Dallas College is making plans with a development group led by Matthews to transform its historic El Centro Campus into a next-gen learning environment along downtown Dallas’ Austin Street corridor that will serve as a place where education, industry, and opportunity converge. The revitalization of the campus will reinforce Dallas College’s commitment to downtown Dallas, regional economic mobility, and expanding access to higher education, college leaders said.
Dallas College Chancellor Justin H. Lonon called it “a defining moment for Dallas College.”
“Through this investment, Dallas College will expand opportunity, strengthen workforce alignment, and reimagine how education connects to the economic future of Dallas and North Texas,” Lonon added in a statement. “We are reimagining what a college can be by creating a next-generation downtown campus that serves as a convener of education, industry, and opportunity.”
‘A model for the college of the future’

Rendering of the planned next-gen Dallas College Downtown Campus [Image: Matthews]
Located at the site of the college’s first campus, opened in 1966, the reimagined Dallas College Downtown Campus will evolve into a dynamic, future-ready urban higher education environment. The development will be shaped by the academic, workforce, and community programming delivered on-site, delivering a flexible and responsive footprint informed by student, employer, and community needs, Dallas College said. The campus will connect West End Station to the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center and bring together five of Dallas’ most important districts into a cohesive corridor of learning, innovation and economic activity.
Lonon said, “We are building a model for the college of the future, deeply connected to the economy, embedded in the life of the city and designed to drive talent and innovation at scale. We appreciate the Board’s stewardship as we have navigated this important journey.”
Paul Mayer, chair, Dallas College Board of Trustees, said, “This vision represents a deliberate step forward in aligning Dallas College with the evolving needs of our regional economy and workforce. By integrating education, industry and experiential learning, we are creating more direct, responsive pathways between classroom and career while positioning Dallas College to meet the future demands of North Texas.”
Connecting districts and opportunities
The development site offers both geographic and economic significance, Dallas College said, because it is the only location in downtown Dallas where five major districts converge: the Arts District, Historic West End, Central Business District, Reunion Station & Industrial District, and the emerging Convention Center and Entertainment District. The rare convergence allows for a bold vision: an urban corridor connected by Dallas College, linking culture, commerce, transit, and education in one place.
“Dallas College is advancing a bold, transformative vision for the future of higher education and workforce alignment,” said Jack Matthews, president of Matthews. “We are honored to partner with the college and its leadership to help bring that vision to life, creating a dynamic, highly connected environment where students, industry and community converge and where opportunity is visible, accessible and integrated into the fabric of the City of Dallas.”
Dallas College said its downtown campus is designed around two integrated anchors:
:: Academic and Student Life Core: Featuring a welcome center, modern classrooms, advanced labs, learning commons, childcare, an early college high school, and student life spaces designed to support access, persistence, and completion
:: Innovation and Industry Hub: A forward-facing ecosystem where employers, entrepreneurs, and academic programs converge, creating direct pathways between education and high-demand careers
The development prioritizes transit-oriented, walkable design by integrating into downtown Dallas and leveraging proximity to major transit hubs. Per the college, this intentional connectivity will help expand opportunity by increasing access to internships, jobs, and apprenticeships; enabling deeper employer engagement within the campus environment; supporting entrepreneurship through proximity and collaboration; and strengthening Dallas College’s role as a civic and economic anchor
Serving 30K students and funded by 2019 bond
The college said that these components establish a new model for higher education in Dallas — embedded, experiential and closely aligned with workforce needs—serving up to 30,000 students and community partners.
The Dallas College Downtown Development Project is a cornerstone of Dallas College’s long-term capital strategy supported by the $1.1 billion bond program approved by Dallas County voters in May 2019.
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