Northline Leander
Northline Leander: A First Look at the New Downtown Taking Shape
If you have driven through Leander recently and noticed cranes, cleared land, and new construction near Leander Station, you have been looking at the early stages of something genuinely significant. Northline is a 115-acre mixed-use development that is being built to become Leander's new downtown, and 2026 has been the year it started to feel real. Multifamily and retail construction is underway, the city has signed agreements to relocate core municipal facilities into the district, and the first pieces of a civic town square are taking shape.
I track development news across Williamson County closely because it directly informs how I talk to buyers and sellers about where these communities are headed. Northline is one of the most important projects on my radar right now, not just for Leander, but for the broader Williamson County market. Here is a first look at what is actually happening on the ground.
Northline spans 115 acres south of San Gabriel Parkway between US 183 and Toll 183A, situated around Leander's Transit-Oriented Development core at the northernmost end of the MetroRail line, which is where the name comes from. The project will combine retail, office, medical office, hotel, civic buildings, multifamily housing, townhomes, and condos into a single walkable district designed to blend contemporary design with Texas Hill Country character.
Northline by the Numbers
Northline is Leander's new downtown district, a unique destination where contemporary design meets the character and charm of Texas Hill Country tradition. This is a development that, when completed, will transform how Leander functions as a city, not just how it looks.
What Is Under Construction Right Now
Northline has moved well past the planning stage. As of 2026, real construction is happening on the ground, and several major pieces of the development are either complete or actively underway.
What Northline Will Eventually Include
The full vision for Northline is genuinely ambitious, and it is worth understanding the scope of what this district is being designed to become over the coming years. This is not a single retail center or apartment complex. It is meant to function as an entire downtown.
One detail that stood out to me in the most recent city council action is what happens to the existing City Hall site in Old Town Leander once municipal offices relocate to Northline. The city has committed to evaluating opportunities to repurpose and redevelop that site while prioritizing keeping Old Town vibrant. That tells you this is not a project designed to abandon what Leander already has. It is designed to add a second, complementary core to the city while protecting the character of the original downtown.
Why This Matters for Leander and the Surrounding Communities
For most of its growth, Leander has functioned primarily as a residential community for people commuting to Austin. What it has lacked is a true central district, a place with its own gravity that gives the city an identity beyond being a bedroom community. Northline is designed to be exactly that. A walkable downtown with retail, dining, civic life, healthcare, employment, and housing all in one place, connected directly to the MetroRail line.
For homeowners in Leander, and for the surrounding communities including Liberty Hill, Cedar Park, and Georgetown, a development of this scale tends to have a meaningful effect on regional desirability over time. New downtowns draw employment, draw visitors, and create the kind of amenity-rich environment that buyers increasingly look for when choosing where to live. Northline will not be finished overnight. Major mixed-use districts like this typically take a decade or more to fully build out. But the fact that real construction, real city investment, and real residential occupancy are already happening tells you this is no longer a concept on a rendering. It is becoming part of how this region functions.
If you are someone who is watching Leander and trying to understand where the momentum is heading, Northline is the single most important development to keep an eye on. I will continue to share updates as new phases break ground and new tenants are announced. This is genuinely one of the more exciting things happening in Williamson County right now, and I think it is going to meaningfully change what people picture when they think about Leander over the next several years.
Curious how developments like Northline affect the broader market?
Whether you are considering Leander, Liberty Hill, or anywhere in Williamson County, understanding what is being built and where matters for your decision. Reach out any time and let's talk through what is happening on the ground.