Mix-Frisco

StreetLights Residential Plans $3B The Mix Development in Frisco, Texas

by Katie Sloan

FRISCO, TEXAS — Dallas-based developer StreetLights Residential and its partners have unveiled plans for The Mix, a $3 billion mixed-use development that will be located at the intersection of Dallas Parkway and Lebanon Road in Frisco.

The 112-acre project is set to include 2 million square feet of office space; 375,000 square feet of retail space, including a grocery store; a 400-key business hotel and 200-key boutique hotel; and 3 million square feet of residential development. 

The development will also include a central park designed by OJB Landscape Architecture, the landscape firm behind Klyde Warren Park in Dallas. The park will include an event lawn and performance pavilion, playground, promenades and a pond for a total of 20 acres of communal green space. 

The development team includes master architects Torti Gallas + Partners and CallisonRTKL, with Kimley-Horn providing planning and design engineering services. The Retail Connection will handle leasing for the retail component, and JLL has been appointed to lease the office and medical space. The groundbreaking of Phase I took place in December, and full completion of the project is slated for 2026.  

The Mix joins a number of large-scale mixed-use developments underway in the Dallas/Fort Worth metroplex, including Fields West, a $2 billion development anchored by a Ritz Carlton hotel in Frisco; The Farm at Allen, a 135-acre project in the Dallas suburb of Allen; The Link, a $1 billion development in Frisco that will act as headquarters for PGA of America; the $7 billion mixed-use expansion of HALL Office Park, an existing 15-building office development in Frisco; and District 121, a $250 million mixed-use development located next to the Craig Ranch master-planned community in McKinney. 

StreetLights Residential specializes in the development of multifamily communities and mixed-use projects. The company has a portfolio of 12,478 multifamily units that are completed, in progress or in design in 19 cities across six states. 

Katie Sloan 

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