Things To Do
Must-See Attractions

Dallas' Reunion Tower Geo-Deck Observation Ticket
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.

SEA LIFE Aquarium Dallas Grapevine
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.

Upcoming Events
Major events and local happenings in -Dallas
Frisco Roughriders vs. Northwest Arkansas Naturals
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
Neon Night: Trace Adkins and John Michael Montgomery
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
Jesus "Aguaje" Ramos & the Buena Vista Orchestra
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
The Wiz (Touring)
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
Family Business
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
Darius
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
Fly By Midnight -The Fastest Time Of Our Lives: A North American Tour
Get tickets and event information by clicking the button below.
Cars
There are no cars to view at the moment. Please check back later.
Fort Worth
Dallas Landmarks
The Eye
Created by contemporary artist Tony Tasset, the fiberglass eyeball features eerily realistic details—bloodshot veins crawling across its pristine white surface, a strikingly blue iris, and an impossibly deep pupil that seems to follow you as you circle around it. At night, spotlights cast dramatic shadows that make the eyeball even more unsettling.
What makes this landmark particularly fascinating is how it disrupts the buttoned-up corporate landscape of downtown Dallas. Businesspeople hurry past while tourists contort themselves for the perfect selfie with this surreal guardian.
The Eye doesn't try to symbolize anything specific about Dallas—it simply exists as a weird, wonderful artistic exclamation point in a city better known for its sleek skyscrapers and Texas traditionalism.
Spirit of Communication
Originally known as Genius of Electricity, the Spirit of Communication is a striking 24-foot bronze statue created in 1916 by artist Evelyn Beatrice Longman. It once stood atop AT&T’s New York headquarters as a symbol of technological progress and global connectivity. With wings outstretched and lightning bolts in hand, the figure represents the power of communication. Today, it resides at AT&T's Dallas headquarters and remains an iconic tribute to the evolution of telecommunications.