This isn't just living near the stadiums. This is walking out your door to Rangers and Cowboys games, concerts at Choctaw Stadium, dining and nightlife at Texas Live!, and the electric energy of event nights — without ever getting in your car. Urban Arlington has arrived.
The Arlington Entertainment District is the heart of urban Arlington — a walkable neighborhood anchored by AT&T Stadium, Globe Life Field, Choctaw Stadium, Texas Live!, and Six Flags. Instead of fighting traffic to get to the action, residents walk out their front door and they're already there.
The Entertainment District is the only truly urban neighborhood in Arlington. You're not talking about suburban cul-de-sacs with front lawns — you're talking about mid-rise condos, modern townhomes, live-work lofts, and urban apartments where the energy is high and the lifestyle is walkable.
For years, this district was just parking lots and commercial zones serving gameday crowds. Then came One Rangers Way condos, urban townhome conversions, new loft construction, and the Texas Live! development, and suddenly you could actually live here — not just visit on Sundays.
The buyers here are professionals working in Dallas or Fort Worth who want a short commute, investors buying for gameday short-term rentals (verify current Arlington STR ordinances), empty-nesters who want walkable nightlife, and sports fans who want to walk to every Rangers and Cowboys home game. The lifestyle is active, loud on event nights, quiet mid-week, and nothing like the rest of Arlington.
Marla has sold condos and townhomes in the Entertainment District — she knows which buildings have the strongest HOAs, which units have stadium views, where parking is included vs. leased separately, and how to read investor vs. owner-occupied ratios. When you're buying urban, you're also buying into an HOA and a building management structure — and Marla knows how to vet both.
AT&T Stadium. Globe Life Field. Choctaw Stadium. Texas Live! Six Flags. The entire entertainment complex is your backyard — walkable, electric, and alive 200+ nights a year.
No other Arlington neighborhood offers this.
Living in the Entertainment District means embracing urban Arlington — the energy, the events, the walkability, and yes, the noise on game nights. Here's what you get.
Home of the Dallas Cowboys. Walk to every home game, concerts, college football championships, and WrestleMania-level events.
Home of the Texas Rangers. Walk to baseball games, concerts, and championship series. Modern retractable-roof stadium with year-round events.
Former Rangers ballpark, now a multi-use venue for concerts, soccer, festivals, and XFL football. More events = more walkable entertainment.
Massive dining and entertainment complex — restaurants, bars, live music, outdoor plaza, and the best gameday atmosphere in DFW.
5 minutes away by car. Living this close to a major theme park is a summertime lifestyle advantage you don't get in most of DFW.
This is the only part of Arlington where you can walk to dinner, drinks, and major events without getting in a car. That's rare in DFW.
Event nights bring crowds, fireworks, street closures, and energy. Mid-week is quiet. If you want predictable suburban calm, this isn't it.
Central DFW location. I-30 and 360 are minutes away. You're 20 minutes to downtown Dallas or Fort Worth, 10 minutes to DFW Airport.
Gameday short-term rental demand is real. Some owners rent their condos on event weekends. Verify current Arlington STR ordinances before buying for rental income.
The Entertainment District spans a wide range of product — from 1-bedroom condos to 3-story urban townhomes. Here's how the pricing typically breaks down.
1-bedroom condos typically start around $250K–$350K, 2-bedroom units run $350K–$500K, and 3-bedroom urban townhomes and penthouses push $500K–$800K. Inventory is mixed — resale condos, new loft construction, and converted townhomes. Call Marla for active listings, HOA breakdowns, and parking details.
The Entertainment District sits in the exact center of the DFW Metroplex — with fast highway access to Dallas, Fort Worth, and the airport. You're close to everything without living in the middle of downtown traffic.
Real answers for buyers considering urban Arlington living near the stadiums.
Most Entertainment District condos and townhomes are a 5–10 minute walk to AT&T Stadium and Globe Life Field. You can literally walk out your front door, grab a drink at Texas Live!, and be in your seat before kickoff — no traffic, no $60 parking fees, no shuttles. That said, "walkable" varies by exact address. Buildings on Randol Mill or near Collins are closer; properties a few blocks east or west may be a 15-minute walk. When you tour with Marla, she'll show you the walk from each building so you know exactly what you're getting.
Let's be honest: event nights are loud, crowded, and energetic. You'll hear fireworks after Rangers home runs, crowds cheering during Cowboys touchdowns, and music from concerts at Choctaw Stadium. Streets around the stadiums close for pre-game tailgating and post-game pedestrian traffic. That's part of the appeal for most buyers — the electric energy of living at the center of it all. But if you need quiet evenings and zero event disruption, the Entertainment District is not the right fit. Mid-week and off-season, it's much quieter. If you embrace the vibe, it's incredible. If you fight it, you'll regret buying here.
It depends on the building. Most newer condo and townhome developments (like One Rangers Way and newer loft buildings) include 1–2 dedicated parking spaces with your unit — either in a gated garage or assigned surface lot. Older condo conversions may require you to lease parking separately, which can add $50–$150/month to your costs. Some buildings offer guest parking; others don't. Parking is a major due diligence item — Marla will help you confirm exactly what's included before you write an offer, because it affects both your monthly costs and your resale appeal.
This is a critical question — and the rules have been changing. Arlington has been updating its short-term rental ordinances, and some HOAs in the Entertainment District explicitly prohibit STRs in their governing documents. Other buildings allow it, and some owners do rent their units on gameday weekends for strong nightly rates. Before you buy with rental income in mind, you must verify two things: (1) current Arlington city STR regulations, and (2) your specific building's HOA rules. Marla can help you pull HOA docs and connect you with an attorney if needed — but do not assume STR income is guaranteed just because the location is perfect for it.
HOA fees in Entertainment District condos typically range from $300–$600+ per month, depending on the building and amenities. These fees usually cover: building exterior maintenance, common area upkeep, insurance on the building structure, trash, water/sewer, sometimes gas, fitness center or pool access (if the building has them), and reserve fund contributions. High-rise buildings with elevators, concierge service, or rooftop amenities will be on the higher end. HOA fees are not optional — they're part of your monthly housing cost just like your mortgage, and lenders factor them into your debt-to-income ratio. Marla can provide exact current HOA figures and help you understand what you're paying for.
The Entertainment District has strong appreciation potential driven by stadium expansions, Texas Live! development, and the ongoing shift toward urban living in DFW. When AT&T Stadium and Globe Life Field were built, the surrounding area saw major appreciation. Texas Live! brought even more demand. Future development (hotels, retail, potential mixed-use towers) could continue pushing values up. That said, condo markets are more sensitive to HOA health, building management, and investor-vs-owner ratios than single-family markets. Marla can pull comps, show you how values have trended, and help you assess whether a specific building is positioned for long-term appreciation or short-term rental income.
It varies by building — and it matters. Some Entertainment District condos have high owner-occupancy (50%+), which tends to support stronger HOA governance, better building upkeep, and easier financing (most lenders require at least 50% owner-occupancy for conventional loans). Other buildings are heavily investor-owned, which can mean more turnover, weaker HOA participation, and tighter financing options (sometimes cash-only or portfolio loans). Marla knows which buildings are FHA-approved, which are predominantly owner-occupied, and which are investor-heavy — and she'll walk you through what that means for your offer and your resale down the road.
The Entertainment District is nothing like the rest of Arlington. Most of Arlington is suburban — big lots, single-family homes, cul-de-sacs, and car-dependent living. The ED is the opposite: mid-rise condos, urban townhomes, walkable streets, and event-night energy. If you're moving from a neighborhood like Viridian, The Parks, or Lake Arlington, this will feel like a completely different city. If you're moving from Uptown Dallas, Deep Ellum, or Fort Worth's Near Southside, this will feel more familiar (but with more parking and easier highway access). The ED is the only true urban district in Arlington — and that's either exactly what you want, or exactly what you don't.
Absolutely. Condo purchases come with more complexity than single-family homes: HOA documents, building financials, investor ratios, parking agreements, special assessments, and resale restrictions. When you bring Marla, you get someone who knows how to read HOA docs, vet building management, confirm FHA/conventional loan eligibility, and negotiate repairs or credits based on inspection findings. The listing agent represents the seller or the building developer — not you. Marla represents you, and in most cases, the commission comes from the seller anyway. There's no reason to go it alone.
From One Rangers Way to the newest loft conversions, from HOA docs to stadium views, The Yost Team knows urban Arlington. No pressure, no sales pitch — just honest answers and a realtor who has sold here.
📞 Call = Google Business line · 💬 Text = Marla's cell — reach out whichever way works for you.