
A half-million-square-foot industrial giant is on deck for south Fort Worth, where Constellation Real Estate Partners is lining up a single-building project on 44 acres at 5933 South Freeway. The speculative development, dubbed Constellation Summit 35, would sit at the southeast corner of the I-35 / I-20 interchange and is pitched as a quick-on, quick-off option for highway-hungry logistics tenants.
The plan calls for a 492,624-square-foot warehouse that would rise to roughly 40 feet and include 296 car stalls plus 194 trailer spaces. Constellation is moving ahead without a pre-committed tenant and has not disclosed the full project cost. Company representatives say there is no tax-incentive agreement with the city and that outreach has begun with nearby Highland Hill residents. Construction is expected to start in 2026 and wrap in 2027, according to the Fort Worth Star‑Telegram.
City Notices And Community Meetings
The City of Fort Worth’s public notice lists municipal-setting-designation requests for parcels at 5921 and 5933 S. Freeway and outlines meetings at Highland Hills Community Center and City Hall, according to the City of Fort Worth. Those filings are part of the formal review process that typically comes before permits, environmental review and traffic studies.
Why This Corner Of I‑35 Is In Play
The Dallas-Fort Worth region remains one of the country’s busiest industrial markets, with tight availability and steady logistics demand that keeps institutional developers circling highway interchanges. Research from CBRE points to strong demand and constrained supply across key U.S. industrial hubs, a list that includes DFW. Constellation’s recent deals show the firm has been active on multiple Texas industrial projects, which helps explain why a large, highway-adjacent speculative building pencils out for the company, per Constellation Real Estate Partners.
What’s Next For Neighbors
With construction not slated to begin until 2026, neighbors and city officials still have a runway to weigh in while site plans and permits move through the municipal process. The Fort Worth Star‑Telegram reports that Constellation has already started outreach to Highland Hill residents, and the city’s public notice signals that additional meetings and formal approvals are likely before trucks begin rolling through the new site, according to the City of Fort Worth.









