Northeast Tarrant

Shivers Farm development in Southlake with possible Whole Foods to start building

A rendering of the future Shivers Farm development by Trademark in Southlake, which will be home to a specialty organic grocery store, shops, restaurants, a hotel and office spaces. The project is expected to break ground this spring.
A rendering of the future Shivers Farm development by Trademark in Southlake, which will be home to a specialty organic grocery store, shops, restaurants, a hotel and office spaces. The project is expected to break ground this spring. City of Southlake

Construction on a $120 million, 40-acre mixed-use development in Southlake, anchored by what may be a Whole Foods Market, is expected to break ground this summer.

Fort Worth-based Trademark Property Co. is developing Shivers Farm on North White Chapel Boulevard, just north of Texas 114. The property had long been owned by the Shivers family.

Recent filings with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation show plans to start almost $30 million retail building construction in late summer, taking about a year.

The project will include 37 single-family lots; 110,000 square feet of retail space, including the grocery store; 38,000 square feet of office space, and a 3-acre pad for a hotel with a full-service restaurant, entertainment or other retail.

The developer hasn’t revealed which grocery store is coming, but signs point to Whole Foods.

According to previous reporting by the Star-Telegram, during an October meeting of the Southlake City Council, one of the council members repeatedly referred to the grocery store as Whole Foods during a discussion about traffic flow. Trademark has worked with the Austin-based grocery before — Fort Worth’s only Whole Foods is in the Waterside mixed-use community on Bryant Irvin Road that Trademark developed around 2016.

The Shivers family farm dates back more than a century, when J.R. and Ora Grace Shivers built a farmhouse and worked the land in 1916, according to the Southlake Historical Society. J.R was also one of the first community members on the board of trustees for the Carroll School District

This story was originally published April 3, 2026 at 1:43 PM.

Fousia Abdullahi
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Fousia Abdullahi is a Fort Worth Star-Telegram news reporter who covers suburban cities including Southlake, Colleyville, Grapevine and Keller. She enjoys reading and attending local events. Send tips by email or phone.
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