
Real-estate software firm Yardi is grabbing a multi-floor slice of Liberty Mutual’s office campus in Plano, joining a growing wave of tech and services companies steering toward the city’s suburban corporate hubs instead of downtown towers. The move adds fresh momentum to the Legacy West and Granite Park corridor, where big-footprint tenants are chasing campus-style amenities, easy parking, and room to grow.
Yardi Deal First Flagged By CoStar
CoStar reported that Yardi has inked a multi-floor lease at Liberty Mutual’s Plano campus. The outlet framed the deal as one more data point in a broader shift, with tech and corporate tenants increasingly planting their flags in Dallas-area suburbs instead of in the urban core.
Liberty Mutual Campus Opens Its Doors To Tenants
Liberty Mutual’s corporate information page lists its Plano campus at 7900 Windrose Ave. The two-tower complex, set in Legacy West, has been offered to outside tenants as the insurer rethinks how much space it needs. The Dallas Morning News previously reported that hybrid work pushed Liberty Mutual to reimagine its Plano footprint and explore leasing out portions of the campus.
Why Plano Makes Sense For Yardi
Yardi, based in Santa Barbara, develops integrated property and asset management software that the company says is used by thousands of real-estate owners and managers worldwide. A suburban campus setting offers the kind of expansion capacity and campus-style environment that many firms now favor when designing hybrid workplaces and competing for talent.
Plano’s Office Hot Streak And Shifting Market
Local reporting has noted that Plano logged a burst of corporate office leasing activity in 2025, with several sizeable tenants taking space in Granite Park and in the Liberty Mutual complex. That surge has come as West Plano’s vacancy and demand trends have diverged from downtown Dallas, according to data reviewed by The Real Deal, and brokers say landlords are actively courting tech and services companies for their campus buildings.
Yardi’s new lease is another sign that the northern Dallas suburbs remain a serious contender for companies needing larger, contiguous blocks of space. Market watchers will be tracking whether more software and services firms follow Yardi into Legacy West and Granite Park or if downtown Dallas can pull some of those big occupiers back over the coming year.









