AllianceTexas (Fort Worth)
AllianceTexas is a master-planned business and logistics park located in northwest Fort Worth, Texas, spanning approximately 27,000 acres near the intersection of Interstate 35W and State Highway 114 in the Alliance corridor. Developed by Hillwood, a private real estate development company founded by Ross Perot Jr., the project ranks among the largest mixed-use real estate developments in the United States by acreage and employment base.[1] Since its groundbreaking in 1989, AllianceTexas has grown into a major employment hub and logistics center within the Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area, attracting corporations, distribution centers, manufacturing plants, and corporate offices. The park is positioned along a direct freight corridor between Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (DFW) and the Port of Houston, which has shaped its identity as a regional gateway for domestic and international commerce. By the mid-2020s, more than 1,000 companies operated within the development, employing upwards of 150,000 people.[2]
History
Founding and Early Development (1989–2000)
AllianceTexas traces its origins to the late 1980s, when Hillwood acquired a large tract of undeveloped prairie land in northwest Fort Worth. The site's proximity to proposed highway corridors and a planned cargo airport made it attractive for large-scale industrial development. Fort Worth Alliance Airport, a dedicated industrial airfield designed specifically to serve the development, opened in 1989 as one of the first purely industrial airports in the United States, giving the project its name and establishing its central transportation premise from the outset.[3]
Initial infrastructure work included road construction, utility installation, and the development of speculative industrial buildings intended to attract early tenants. The first major occupants were logistics and distribution companies drawn by the airport, the adjacent BNSF Railway intermodal facility, and access to I-35W. Procter & Gamble was among the earliest significant corporate tenants to establish a distribution presence, a relationship that has continued and expanded over the decades. Through the 1990s, Hillwood steadily extended internal road networks, negotiated municipal service agreements with the City of Fort Worth, and began planning for the residential and retail components that would eventually surround the industrial core.
Growth and Diversification (2000–2015)
The 2000s brought substantial diversification beyond warehousing and freight. Toyota established vehicle-processing operations within the park, and Siemens built manufacturing facilities there, signaling to other industrial companies that AllianceTexas could support more complex and capital-intensive operations than simple storage and distribution. Amazon opened a regional fulfillment center at the site during the early years of its logistics buildout in North Texas, drawn by the same highway and rail access that had attracted earlier tenants.
The e-commerce expansion of the 2010s accelerated leasing activity across the park's industrial buildings. As online retailers raced to shorten delivery times to Texas consumers, AllianceTexas became one of the preferred locations for regional distribution infrastructure. Hillwood responded by developing additional speculative warehouse space and extending utility and roadway capacity to newly platted sections of the park. By the mid-2010s, AllianceTexas had become one of the primary drivers of industrial real estate absorption in the Fort Worth metropolitan area, regularly accounting for a significant share of annual leasing activity tracked by regional commercial real estate brokers.[4]
Recent Developments (2020–Present)
The park's growth has continued into the 2020s with several high-profile announcements. Mercedes-Benz Group established its North American financial services headquarters within AllianceTexas and has continued to add jobs there as its financial services operations in North Texas expand. A March 2026 report confirmed the company was actively hiring at the location, reflecting broader growth in the region's professional services sector.[5]
Bell, the Fort Worth-based aerospace manufacturer formerly known as Bell Helicopter, announced plans to begin construction on a large new factory within the Alliance corridor, adding to its existing manufacturing footprint in the region. The project represents one of the more significant industrial construction commitments in the area in recent years.[6]
The development is also moving into autonomous freight infrastructure. A dedicated bridge for autonomous trucks is under construction within the Alliance logistics corridor, part of a broader effort to integrate driverless freight technology into the park's operations. The project, reported by the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, positions AllianceTexas as an early adopter of autonomous logistics infrastructure at commercial scale.[7] Data centers have also begun appearing within and adjacent to the development, drawing interest and some concern from local residents about land use, power demands, and long-term character of the area.
Geography
AllianceTexas occupies approximately 27,000 acres in northwest Fort Worth, centered on the Alliance corridor near the intersection of Interstate 35W and State Highway 114. The park's boundaries extend across multiple jurisdictions, including incorporated portions of Fort Worth and adjacent unincorporated areas of Tarrant and Denton counties. It sits roughly equidistant between downtown Fort Worth and DFW International Airport, which lies approximately 15 miles to the southeast via State Highway 114. The positioning on a direct overland freight corridor to the Port of Houston has made it a natural fit for companies involved in international trade.
The terrain is characteristic of north-central Texas: relatively flat to gently rolling prairie land with modest elevation changes ranging from roughly 600 to 700 feet above sea level. Several creek systems and tributaries feeding the Trinity River drainage basin run through the property. Hillwood incorporated these waterways into the park's stormwater management design, using green corridors and retention areas to manage runoff from the large impervious surfaces associated with industrial development. The climate matches the broader Dallas-Fort Worth pattern — hot summers, mild winters, and annual rainfall averaging around 35 inches — with the occasional severe thunderstorm and, rarely, tornado risk factored into building and safety standards throughout the park.
Major highway access points include I-35W for north-south movement connecting to Dallas, Oklahoma City, and ultimately Laredo and the Mexican border to the south; State Highway 114 running east toward DFW Airport and west toward Decatur; and connections to the Dallas North Tollway network. Internal roads are engineered to handle continuous heavy truck traffic, with turning radii, lane widths, and pavement specifications suited to Class 8 freight vehicles.
Economy
AllianceTexas functions as a diversified economic center supporting multiple industries within the regional and national economy. Its original focus on logistics and distribution remains the foundation of the park, with large-scale warehousing and fulfillment operations spread across millions of square feet of industrial space. The economic base has expanded well beyond that foundation to include automotive-related manufacturing, consumer products distribution, pharmaceutical logistics, food processing, aerospace manufacturing, corporate office operations, and financial services.
Employment within the park has grown substantially since its early years. Current estimates place the workforce at more than 150,000 individuals across tenant companies and supporting operations, with job types ranging from entry-level warehouse and assembly positions to engineering, finance, and executive roles. The Mercedes-Benz Group financial services headquarters is an example of the white-collar employment that has become a more prominent part of the park's profile alongside its industrial base.[8]
Tax revenues generated by AllianceTexas businesses contribute meaningfully to Fort Worth municipal budgets and Tarrant County resources. The City of Fort Worth has used Tax Increment Financing districts and Chapter 380 economic development agreements to support infrastructure investments within the Alliance area, a common tool in Texas for encouraging large-scale private development by capturing a portion of the incremental property tax growth generated by that development and reinvesting it in local infrastructure.[9] The concentration of employers has also driven retail, restaurant, and service sector growth in surrounding communities, including Haslet, Northlake, and Roanoke.
Notable Tenants
AllianceTexas is home to more than 1,000 companies spanning a wide range of industries. Among the most prominent is Amazon, which operates a major regional fulfillment and distribution center within the park, part of the company's extensive North Texas logistics network. Procter & Gamble has maintained distribution operations at the site since the park's early years. Toyota uses the location for vehicle processing and distribution supporting its Texas dealer network. Siemens operates manufacturing facilities there, and Mercedes-Benz Group runs its North American financial services headquarters from an office campus within the development.[10]
Bell is among the most locally significant tenants given its long history in Fort Worth. The company has announced a major new factory project within the Alliance corridor, expanding its manufacturing base in the area where it has long produced military and commercial aircraft.[11] The tenant mix also includes numerous third-party logistics providers, pharmaceutical distributors, food and beverage manufacturers, and technology companies — making AllianceTexas a cross-section of modern American industrial and commercial activity rather than a single-industry campus.
Alliance Town Center
Integral to the broader AllianceTexas development is Alliance Town Center, a retail and mixed-use district that serves the park's large working population as well as residents of surrounding master-planned communities. The town center includes major retailers, restaurants, hotels, and service businesses concentrated in a commercial district designed to reduce the need for workers and residents to travel significant distances for everyday goods and services. It functions as the civic and commercial hub for the Alliance area, sitting adjacent to the industrial and office zones that make up the park's economic core.
Hillwood has developed several master-planned residential neighborhoods surrounding AllianceTexas, designed to provide housing within reasonable proximity to the park's employment base. These communities include a mix of single-family homes and apartment developments at various price points, along with neighborhood parks, trails, and community amenities. The residential components are separate from the industrial and commercial zones but integrated into the overall master plan that Hillwood has executed across the broader Alliance corridor.
Transportation
Transportation infrastructure is the defining feature of AllianceTexas, and the park's design reflects that from the ground up. Interstate 35W provides the primary north-south spine, connecting the park to Dallas to the south, Oklahoma City to the north, and — via its full length — to the Mexican border at Laredo, a critical artery for cross-border trade. State Highway 114 runs east toward DFW International Airport, approximately 15 miles away, and west toward Decatur, giving the park direct access to air cargo and passenger connections. The Dallas North Tollway network provides additional reach into the broader Dallas metropolitan area.
Fort Worth Alliance Airport sits within the development itself. Opened in 1989 as the country's first purely industrial airport, it handles cargo operations, charter flights, and general aviation rather than commercial passenger service, keeping the airfield focused on the freight and corporate needs of park tenants. The airport's presence is a foundational element of AllianceTexas's logistics value proposition and distinguishes it from most other large industrial parks in the region.
Rail access is provided by the BNSF Railway Alliance Intermodal Facility, one of the larger inland intermodal terminals in North Texas. The facility allows containers to transfer directly between truck and rail, enabling efficient long-haul freight movement without requiring cargo to move exclusively by highway. Union Pacific Railroad also serves portions of the corridor. Together, these rail connections allow tenants with high-volume shipping needs to use rail for trunk-line movements while relying on truck for final-mile distribution — a combination that suits the logistics operations dominating the park's industrial base.[12]
Public transportation options are more limited. Fort Worth Transportation Authority (The T) provides some bus service connecting surrounding residential areas to the park, but the scale and spread of AllianceTexas means most employees arrive by personal vehicle. The autonomous trucking infrastructure currently under development — including a dedicated bridge for driverless freight vehicles being built within the corridor — signals a potential shift in how goods move through the park internally, even if workforce commuting patterns remain car-dependent for the foreseeable future.[13] Regional transportation planning by the North Central Texas Council of Governments continues to assess highway and transit improvements to serve the Alliance area as development expands into currently undeveloped portions of the original land holding.