Wynnewood North was developed in the early 1950s as a cohesive community of midcentury modern and ranch homes. We're working with the City of Dallas to secure a Conservation District designation — to protect our character, our trees, and the value of our homes.
As Oak Cliff becomes one of Dallas's most sought-after neighborhoods, developers have taken notice. Without a Conservation District, any home in Wynnewood North can be demolished and replaced with a structure that has nothing to do with who we are. Once a demolition permit is pulled, there's no going back.
When non-contextual construction takes hold, original homes begin to look less desirable and property values can revert toward lot value only. A CD protects your investment.
Wynnewood North's cohesive midcentury streetscape — its modest scale, mature trees, and graceful lines — is irreplaceable once it's gone.
Unlike a historic district, a Conservation District's standards are tailor-made by the residents themselves. You decide what matters most to protect.
A CD is not a historic district or an HOA. It does not govern paint colors, interior remodeling, or landscaping. It regulates exterior architecture and scale on new construction.
Dozens of Dallas homeowners successfully remodel, expand, and modernize their homes within Conservation Districts every year. Compatible change is always welcome — incompatible construction is not.
Conservation Districts have existed in the City of Dallas since 1988, primarily in East Dallas and Oak Cliff. There are currently at least 17 Conservation Districts established and in effect across Dallas. Wynnewood North would become the newest member of a family of protected neighborhoods, including Kessler Park, King's Highway, and Stevens Park.
See All Dallas Conservation DistrictsA beloved midcentury community in the heart of Oak Cliff, Dallas — and one worth protecting.
Wynnewood North encompasses approximately 300 homes in a hilly, scenic North Oak Cliff location. Named Best Neighborhood in Dallas for 2012 by the Dallas Observer, the neighborhood is bounded by Vernon Avenue (west), Zang Blvd (east), W. Illinois Ave (south), and W. Clarendon Dr (north). See the boundary map ↓ Developed in the early 1950s by Angus Wynne, Jr. as the first postwar "packaged suburb" in Dallas, the neighborhood attracted noted architect Bud Oglesby and the Hare & Hare landscape architect firm. Today its large shaded lots, mature oak trees, and cohesive midcentury homes remain a defining feature of Oak Cliff.
Wynnewood North was developed in the early 1950s as part of the broader Wynnewood neighborhood in Oak Cliff, one of Dallas's most historic and culturally rich communities. The neighborhood was built with intentionality — streets lined with mature native trees, homes designed in the midcentury modern and midcentury traditional ranch styles that defined postwar American residential architecture.
The result is a streetscape of remarkable cohesion. Modest in scale, rich in character, and deeply livable — Wynnewood North has remained a place where architecture and community reinforce each other.
Oak Cliff has experienced an extraordinary resurgence in the last decade. The Bishop Arts District, Kessler Park, and the surrounding neighborhoods have become some of the most sought-after addresses in Dallas. That's wonderful — and it has also attracted the kind of speculative development that can fundamentally alter what makes a neighborhood unique.
Investors and developers have increasingly purchased modest homes in desirable, unprotected neighborhoods, demolished them, and replaced them with large-footprint structures that bear no relationship to the surrounding context. This "McMansion effect" has already reshaped parts of Oak Cliff. Wynnewood North has, so far, been largely spared — but that window is closing.
The Wynnewood North Conservation District Committee is made up of concerned neighbors who actually live here. We are long-time homeowners, newer residents, and anyone who cares about the future of this place. We have been working on this effort for several years, engaging with the City of Dallas, studying how other neighborhoods have navigated this process, and building the community consensus necessary to move forward. The Conservation District Committee is wholly separate and independent from the Wynnewood North Neighborhood Association and its board. While many WNNA members and board members support and participate in the CDC, the Conservation District Committee operates independently from the WNNA.
A Conservation District is a city zoning overlay that protects a neighborhood's distinctive physical character — without the restrictions of a historic district.
A Conservation District (CD) is a zoning tool used by the City of Dallas to help communities protect certain characteristics of their neighborhoods. Conservation Districts have existed in Dallas since 1988 and are concentrated primarily in East Dallas and Oak Cliff — Wynnewood North's own backyard.
Each Conservation District is different, because each one is crafted by its own residents. In general, a CD can regulate things like:
A CD is not a historic district. It does not freeze a neighborhood in amber or require expensive reviews for routine maintenance. Specifically:
Existing homes can and do get updated, expanded, and modernized within Conservation Districts all across Dallas. The focus is on new construction and substantial exterior remodels — ensuring they fit the neighborhood, not overwhelm it.
Historic districts in Dallas carry more restrictive review processes and are intended to preserve places of historic or cultural significance. A Conservation District, by contrast, is forward-looking — it's about defining the character we want to protect and guiding future growth to be compatible with it. It is a gentler, more flexible tool.
Wynnewood North would join a well-established family of protected neighborhoods. Here are the Conservation Districts currently established in Dallas:
Note: C.D. numbers reflect the City of Dallas numbering system; not all numbers are currently active.
How a neighborhood becomes a Conservation District in the City of Dallas — and where Wynnewood North is in that journey.
The City of Dallas has a formal process for establishing a Conservation District, governed by Section 51A-4.505 of the Dallas Development Code. The process typically takes 12–18 months from initial authorization through City Council adoption. Here's how it works — and where we are.
The process is governed by Dallas Development Code §51A-4.505. For questions about where we are or how to get involved, contact the CDC.
Everything you need to know about Conservation Districts, and what becoming one would mean for Wynnewood North.
The purpose is to conserve the overall character of the neighborhood. Because Wynnewood North has a distinctive history and architectural character — the "large, shaded lots and cohesive houses" that Preservation Dallas notes — many homeowners want to conserve the style and scale of homes that have characterized our neighborhood since its origin. Specifically, a CD is intended to:
Many of us chose Wynnewood North for its location, mature trees, affordability, and neighborhood feel. A CD gives us the tools to protect that investment by regulating teardowns and McMansion construction. It requires builders to be sensitive to our neighborhood's architectural style — creating homes that augment Wynnewood's charm rather than detract from it.
As homeowners, we know property values in Oak Cliff have been rising for years. But once newer, larger homes begin to outnumber the original homes, yours may be worth only "lot value" — meaning buyers would purchase it simply to scrape the house and build something much larger. A CD helps prevent that outcome.
Living in Dallas already means complying with city codes on plumbing, parking, fence height, fire safety, setbacks, and more. Most of us accept that these basic norms are part of being a good neighbor.
A Conservation District adds a layer specifically to maintain architectural standards that make Wynnewood North feel like Wynnewood North. Those standards would include things like:
Critically, these apply to new construction and significant exterior remodels — not to routine maintenance, interior work, paint colors, or landscaping.
The Wynnewood North CDC has been meeting and investigating this since late 2022, including consulting with neighborhood committees from Kidd Springs and Miller/Stemmons. Here's where we are:
See the full Process page for a detailed step-by-step timeline.
Once the neighborhood becomes a Conservation District, compliance with the ordinance regulations is required whether a work permit is needed or not. Here's how it works:
The process is managed through the City's online DallasNow portal and administered out of the Oak Cliff Municipal Center at 320 E. Jefferson Blvd.
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The latest from the Wynnewood North Conservation District Committee.
Documents, recordings, and links to help you understand the Conservation District and our progress.
Questions, interest in volunteering, yard sign requests, or just want to stay in the loop — we'd love to hear from you.
Show your neighbors where you stand. Check the box in the contact form and we'll get a sign to you.
Personal conversations are the most powerful way to build support. We need 58% of property owners — neighbor-to-neighbor outreach makes a real difference.
Pre-application community meetings are open to all. Check the Updates page for the next date.
The CDC has real costs — printing, postage, filing fees, and more. Contributions help keep us moving.
Your contribution supports printing, postage, City filing fees, community events, and everything else that makes this grassroots effort possible.
The Conservation District process involves real costs that a volunteer-led committee must cover out-of-pocket. Your support directly funds:
Brochures, yard signs, door hangers, petitions, and mailers to reach all Wynnewood North property owners.
Direct mail to the full neighborhood is one of the most effective ways to reach every property owner — and it costs real money.
The formal application process with the City of Dallas involves filing fees and related administrative costs.
Hosting informational meetings, gathering spaces, and refreshments for neighborhood input sessions.
Select an amount below to contribute to the Wynnewood North Conservation District Committee.
The Wynnewood North Conservation District Committee is made up of neighbors who live here and care about the future of this place. Have a question? Reach out to any of us.