The most important beings in my home search don’t pay the mortgage.

They don’t contribute to the down payment.

They don’t review HOA documents.

They don’t care about interest rates.

And they have absolutely no opinion whatsoever on granite countertops.

Their names are Otto and Giorgio.

They’re two Rhodesian Ridgebacks who have somehow managed to become the unofficial directors of my daily schedule.

And while they may not understand real estate, they’ve taught me something important about choosing where to live.

The best neighborhoods aren’t always the ones with the biggest homes.

They’re the ones that make everyday life better.

Before I became a dog dad, I thought I evaluated neighborhoods based on architecture, restaurants, walkability, and convenience.

Then Otto and Giorgio arrived.

They forced me to think beyond the house itself.

Because at some point you realize you’re not just buying square footage.

You’re buying the route you walk every morning.

The park you’ll visit after work.

The coffee shop you’ll stop at on Saturday.

The people you’ll meet.

The life you’ll actually live once the moving truck leaves.

 

One of the reasons I love Oak Lawn, Uptown, and Turtle Creek is that they work exceptionally well for people who live pet-centered lives.

A great neighborhood for dog owners isn’t simply a place with a dog park.

It’s a place where daily life feels easy.

It’s a place where a morning walk doesn’t feel like a chore.

It’s a place where you can leave your front door and immediately find beautiful streets, shaded sidewalks, trails, green spaces, and other people doing exactly what you’re doing.

Walking their dogs.

Living their lives.

Connecting with their community.

Some mornings, Otto and Giorgio and I walk beneath the massive tree canopy that covers portions of Turtle Creek and Oak Lawn.

The boys are happy.

I’m getting exercise.

And for a few minutes, everybody’s blood pressure improves.

Including mine.

As a bonus, it’s difficult to take yourself too seriously when one of your dogs suddenly decides a squirrel is public enemy number one.

The other thing that makes these neighborhoods special is that they’re built around daily convenience.

Veterinarians.

Boarding facilities.

Groomers.

Dog-friendly patios.

Coffee shops.

Parks.

Trails.

They’re all woven into the fabric of the neighborhood.

You don’t have to plan your life around your dog.

Your neighborhood already supports both of you.

 

One of my favorite examples is watching how often dogs become social connectors.

People who might never speak to each other suddenly find themselves having a ten-minute conversation because their dogs introduced them.

A neighborhood starts feeling smaller.

Friendlier.

More connected.

Community happens.

And sometimes it happens because a Labrador refuses to mind its own business.

Or because a Ridgeback decides everyone within a fifty-foot radius should come say hello.

The best dog-friendly neighborhoods aren’t necessarily the neighborhoods with the biggest backyards.

They’re the neighborhoods that make daily life enjoyable.

The places where a walk feels peaceful.

The places where a patio welcomes both you and your dog.

The places where green space, shade, trails, and community are part of everyday life.

Before Otto and Giorgio, I thought I was choosing neighborhoods based on location.

Now I realize I was choosing neighborhoods based on quality of life.

The dogs just happened to point it out first.

And while they don’t pay the mortgage, they absolutely influence where I want to live.