Irving Deep Dive
Everything you need to know before buying in Irving — backed by planning docs, school data, and on-the-ground research.
The Bottom Line
Irving is executing a strategy of "polycentric urbanism"—and the data infrastructure economy just added a new node. PowerHouse Data Centers closed on 50 acres in Las Colinas for a nearly 1 million SF, 200-megawatt data center campus. Combined with Wells Fargo's $570M campus (4,500 employees), the Heritage District turnaround ($45M flood control, Land Bank program), and Valley Ranch's Coppell ISD anchor, Irving is building distinct economic ecosystems that don't depend on any single sector.
For the family or investor, Irving presents a bifurcated market — and the price data confirms it. Las Colinas (75039) is posting +9.4% YoY appreciation — one of only three ZIPs in our entire DFW dataset that's up. Meanwhile, 75038 is down -16.4% and 75062 is down -10.5%. "North Irving" (Las Colinas, Valley Ranch) is in a phase of value protection driven by scarcity, corporate anchoring, and data center tax revenue. "South Irving" (Heritage District, Nursery Road) is in a phase of value creation driven by heavy public sector intervention. The $912.2M capital budget signals a municipality spending aggressively to fix the old while facilitating the new.
Irving Deep Dive
Full analysis