you ask? It
came down to the crime
data. No, Highland Park
and University Park
haven’t been overrun by
pirates and highwaymen;
crime stats in both
towns actually improved
over two years ago. But
Southlake, Parker, and
Highland Village simply
had even less
crime.
For this year’s
rankings, we tackled
more burbs than ever
before—63—crunching the
data on their schools,
crime, housing, and
ambience. We interviewed
residents and logged
many miles having a look
around (oy, the cost of
gas!). For a detailed
explanation of how we
did it, see the end of
our report. But here are
some important points to
keep in mind about this
year’s list:
Yes, ranking the suburbs
is inherently unfair.
Parker (No. 2) has 2,450
residents. In the data
we used, the city had
not a single violent
crime. Irving (No. 59)
claims 201,950 souls and
910 violent crimes. It
isn’t so much apples to
oranges as it is apples
to hammers.
Understanding that big
cities are different
beasts, we broke them
out in their own ranking
(see "The Big Boys"
sidebar).
We altered our
methodology this year,
and it did affect the
ranking. Realizing that
property tax rates
don’t vary much from
city to city (and that
taxes
paid don’t
necessarily indicate
anything), we dropped
that factor from our
ranking formula and
shifted weight into the
safety and ambience
factors. For ambience,
we added a new stat: air
quality. Again, for a
more detailed
explanation, see the end
of our report.
Finally, this year, in
addition to profiling
the top 10 suburbs, we
also took a look at six
towns that we felt
deserved a little
attention: Prosper,
because Jerry Jones
thinks it’s the next
Frisco; Sunnyvale,
because it’s such a
surprise that a bucolic
burb can lie just 15
minutes from downtown
Dallas; Keller, because
it’s one of the most
wired cities in America;
Ennis, because it moved
up more spots than any
other burb; and Rockwall
and Heath, because
Rockwall County is the
fourth-fastest-growing
in the country.
Click
HERE
to see our rankings in
PDF format.

1.
Southlake
Population:
25,350
Annual growth since
1990:
8.3%
Average home
sales price in 2005:
$513,439
Median age of
residents:
36.7
Families with kids under
18: 60.5%
Median household income:
$131,549
WHAT RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
The empty city streets
on fall Friday nights
give you a clue about
what makes this town
tick. All the local
sports teams are the
Dragons, not just the
high school football
team (which won the
state 5A division
championship last season
and was named the No. 2
football team in the
country by USA Today).
The good news is local
football brings people
together; the bad news
is winning is so
important that less
athletically gifted kids
don’t get to play. The
schools are great, but
some say they’re full of
rich kids with
competitive, meddling
parents. The Grapevine
Lake Equestrian Trail
gives a glimpse of what
Southlake used to be
like, but most residents
think the growth has
been handled well. The
city often surveys its
residents, listening and
responding to their
comments. Considered an
elite area, homes can
easily get up to more
than $1 million.
WHAT WE SAY:
Southlake combines city
and country life. Sure,
more than one Kerry sign
was stolen here during
the last presidential
election, but the
downtown brownstones and
soon-to-open Central
Market give the city a
hip, urban feel. This is
our most family-centered
top suburb, with 60.4
percent of families
having kids under 18.
The city’s bike paths
and sidewalks, which
will allow kids to ride
their bikes to the new
Harkins movie theaters,
are a definite suburban
bonus. That said, the
recent battle waged by
parents whose daughters
didn’t make the varsity
cheerleading team
(eventually the school
board allowed all girls
who had tried out to be
on the team) shows that
the Park Cities aren’t
the only local bubble in
need of perspective.
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|
NO. 2
PARKER:
Tucked away to
the east of
Plano, it still
offers wide-open
spaces.
Photo by Dave
Shafer |
2. Parker
Population:
2,450
Annual growth since
1990:
4.5%
Average home sales price
in 2005:
$453,004
Median age of residents:
40.8
Families with kids under
18: 33.8%
Median
household income:
$101,786
WHAT RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
There’s no easy way to
get in or out of Parker,
a main difference
between it and Murphy,
its nearby top-10 peer.
Some residents are
looking for a bit more
progress, hoping the
town will try to attract
new businesses. Most of
the homes here are
custom, averaging about
$550,000. Most are new,
built in the late ’90s,
ranging from $300,000 up
to $1.3 million. What
people often want but
can’t find here: land.
WHAT WE SAY:
You can’t talk about
Parker without
mentioning that it’s the
home of Southfork. So
there. It’s mentioned.
Parker’s low crime rates
make it the
second-safest suburb in
our entire survey. In
2005, the town had zero
violent crimes, two
burglaries, and 30
larcenies.
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|
NO. 3 HIGHLAND
VILLAGE:
Jennifer Lewis
and daughter
Macy live not
far from the
tony homes on
the shores of
Lake Lewisville.
Photo by
Doug Davis |
3. Highland Village
Population:
14,450
Annual growth
since 1990: 4.6%
Average home
sales price in 2005:
$282,586
Median age of
residents:
37.7
Families with kids under
18: 53.3%
Median household income:
$102,141
WHAT RESIDENTS
AND REAL ESTATE AGENTS
SAY:
Residents are
cheerleaders for their
town of grand homes
along Lake Lewisville.
They like to tell
stories of how Highland
Park residents used to
weekend here in the true
lakeside bungalows in
the older part of town.
(No one knows if that’s
true, but it’s a good
story.) Locals are
excited about a
Southlake-like retail
area, which will open in
the fall and feature
Coldwater Creek, Ann
Taylor, and the like.
Highland Shores is the
most popular and pricey
subdivision here, with
many homes along Lake
Lewisville priced at
more than $1 million.
Though you should expect
to spend about $300,000
on a home, some starting
in the upper $100,000s
can be found in the
older sections of town.
WHAT WE SAY:
In addition to the lake
views and mature trees,
we love the small-town
politics. Recently, the
town has been in an
uproar over the City
Council’s approval of a
Wal-Mart. In the May
election, mayoral
candidate Dave Bunnell
told his opponent—who
voted for the Wal-Mart
and ended up barely
winning the mayor’s
race—it was “evil to
disregard what the
majority of citizens
tell you to do.” Dianne
Costa’s response: “Where
would Moses be if he
took a poll in Egypt?
Where would Jesus Christ
be if he took a poll in
Israel?” Where but
small-town Texas would
someone invoke the name
of Jesus to defend
Wal-Mart?
4.
University Park
Population:
23,250
Annual growth since
1990:
0.3%
Average home sales price
in 2005:
$926,133
Median age of residents:
31.2
Families with
kids under 18:
40.8%
Median
household income:
$92,778
WHAT RESIDENTS
AND REAL ESTATE AGENTS
SAY:
A small town in the
midst of a huge
metropolitan area is a
rarity, and it’s one of
UP’s best attributes.
The city is clean, and
trash pickup runs like
clockwork. Yet the
structure that make
everything run so well
also drives some locals
crazy. Town employees
actually drive up and
down alleys to make sure
your garbage can lids
are attached to a fixed
structure and chained to
your trash cans. You’ll
also be busted if
anything is growing
within eight inches of
that alley. The shops
are great; parking, not
so much. If land comes
up for sale (generally
from a tear-down), it’s
gone within 24 hours.
Real estate agents
estimate land value here
and in Highland Park has
increased by 15 to 30
percent in the last
year. A 70-by-160 lot
will go for $1 million
to $1.5 million. Low-end
housing here is $450,000
to $500,000; high-end is
more like $5 million to
$6 million (unless
you’re talking about
Boca Estates, where
homes push $20 million).
WHAT WE SAY:
It would just be
embarrassing to surround
a major university and
not have the most
educated population in
our top 10. UP pulls it
out, though, with 80
percent of residents
having at least a
bachelor’s degree.
Schools here and in HP
rank the highest on our
chart, boasting a 4.8
score out of 5. Students
in HPISD have the
highest mean SAT scores
of all our suburbs at
1163. UP has just about
everything HP does at a
lower price. No brainer.
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|
NO. 5
HIGHLAND PARK:
Mark and Grace
Jolas live in a
neighborhood
where moms feel
safe letting
their kids roam.
Photo by Doug
Davis |
5. Highland Park
Population:
8,750
Annual growth since
1990:
0%
Average home sales price
in 2005:
$1,347,657
Median age of residents:
42
Families with
kids under 18:
33.6%
Median
household income:
$149,389
WHAT
RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
This is a lovely place.
Old trees, a beautiful
city pool, parks along
creeks, interesting old
homes. The local library
is small but within
walking distance for
many. The downside is
that diversity is rare
and competitiveness is
high. And residents hate
that they can’t vote in
Dallas elections. The
schools are HP’s true
gem. Many urban parents
decide to invest in a
high-priced HP home they
can sell in 18 years
instead of writing that
big check to a private
school. Highland Park’s
larger lots bring higher
prices than in UP. A
70-by-200 lot sells for
$2.4 million to $3
million. Rumor has it
that highly coveted lots
have gone for as much as
$12 million. Most homes
here run $2 million and
up. You’ll struggle to
find anything less than
$600,000 and can pay as
much as $20 million if
you’d like.
WHAT WE SAY:
Not surprisingly, HP has
the highest median
household income of our
top 10 suburbs at
$149,389. Surprisingly,
it has the lowest tax
rate of all our 63
suburbs. (Of course,
with an average home
sales price of more than
$1.3 million, a town can
probably do that.) You
may scoff at the
near-perfect 98 ambience
score we gave the town,
but that’s just because
you’re jealous you can’t
live in Highland Park.
Honestly, is there
another entire city
that’s as idyllic,
small, and inviting?
6.
Colleyville
Population:
21,700
Annual growth since
1990:
3.4%
Average home sales price
in 2005:
$415,273
Median age of residents:
40
Families with
kids under 18:
49.8%
Median household income:
$117,419
WHAT
RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
People here like the
country, but they also
like convenient
luxuries. (One mentioned
is the new Bob’s Steak &
Chop House, opening soon
in nearby Grapevine.)
Sure, the schools are
great, the dearth of
apartments means little
riffraff, and
Colleyville is close to
urban conveniences. The
true perfection, though,
may be Colleyville’s
proximity to DFW Airport
without the bother of
being in the actual
flight pattern. “I don’t
have to say anything to
sell Colleyville,” one
real estate agent says.
Homes here are less
expensive than in
Southlake yet more than
in Grapevine. Not many
homes are more than $1
million, with the higher
end being more like
$800,000 and an average
home going for around
$400,000. About 10
percent of homes are new
construction, with most
being pre-owned and
built in the early ’90s.
WHAT WE SAY:
Colleyville was No. 40
in
Money Magazine’s
Top Places To Live
survey. In the nation.
The city just feels
nice. Maybe it’s the
design. The sidewalks.
The landscaping. The
beautiful construction.
The swath of undisturbed
nature that runs
straight through the
middle of the city. It’s
a place where you can
think you live in the
land of milk and
honey—yet buy that milk
and honey at the Kroger
down the street.
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|
NO. 7
TROPHY CLUB:
An entire burb
built around a
country club, it
offers great
golf (and golf
instruction with
Rosey Bartlett,
the 2004 LPGA
T&CP National
Teacher of the
Year).
Photo by
Doug Davis |
7. Trophy Club
Population:
7,250
Annual growth since
1990:
3.9%
Average home sales price
in 2005:
$233,731
Median age of residents:
37
Families with
kids under 18:
43.2%
Median
household income:
$92,492
WHAT
RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
People who don’t live in
Trophy Club usually just
drive past Trophy Club,
never entering its city
limits. And residents
are fine with that.
“Trophy Club is like a
neighborhood on
steroids,” one resident
says. Kids’ baseball and
soccer are big here. So
is the Trophy Club
Country Club, which sits
in the center of town.
Northwest ISD attracts
many families who say
the schools seem more
private than public
because of the small
classes and personal
attention. High-end
homes go over $1 million
(many along the country
club’s golf course,
which was designed by
Ben Hogan). You can also
find well-crafted homes
from the ’70s and ’80s
in the upper $200,000s.
Lower-end housing in the
low to mid-$100,000s
draws more singles than
you’d find in Southlake
or Colleyville, yet
Trophy Club is still
mostly families.
WHAT WE SAY:
It’s difficult to say
whether Trophy Club is
planned perfection or
contrived community. The
town started as the
state’s first entirely
planned community back
in 1973 and was centered
around the country club
(with the very “clubby”
name). Families go to
the community pool or
walk to the lake to feed
the ducks. A
second-grade class
recently won the town’s
“Name the Fire Truck”
contest. (“Smokey” it
is.) It’s a bit Stepford
Wife-ish to urbanites
because it looks so
pleasant. But we’re
jaded by the smog and
shootings.
8. Flower
Mound
Population:
61,550
Annual growth
since 1990: 9.0%
Average home sales price
in 2005:
$270,303
Median age of
residents:
33.3
Families with kids under
18: 56.8%
Median household income:
$95,416
WHAT
RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
While many people in
Flower Mound certainly
have money, it isn’t
obvious. The high school
parking lot is filled
with cars that look like
what a high school kid
could afford. People cut
their own grass. Locals
have been demanding
retail and restaurants
and are now getting it,
enjoying the new Lowe’s,
Home Depot, and Target.
The city is trying hard
to control growth, to
its own detriment, some
residents say. While
Southlake’s retail
district booms, Flower
Mound’s Parker Square is
limited to only local
stores, most of which
don’t last long. As far
as housing, you can
start with a small,
older garden home for
$120,000 and go up to
multimillion-dollar
properties along Lake
Lewisville.
WHAT WE SAY:
Flower Mound is the
largest of our top
suburbs, so it’s not
surprising it has so
many urban conveniences.
The city is a nice mix
of cul-de-sacs with
stay-at-home moms, kids
on bikes, and nearby
horse stables and
rolling green
hills—although we wonder
how long the developers
will let that last. The
city does mandate that
trees stay put during
development, which
helps. Almost 13 acres
of the original mound of
wildflowers after which
the city was named (next
to the Tom Thumb at FM
3040 and FM 2499) belong
to a nonprofit citizens’
organization, safe from
the bulldozers of
developers.
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|
NO. 15
FRISCO:
The intimacy of
the Dr Pepper
Ballpark helps
the fast-growing
city feel small.
Photo by
Dave Shafer |
9. Hickory Creek
Population:
2,400
Annual growth since
1990:
1.5%
Average home
sales price in 2005:
$208,843
Median age of
residents:
39.8
Families with
kids under 18:
33.5%
Median
household income:
$69,313
WHAT
RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
Residents hope their
town hall will be the
beginning of a central
business district, the
closest thing to a
downtown Hickory Creek
probably will ever have.
“It used to be our
downtown was Lake
Dallas,” one resident
says. Hickory Creek
boomed in the early ’90s
and still has the feel
of a small town. While
there is no central
gathering place,
residents say they
always see someone at
Wal-Mart they know. Ten
years ago, the town’s
annual sales tax revenue
was $30,000. It’s
projected to be closer
to $1 million this year,
thanks to a Wal-Mart,
IHOP, McDonald’s and
other businesses that
started when the town
got water on its west
side. (The town is
divided by I-35.) Homes
here start at around
$200,000, going up
significantly around
Lake Lewisville, and
average around $500,000.
WHAT WE SAY:
While a bedroom
community with a
Wal-Mart and no real
downtown isn’t generally
our kind of place, this
one looks great on
paper. In fact, it wins
our best value for
quality of life contest
(see "Best Deals").
Hickory Creek has the
lowest median income of
our top suburbs at
$69,313. (The national
average, by the way, is
$41,994.) It also has
the least-educated
residents, with 25
percent having earned at
least a bachelor’s
degree. The smallest of
the top 10 (Parker has
about 50 more people),
Hickory Creek is a safe
bet for quiet,
hassle-free, safe
living.
10. Murphy
Population:
11,300
Annual growth
since 1990:
13.2%
Average home
sales price in 2005:
$271,056
Median age of
residents:
33.9
Families with kids under
18: 47.1%
Median
household income:
$83,547
WHAT
RESIDENTS AND REAL
ESTATE AGENTS SAY:
Murphy is a quiet town.
But residents who once
heard tree frogs, owls,
and coyotes are now
serenaded by the sounds
of new construction.
Longtime residents miss
the feel that inspired
the town’s slogan:
“Country living at its
best.” There was a day
when city employees
would return your
escaped dog to your
backyard. Now they’re
hiring hunters to kill
the coyotes who were
killing local cats.
Still, residents feel
they can drop in on City
Council members, and
many know the names of
local police officers.
Minimum lot sizes here
are 9,000 square feet,
with most being closer
to 12,000. Murphy is a
bit lower-end than
Parker, with homes
averaging about
$280,000. You can’t get
in for less than
$150,000 and can pay up
to $800,000 in the
Rolling Ridge
subdivision. Homes here
must have side-entry
garages, meaning there
are no alleys and a
minimum of 20 feet
between each home,
giving everyone a bit of
elbowroom.
WHAT WE SAY:
Last year, a Starbucks
replaced the Fina
station. That pretty
much tells Murphy’s
story. The local
newspaper reports that
50 families a month are
moving to the town. The
vote to make the city
wet comes up more and
more often, and some
residents expect it
probably will pass
before much longer.
Starbucks. Easy highway
access. A Barnes & Noble
five minutes away at the
new Firewheel Mall. All
evidence that Murphy has
grown 630 percent in the
last decade and a half.
