
Arlington's retail map is about to get a late June shakeup. The city has flagged a cluster of new storefronts, a planned collision facility and a revamped neighborhood park as "coming soon," all of them poised to tweak where locals shop and where visitors plug in or park around the Collins and Arbrook corridors.
The City of Arlington rolled out a short Facebook reel on Thursday that strings together several openings and projects across town, naming a lululemon at Arlington Highlands, a Dollar Tree on Turner Warnell, a Back Nine Golf simulator on North Collins, a Tesla collision center on Coping Lane, two Tesla charging locations and the Al Rollins Park redevelopment. The clip includes addresses for each site but does not pin down specific opening dates, so we checked company and public records for backup.
Retail And Recreation Move Into Arlington Highlands
Lululemon's store finder lists an Arlington Highlands outpost at 4000 Arlington Highlands Boulevard, according to lululemon. The shopping center's tenant directory also shows the brand among its new arrivals, reinforcing that the company is planting a flag there. A full lululemon would be a notable addition to the village lineup and could redraw some local shopping patterns.
Back Nine Golf's site shows an Arlington North location at 4060 N Collins St #160, signaling the chain is extending its indoor simulator concept in DFW. The city reel notes that a Dollar Tree is slated for 1210 W Turner Warnell Rd, and commercial listings tie that parcel to west Arlington and suggest the site could handle a discount retailer. Together, those moves point to more convenience retail and experiential concepts filling smaller bays along Collins and Turner Warnell.
Tesla Collision Center And Charging Sites In The Works
The reel tags a Tesla collision center at 6000 Coping Ln and highlights charging locations at 2315 N Collins St and 951 W Arbrook Blvd, listing exact addresses as part of the city's overview. A commercial listing for 6000 Coping Lane shows the parcel as available for development, and Tesla's careers pages list collision center and Supercharger construction roles in the Arlington area, both signals that the company may be staffing up local operations.
The 951 W Arbrook address sits in a busy retail strip that includes a Steak 'n Shake, a typical kind of host for destination chargers in a shopping parking lot. The North Collins corridor is packed with small centers and service businesses, which makes 2315 N Collins a plausible spot for added public chargers if the plans move forward.
Why It Matters
Taken together, these openings point to Arlington's continued commercial growth and a push to plug neighborhood retail gaps while layering on new amenities for residents and visitors. Regional construction pipeline data and the city's growth profile show steady investment along Collins and in the Highlands, and the Coping Lane parcel appears on planning lists for new development.
The reel does not provide firm opening dates for most of the projects, so residents and shoppers will need to keep an eye on company pages and future city posts for timing and permitting updates.









