The numbers are in: up to $1.4 billion over 20 years to fully modernize City Hall. Now, the Dallas City Council must make the next move, but where they ultimately land remains uncertain. Among those in the debate:
Open to relocating
Council member Chad West
West, who chairs the Finance Committee, has been one of the most active voices in pushing the council to study relocation options.He described efforts to explore alternatives as a fact-finding mission, not a predetermined decision to move.West, who represents North Oak Cliff, said the city must carefully evaluate the costs and logistics of establishing a new City Hall site.
Council member Chad West.
Chitose Suzuki / Staff Photographer
“If colleagues are honest about wanting to stay in City Hall, then I would hope they would be willing and ready to dive into the data and figure out the plan to finance all the repairs we need for the future,” West said Saturday.
Other council members who have been receptive to exploring relocation options: Mayor Pro Tem Jess Moreno, Deputy Mayor Pro Tem Gay Donnell Willis and council member Maxie Johnson.
Arguing to stay
Council member Paul Ridley
Ridley, who represents Uptown, Old East Dallas and parts of downtown, has been one of the most vocal skeptics about relocating City Hall so far. He voted against exploring alternatives and said the process was too rushed.He expressed concern the vote could lead toward demolition of the building and emphasized the need for a thorough assessment before considering relocation.Ridley also questioned the development value of the City Hall site and said the building’s symbolic importance and potential future utility should be weighed before moving.
City Council member Paul Ridley.
Christine Vo / Staff Photographer
“City Hall is not just a building, it is an architectural icon — the people’s house,” he said previously. “We must slow this process down, retain a credible, independent assessment, appoint an objective task force to make recommendations and have public decisions on how we can fund the necessary repairs for the building.”
Political Points
Other council members who have been skeptical of moving: Cara Mendelsohn and Paula Blackmon, who both voted against the November resolution to explore alternatives for City Hall.
Receptive but cautious
Mayor Eric Johnson
Johnson in August directed the council’s Finance Committee to decide whether City Hall best serves residents, identify the most responsible way to address growing repair needs and weigh all options for its future.Johnson said he supports the City Council having all the data it needs to make an informed decision on how to deal with City Hall’s needs.He has called the building outdated and not user-friendly, and said a final decision should be based on practicality rather than sentiment. 
Mayor Eric Johnson delivers the annual State of the City address on Nov. 13, 2025.
Shafkat Anowar / Staff Photographer
“City Hall, as it stands today, is not a user-friendly building for people and it risks becoming an albatross for our city,” he said in his State of the City address in November.
“Whatever the intentions of a famous architect, it has become a massive symbol of a byzantine bureaucracy that is stuck in the past and falling apart, its shortcomings masked by a brutalist facade.”
Dallas City Hall needs more than $1B for full repairs over 20 years, new report says
The assessment of Dallas’ government headquarters will play a key role in whether City Hall stays put or leaves.
Upcoming report could decide Dallas City Hall’s fate
The report is expected to assess the building’s condition vs. relocation costs to determine the fate of the I.M. Pei-designed structure.