Griggs Park, Dallas

Griggs Park is a leafy Uptown hideaway where dog walkers, picnic blankets, and downtown skyline views soften one of the busiest parts of the city into something unexpectedly peaceful.

Set along Hugo Street near Hall Street and just steps from Uptown's apartment towers and the State Thomas historic district, this sloping neighborhood park carries the unmistakable feeling of golden retrievers dragging owners across the grass, couples sharing takeout beneath enormous oak trees, and residents escaping tiny apartments for an hour of sunlight and open air before heading back into the city around them. The park feels deeply lived-in. Shoes come off quickly here. People stretch out on blankets beneath the shade while runners cut diagonally across the pathways and small groups gather around picnic tables with iced coffee, wine, tacos, or grocery bags from nearby stops. Downtown towers rise just beyond the trees, but the sound inside the park stays surprisingly soft, dogs barking, conversations drifting, leaves moving overhead, somebody throwing a tennis ball across the lawn. Griggs Park gives Uptown something it desperately needs: room to slow down.

Griggs Park sits inside one of the oldest residential sections of central Dallas, where historic State Thomas homes survived the city's explosive high-rise expansion surrounding them.

That contrast shapes the entire feeling of the park. Glass apartment towers loom around the edges while older brick homes, sidewalks, and tree-lined streets still anchor the neighborhood directly beside it. The park itself slopes naturally across several levels, creating pockets where people spread out without feeling stacked on top of each other despite being in the middle of Uptown. Dogs dominate much of the social rhythm here. Early mornings fill with residents carrying coffee cups and leashes while late afternoons bring groups spilling out from nearby apartments onto the grass with drinks, snacks, and portable speakers. The trees matter too. Large mature canopies keep huge sections shaded even during brutal Dallas heat, which explains why the park stays active long after smaller downtown greenspaces empty out. Griggs Park feels like a neighborhood backyard accidentally surrounded by skyscrapers.

Griggs Park belongs inside slower Uptown afternoons where the goal is sitting still long enough to let the city breathe around you.

Grab coffee, wine, sandwiches, or takeout nearby and walk into the park. Find a shaded section of grass beneath the trees and stay there longer than originally planned. The park hits hardest in late afternoon when sunlight cuts through the canopy and apartment residents slowly begin filling the lawns after work. Bring a book, bring a dog, bring somebody you like talking to. Nobody comes here for spectacle. People come because the park makes Uptown feel human again for a little while. Griggs Park fits perfectly between Katy Trail walks, casual dinners, apartment hangs, or lazy weekend afternoons where the entire point is avoiding unnecessary plans. By the time the skyline starts glowing through the trees and the park settles into evening light, the place leaves behind exactly what great neighborhood parks are supposed to leave behind: calm, softness, and the strange relief of not needing to be anywhere else for a while.

MAKE IT REAL

Start your planning journey with Foresyte Travel.

Experience immersive stories crafted for luxury travelers.

SEARCH

GET THE APP

Read the Latest:

Daytime aerial view of the Las Vegas Strip with Bellagio Fountains and major resorts.

πŸ“ Itinerary Inspiration

Perfect weekend in Las Vegas

Read now
Illuminated water fountains in front of the Bellagio Hotel in Las Vegas

πŸ’« Vibe Check

Fun facts about Las Vegas

Read now
<< Back to news page
Right Menu Icon