A big step for the NorthEnd site
Goldman Sachs has officially topped out its new Dallas campus, a major milestone for the $709 million project rising on North Field Street next to Victory Park. First reported by The Dallas Morning News, the office hub is designed at roughly 800,000 square feet with room for more than 5,000 employees. The firm broke ground in 2023 and said construction is tracking toward late-2027 completion in its own project update on Goldman Sachs’ press site. For Dallas, this is another proof point that the urban core keeps winning the corporate campus game while staying walkable to arenas, museums, and the Katy Trail.
Why Dallas keeps landing these campuses
Cost, talent, and lifestyle are the hook. Goldman has operated in Dallas since 1968 and has steadily grown headcount here. The new campus is planned with flexible workspaces, wellness and childcare amenities, and access to a new public green space, according to fresh renderings shared in October on Goldman’s newsroom. The broader NorthEnd plan also ties into the mixed-use district between Uptown and Victory Park, a pocket that keeps adding restaurants and venues.
What neighbors should expect next
Topping out means the structure has reached its full height, but the interior buildout and the surrounding public realm work continue. Expect periodic lane closures and construction traffic as crews finish the façade and start on streetscape improvements. The project’s location puts it within a short walk of the Perot Museum and the arena, so game nights will stay busy.
The bigger picture for DFW real estate
Dallas is not slowing down on corporate investment. National outlets have been tracking the financial sector’s Texas build-out, and the Goldman campus is a flagship example of “Y’all Street” momentum. For the local market, that means steady demand for office-adjacent housing, lunch-hour retail, and walkable amenities. Developers are still betting on this part of downtown for its connectivity and room to grow, as highlighted in coverage of the NorthEnd plan by Dallas Innovates. For residents, the payoff is simple: more jobs in the urban core, more eyes on the street, and more choices for dinner before a show.
Bottom line for Dallas
A topped-out tower is not ribbon-cutting day, but it is the point where a project shifts from “someday” to “it’s happening.” With Goldman’s timeline pointing to late 2027 completion and capacity for thousands of workers, Victory Park and the northern edge of downtown are gearing up for a busier, brighter weekday scene. Keep an eye on hiring updates and opening dates, and plan your evenings accordingly. This campus will bring energy to the blocks between Uptown and the arena, and that is a win for Dallas.






