Presidio Junction, one of the largest and busiest retail centers in far north Fort Worth, has been acquired by Dallas-based Younger Partners Investments, which also owns Artisan Circle near the Cultural District.

The sprawling development along North Tarrant Parkway and Interstate 35W includes big-box retailers Target, Cosco and At Home, though those specific stores were not included in the sale. In all, the deal includes three adjacent shopping centers — Presidio Towne Crossing, Tehama Towne Crossing and Vista Ridge — that total 375,000 square feet of retail and restaurants, including HomeGoods, Ross Aldi, Whataburger and Chick-fil-A.

Retailers at Presidio Junction in far north Fort Worth include HomeGoods, Ross, Aldi, Petco, Old Navy, Sephora, Shoe Carnival, Five Below, Daiso and Rally House. The shopping center along North Tarrant Parkway and Interstate 35W were acquired by Dallas-based Young Partners Investments in March 2026. Retailers at Presidio Junction in far north Fort Worth include HomeGoods, Ross, Aldi, Petco, Old Navy, Sephora, Shoe Carnival, Five Below, Daiso and Rally House. The shopping center along North Tarrant Parkway and Interstate 35W were acquired by Dallas-based Young Partners Investments in March 2026. Courtesy of Younger Partners Investments

Moody Younger, a co-managing partner of Younger Partners Investments, said shoppers won’t see major changes at Presidio; the complex has remained at or near 100% occupancy with tenants who “for the most part are doing really well.” The new owners do plan to make it easier to navigate through the maze-like parking lots with better signage.

The seller, Weber & Company, developed Presidio Junction starting in 2015 when far north Fort Worth was still starved for retail, despite Alliance Town Center across the highway and booming residential growth. A decade later, demand hasn’t waned. Shopping centers are sprouting up and down the U.S. 287 corridor, from Harmon Road to the new Kroger Marketplace on Bonds Ranch Road (and possibly a future H-E-B).

Younger said Presidio Junction presented a solid opportunity to invest in perhaps the area’s largest retail center other than Alliance Town Center, at a prime location that’s still growing. The $1.1 billion, 300-acre North City development just across North Tarrant Parkway will draw even more diners and shoppers.

“We feel really good about it,” Younger said. “There’s limited potential for competition, and there’s excellent growth, plus the (highway) access is phenominal.”

The firm says median home sale prices in the area range from $420,000 to $460,000.

Younger Partners Investments purchased Artisan Circle, formerly Crockett Row, in 2022 and as been working on improvements to lighting, parking and occupancy. Tandy Leather opened a flagship store in January, followed by Henry McCarty Irish Pub and soon-to-open Partenope Ristorante, known for Neapolitan pizza.

The other retail centers in the firm’s portfolio are 380 Towne Crossing in McKinney, Shops at Prosper Trail, Heath Town Center, Longview Towne Crossing and Midlothian Towne Crossing.

“These types of grocery-anchored and shadow-anchored open-air centers present Texas-sized opportunities,” said Micah Ashford, managing director of Younger Partners Investments, in a statement. “We plan to continue expanding our retail portfolio with similar acquisitions as investor demand for assets such as Presidio Junction remains strong.”

This story was originally published March 17, 2026 at 5:32 PM.


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Matt Leclercq

Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Matt Leclercq is senior managing editor at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He previously was an editor at USA Today in Washington, national news editor at Gatehouse Media in Austin, and executive editor of The Fayetteville (NC) Observer. He’s a New Orleans native.