Good Morning, Richardson!

Thank you to this week's Health & Wellness Guide sponsors
Gold Sponsors
Top Story
Renner Road reopens, water system project enters final construction phase

Renner Road reopened last week as Richardson’s northwest water system project moves into the final phase of construction, the city announced.

The details: Construction crews lifted westbound lane closures on Renner Road near Custer Parkway last week. The 825 Pressure Zone Project, aimed at increasing the water system capacity in northwest Richardson, included the installation of a new waterline along Renner Road. Renner Road may still experience temporary rolling lane closures during non-peak traffic hours as the project enters the final construction phase, which will include pavement restoration and landscaping.

The big picture: Along with the water system upgrades, Point North Park was also completely renovated with new playground equipment, artificial turf, play areas, a climbing wall and a pavilion.

 
On The Business Beat
Mike’s Chicken sets opening date to serve fried chicken in Plano, near Richardson border

Mike’s Chicken is set to open Jan. 14 in south Plano near the Richardson border across Renner Road from Methodist Richardson Medical Center.

On the menu: Mike’s Chicken menu features a variety of fried chicken options including tenders, wings, dark meat, white meat and more. Additional menu items include sandwiches, salads, baked beans, french fries, coleslaw and more.

  • 3345 E. President George Bush Highway, Plano

 
Transportation Tuesday
Check out 5 transportation projects around Dallas-Fort Worth

See five transportation projects happening around Dallas Fort Worth. 

Collin County

1. Lebanon Road widening


Project: Lebanon Road will be widened from a four-lane roadway to a six-lane divided roadway from FM 423 to Todd Drive. Improvements include pavement reconstruction, bridge repair, drainage improvements and street light replacement, among others.

Update: Construction was anticipated to begin in December 2025.

Timeline: October 2025-late 2027

Cost: $22.99 million

Funding sources: city of Frisco, external funding

 
Stay In The Know
Dallas-Fort Worth’s retail occupancy climbs to 95.3% in 2025

The Dallas-Fort Worth retail market’s occupancy rate climbed again in 2025, according to Texas-based real estate firm Weitzman’s latest annual forecast.

The full story: Dallas-Fort Worth finished 2025 with a retail occupancy of 95.3%, an increase to the record occupancy first reported in 2023. Executive Managing Director Bob Young called it a “retail three-peat.”

“For the first time in our [survey’s 36-year history], three years in a row, occupancy has been at record levels,” he said. “Right now, we’re celebrating the market’s highest-ever occupancy of 95.3%.”

More information: Occupancy wasn’t the only measurement that increased since last year’s report. Total inventory increased to 202 million square feet and new construction increased to 2.4 million square feet delivered, according to the retail market report. Vacant space fell to 9.5 million square feet from 9.7 million square feet in 2024.

Grocery store anchors such as H-E-B, Kroger and Target accounted for more than 1.9 million square feet of all new space delivered, Young said. That trend is expected to continue in 2026.

 
What's Happening at CI
Community Impact expands across Texas—3 new CI markets launching in early 2026

The growing need: Community Impact will expand its Texas footprint in 2026, launching three new markets: Denton, Bryan-College Station and Allen. The expansion will bring hyperlocal news to 150,000 additional residences across Texas.

The demand for trusted, localized reporting is at an all-time high. Across Texas, many communities face shrinking coverage, leaving residents without reliable information.

“Right now, the only way the City of Allen can inform residents—outside of their website and social media—is through the water bill, which many residents don’t always see,” said Miranda Talley, Allen General Manager at Community Impact.

Similar challenges exist in Denton and Bryan-College Station, where rapid growth and evolving local issues outpace traditional news coverage. By expanding into these three markets, Community Impact aims to fill these gaps, keeping residents connected to local news.

Stay informed and connected: With the addition of Denton, Bryan-College Station and Allen, Community Impact continues its mission to strengthen Texas communities through reliable, locally focused journalism.

Residents can subscribe to the Denton, Bryan-College Station, and Allen newsletters to get the latest local news delivered straight to their inbox.

 

Your local team

Michael Crouchley
Editor

Tracy Ruckel
General Manager

Email [email protected] for story ideas, tips or questions.

Keep Reading

No posts found