![]() DoorDash made it impossible to order.VOLUME 10, ISSUE 3 SEPT. UNT at Frisco readies to open collaborative campusįRISCO LANDING The new UNT at Frisco branch campus will feature a four-story building called Frisco Landing. SOURCE: UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXASCOMMUNITY IMPACT 135,000 square feet 29 classrooms 27 undergraduate and master’s level programs at UNT at FriscoĬAMPUS LISTINGS HIGHER EDUCATION FOCUS 2022Ĭonstruction continues in August at the new University of North Texas at Frisco campus. Next spring the University of North Texas will debut the rst building of a 100-acre branch campus serving Frisco and the surrounding areas. It will be the rst time Collin County has a Tier 1 Carnegie research institution, ocials said, the top tier for a research-fo- cused university. Frisco Landing, the rst building of the new branch, will open for the spring semester next year at the southwest corner of Panther Creek Parkway and Preston Road. Will not only showcase a design intended to promote collabo- ration and communication between students, but also provide a hub for growth opportunities through supporting programs and partnerships, ocials said. “It was designed very intentionally to welcome employers in, to have employers be engaged not just CONTINUED ON 28ĭowntown road project signals start of Rail District redevelopment “The purpose of the Frisco campus is to close the gap between higher education and employers,” UNT President Neal Smatresk said. When the city’s downtown master plan was updated. Council members awarded a $5.1 million construction contract to XIT Paving and Construction Aug. The contract designates Elm Street from 1st Street to South County Road in Frisco as the construction site, and it will tran- sition the roadway into a more pedes- trian-friendly area. THREE PROJECTS IN THE WORKS Estimated total cost: $44.1MĬonstruction on the rst of three projects to breathe new life into Frisco’s Rail District is starting in September. The contract signies the result of an ongoing process that started in 2018 City Council approved a construction contract in August to begin redevelop- ing part of the Rail District, a mixed-use downtown development that includes retail stores, restaurants and housing. SUPPORT LOCAL JOURNALISM Become a Patron today! SOURCE: CITY OF FRISCO COMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER We are honored to be the longest-serving hospital in Frisco. The result is an experience that challenges the way you think about Chinese food.For 20 years, we have provided safe, high-quality care compassionately and with absolute integrity to North Texans. "I wanted to show people that Chinese food can be simple, healthy, and satisfying, something you can eat every day," said co-founder Yong Zhao. ![]() Nostalgia for the spring flavors of home led the fellow Yale grad students to launch Junzi Kitchen. Instead of growing food on their own, supermarkets became a predominant food source for families out of convenience, but it was clear that something special was being lost in the process. Junzi co-founders Ming Bai, Wanting Zhang, and Yong Zhao grew up in a transitional time in northeast China when the population was experiencing many modernizations. And now on 21 Broadway in New Haven at Junzi Kitchen which opened this week. It’s become a year-round staple in northern China where you can find it in street carts, restaurants, and on sunday dinner tables. ![]() Its origins as a humble culinary tradition are tied to the Qin dynasty (265 - 240 ad), when chun-bing was prepared with fresh spring ingredients to signal the spring harvest and a return to the land. A chun-bing (spring-pancake), is traditionally eaten to celebrate the arrival of spring in chinese culture.
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