NORTHLAKE · DENTON COUNTY · NEW BUILD COMMUNITY REPORT

Harvest

A working farmstand, garden plots, and one final phase

PRICED FROM
$450s
BUILDERS
8 ACTIVE
STATUS
FINAL PHASE
SCHOOLS
Northwest ISD
LOCATORN ↑
33.129° N · 97.262° WHARVEST · NORTHLAKE, TX
01 — THE VIBE

What Harvest feels like.

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.

QUICK FACTS
CITYNorthlake, TX
COUNTYDenton County
SCHOOLSNorthwest ISD
TYPENew-build community
STATUSFINAL PHASE
PLACEHOLDER FIGURES — VERIFY BEFORE PUBLISHING
02 — NEW BUILD RESOURCES

Buying new in Harvest.

PLACEHOLDERS — VERIFY WITH SALES OFFICES
PRICED FROM
$450s
BASE PRICING · BY PHASE
ACTIVE BUILDERS
8
MODEL HOMES OPEN
SALES STATUS
FINAL PHASE
LAST LOTS REMAINING

Community amenities

  • Community farmstand at the heart of the plan
  • Resident garden plots
  • Farm-themed events and seasonal traditions
  • Established gathering spaces, fully built out

Buyer's field notes

1

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.

2

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.

3

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.

03 — WHY BUYERS LOOK HERE

The case for Harvest.

1
Community farmstand
Neighborhood-grown produce, sold steps from your door.
2
Garden plots
Residents grow their own — the farm theme is real, not marketing.
3
Two-town address
The community straddles the Northlake–Argyle line and reads as one neighborhood.
4
Final phase
Last call for new construction, priced from the $450s.
04 — GOOD QUESTIONS

Asked about Harvest, answered straight.

Is Harvest a good place to live?

Residents tend to say yes emphatically, and the farm theme is a big reason why. The community garden and farmstand give Harvest a shared project most master plans lack, and years of build-out mean the traditions — seasonal events, neighborly routines — are well established. Add short 35W-corridor commutes and you get a community that feels rooted in a part of North Texas that's otherwise brand new.

Is Harvest in Northlake or Argyle?

Both. Harvest spans the line between the two towns, with its primary footprint in Argyle and a meaningful share of addresses in Northlake. Day to day it functions as a single community — same amenities, same farmstand, same events. The town on a specific home's address is worth confirming on the listing, since it can affect services and which municipal rules apply.

Are there new construction homes in Harvest?

Yes, but the window is closing — Harvest is in its final phase, with new homes from the $450s. Final phases usually mean a mix of quick-move-in inventory and the last to-be-built lots, so buyers wanting brand-new here should move sooner rather than later. After that, Harvest becomes a resale community, which has its own appeal: established streets and mature landscaping.

What school district serves Harvest?

Northlake falls within Northwest ISD, so Harvest addresses on the Northlake side are zoned to Northwest ISD campuses. Because the community spans into Argyle, school assignment can differ from one street to the next — always verify the exact zoning for a specific address with the district before making an offer. It's a five-minute call that prevents surprises.

What amenities does Harvest have?

The farm is the centerpiece: community garden plots residents actually tend, and a farmstand where the harvest gets shared and sold. Around that core, the community runs the events and gathering spaces you'd expect from an established North Texas master plan. It's the rare theme that deepens with age — gardens and traditions get better every season.

05 — KEEP EXPLORING

More of Northlake worth a look.

NEW BUILD COMMUNITY
Pecan Square
Front-porch master plan, packed events calendar
NEIGHBORHOOD
Canyon Falls
Trail-laced, spans three towns
NEIGHBORHOOD
FM 407 corridor
Acreage and custom builds
FULL CITY REPORT
Northlake, TX →
Market snapshot, schools, commutes, and every neighborhood.

Harvest spans city lines — see the Argyle side of Harvest.

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Pecan Square
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Canyon Falls