
For years, the corner where Fiesta Rancho and Texas Station once stood was mostly a sunbaked ocean of asphalt. Now bright stucco walls and new retail shells are muscling into that empty space as Hylo Park turns from glossy renderings into an actual neighborhood. Along Lake Mead Boulevard and Rancho Drive, the outlines of a grocery store, restaurants and other storefronts are taking shape, while developers pivot their attention to the sports village planned for the northern half of the site.
Project basics and site
Hylo Park is a 73-acre mixed-use redevelopment led by Calabasas-based Agora Realty that stitches together retail, housing and a sports-centric campus under one master plan. According to Agora Realty, the layout pairs roughly 37 acres of housing with an 11-acre commercial node and family-focused athletic amenities designed to serve nearby residents.
City milestone and early work
The City of North Las Vegas held the first official groundbreaking in January 2025 and described the initial phase as a commercial lifestyle center meant to bring everyday services closer to existing neighborhoods, according to the City of North Las Vegas. That same municipal release notes that phase two is expected to add multipurpose sports venues and programming intended to attract tournaments and weekend visitors.
Construction progress
On the ground, exterior shells now line much of the southern retail pads as construction crews work through utility installation and facade details. As reported by 8 News Now, Agora CEO Cary Lefton says the project is in Phase Two, with work increasingly focused on sports and recreation elements next to the existing ice rink.
Housing and tenants
On the residential side, Agora has sold roughly 36 acres to Lennar, which plans about 393 single-family homes adjacent to the retail center, according to NVBEX. Planning filings and local coverage also point to an 11.4-acre commercial pad with room for a grocery anchor and quick-serve restaurants, and the Las Vegas Review-Journal reported that an In-N-Out is among the proposed tenants.
Sports village and programming
Developer presentations pitch an "Olympic village" vibe for the northern portion of the site, with a large indoor multisport facility, outdoor turf fields and a sports-education center aimed at youth tournaments and training. Trade coverage and planning documents describe a roughly 158,000-square-foot multisport venue, with additional room reserved for a hotel and related support services, according to fDi Intelligence.
Timeline and scale
Agora and industry outlets have framed Hylo Park as roughly a $380 million investment on the west side of North Las Vegas, a figure reported by The Real Deal. Broader reporting puts full buildout around 2027, and 8 News Now notes that the north side of the project is currently scheduled to break ground in May 2026.
Why it matters locally
For nearby residents and small businesses, Hylo Park promises something more than a fresh view from the sidewalk. The project brings the prospect of a new grocery store, additional restaurants and an influx of weekend visitors tied to youth tournaments, which could translate into hundreds of jobs and more consistent foot traffic. Coverage of the city's broader redevelopment push last year noted that projects like Hylo Park sit at the center of Mayor Pamela Goynes-Brown's strategy to add services and jobs in rapidly growing neighborhoods.









