Frisco | August 2022

CITY & COUNTY

News from Frisco

City Council approves agreement for 45-acre oce campus project FRISCO City Council passed a master develop- ment agreement July 5 for an oce park called SouthStone Yards that will oer 1.1 million square feet of space across four buildings. The agreement among the city of Frisco, the Frisco Economic Development Corp., the Frisco Community Development Corp. and Crow Hold- ings will allow Crow Holdings Oce to construct four Class A oce buildings and accompanying parking structures at the northeast corner of SH 121 and Spring Creek Parkway. “This project will bring much-needed oce space to help our very full pipeline of prospects,” said Gloria Salinas, vice president of the Frisco Economic Development Corp., during the meeting. SouthStone Yards will be completed in four phases with four oce buildings and parking structures. These will span the 45-acre site. The rst building is slated to open in December 2024, and the project will conclude with the opening of Building 4 in December 2030.

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MAIN ST.

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VIRGINIA PKWY.

STONEBROOK PKWY.

LEBANON RD.

PANTHER CREEK PKWY.

DALLAS PKWY.

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Speed limits reduced on two Frisco roadways FRISCO The city of Frisco unanimously voted to lower speed limits from 50 mph to 45 mph on sections of Coit Road and Dallas Parkway during a July 5 City Council meeting. The speed change on Dallas from Main Street to SH 121 and on Coit from US 380 to Panther Creek Parkway go into eect immediately and will be reected with new signage in the near future. New roadway construction and updated speed studies led city sta to recommend the new speed limits presented to the council, according to meeting documents.

Developers plan to construct the rst building as a speculative mass timber building, the area’s rst, ocials said. (Rendering courtesy Crow Holdings Development)

TOWN AND COUNTRY BLVD.

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