Houston

Stream Breaks Ground On Northfield Logistics Center In Houston

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Published on May 17, 2026
Stream Breaks Ground On Northfield Logistics Center In HoustonSource: Google Street View

Northwest Houston’s industrial belt is getting a hefty new addition. Stream Realty Partners has broken ground on Northfield Logistics Center, a Class A logistics building that will bring roughly 300,000 square feet of distribution space to a tightly constrained infill pocket. The project sits on a rare large-format parcel at 4330 Northfield Lane and targets last-mile and regional distribution users. Developers expect the building to come online in early 2027.

Justin Robinson, Stream’s executive managing director and partner, called the development “a compelling opportunity to deliver high-quality industrial product” in a press release via Stream Realty Partners. According to the release, the project will deliver more than 300,000 square feet of modern distribution space on an infill parcel inside northwest Houston’s industrial belt.

The site is positioned for quick truck turns, with direct access to U.S. 290 via W. 43rd Street and a secondary way in and out at Langtry Street, as reported by REJournals. City records filed with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation list the project as a 304,646-square-foot shell building at that address, according to the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation.

Stream is developing Northfield Logistics Center through its Investment Management platform, with the firm’s Industrial Development Services team leading project execution, per Stream Realty Partners. The company lists Justin Robinson, Craig McKenna, Tyler Wellborn, Kristina Gibson and Camryn Wisenbaker on the development team, and Adam Jackson, Mustafa Ali, Scott Thetford and Meagan Oefelein on the investment side. Executive Vice President Garret Geaccone will handle leasing for the property.

Design, Construction and Financing

Rosenberger Construction will serve as general contractor, Seeberger Architecture is the project architect and Kimley-Horn is the civil engineer, with financing provided by Associated Bank, according to Realty News Report. These firms have been particularly active across northwest Houston as developers chase modern logistics product in infill locations.

What This Means for Houston's Industrial Market

Northwest Houston remains one of the region’s most active industrial corridors, where limited developable land keeps new large-format supply tight, industry reports show. Recent data from Colliers point to sustained demand in the submarket, and REJournals notes the property is expected to deliver in the first quarter of 2027. Developers say the new building will offer occupiers a rare infill option for distribution and e-commerce operations in a part of town where sites like this do not come around often.

Houston-Real Estate & Development