I think the far left unit in the center phase is occupied. It's pretty decked out and personalized inside on a drive-by and also a dinner at Cava.
They just filed building permits for the 3rd and final phase, which would be on the south end of the property.
This is probably one of the longest (slowest) projects in OKC.
They have only been starting on new phases after selling existing units.
I found this. Absolutely beautiful. https://www.trulia.com/home/6115-nw-...118-2079847209
The good news is that this has been built as planned and is selling. This is a premium project and has buyers. The project wasn't downgraded and cheapened to sell quicker and has methodically moved from concept to execution to sales. Bravo to good quality premium infill. Kudos to Rick Brown (RBA)
No debate about the quality either.
It seems well made, but the style…it feels totally out of place so lack of good taste.
We are in Oklahoma City, not Versailles.
It likes our bored but wealthy mother in laws finally find a way to waste more money than changing of kitsch furniture every year and went for the whole estate instead.
This development is opposite of poor taste. Gaw
I would love to see one of those units staged/virtualized with some normal home decor and not the gaudy stuff in the photos. Not my taste of decor, but I think the floor plan is interesting. Not sure about having the kids on the top floor, that might drive me mad being between floors. I'll never afford one, in any case.
The finished product looks nice. I also thought the initial renderings looked a bit cartoonish, but the quality is apparent. It may not be everyone's taste, but it is really well done. I like it significantly more than I expected I would.
Based on the handful of sales that have been recorded, the units are going from $1.7 million and up.
LOL. Renderings are drawings and cartoons.
The materials used on the project are first class. The furnishings and accessorizing will be according to each owner's style and taste, so everyone shouldn't get worked up based on some fictitious rendering of what it MIGHT look like decorated. We worry about the darndest things that aren't even real or complete.
Cartoonish like a Disney World hotel. Of course the renderings are drawing.
Gaudy stuff..? Since when is Le Corbusier gaudy?
I wish Classen Curve had this style of architecture. It would have given it a truly upscale/high end retail feel. I’m not anti modernism but the current design is stale and looks cheap. IMO.
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