Front porches and gridded streets a short walk from Heritage High
MidTowne runs against the grain of the typical Midlothian subdivision. Instead of cul-de-sacs and privacy fences turned to the street, you get a connected grid, sidewalks that actually go somewhere, and homes that face each other close enough for a wave. It's new-urbanist planning on DFW's southwest edge, in a town better known for acre lots — a walkable pocket where kids bike to Heritage High and neighbors learn names fast.
The daily rhythm is the draw. Mornings mean porch coffee and school traffic on foot rather than in a pickup line; evenings bring strollers, dog leashes, and driveway conversations that stretch past dark. Midlothian's small-town center is minutes away, and when the big city calls, downtown Dallas runs about 31 minutes and downtown Fort Worth about 32 — close enough for work, far enough that the pace stays yours.
In a phased community, early sections often carry the lowest base pricing while later phases benefit from finished streetscapes. Ask each builder which sections release next and how pricing has moved between phases before you commit to a lot.
Design-center spending routinely adds a meaningful chunk on top of a base price. Set your upgrade budget before the appointment, prioritize what's hard to retrofit — electrical runs, plumbing rough-ins, structural options — and leave cosmetic finishes for later.
New-urbanist neighborhoods typically run active HOAs to protect the streetscape that drew you in. Read the covenants on porches, fencing, and street parking before you sign a contract, and fold the assessment into your monthly budget alongside taxes and insurance.