A working farmstand, garden plots, and one final phase
Harvest took the master-plan formula and gave it a theme that actually sticks: farming. There's a real community garden where residents grow things, a farmstand where the produce shows up, and a calendar of neighborhood traditions built around the growing season. The community straddles the Northlake–Argyle line — its heart sits in Argyle, but plenty of Harvest addresses land on the Northlake side — and the whole thing reads as one connected neighborhood.
Life here has a settled quality that newer 35W-corridor communities can't fake yet. Most of the build-out is done, amenities are up and running, and the neighbors have had years to become actual friends. Northlake addresses here fall under Northwest ISD, downtown Fort Worth is about 30 minutes off, and DFW Airport is closer still. For buyers who like the North Texas master-plan life but want proof it works before signing, Harvest offers exactly that.
Final-phase shopping favors decisive buyers. Standing inventory and the last released lots tend to go quickly, and there won't be another section behind this one — if a plan and lot combination works for you, hesitating rarely pays.
Expect more quick-move-in homes than fully customizable builds this late in a community's life. Finishes may already be selected, which trims design-center flexibility but often shortens the wait — and builders are sometimes motivated to close out standing inventory.
Buying into a mature master plan means the HOA and amenities are known quantities. Walk the farmstand, talk to neighbors, review the covenants and current dues, and compare recent resales so you know how finished streets are valuing.
Harvest spans city lines — see the Argyle side of Harvest.