Groundbreaking set for 302 new apartments, townhomes in Fort Worth’s Stop Six

The groundbreaking is set for June 2.

FORT WORTH, Texas — Fort Worth Housing Solutions, an agency created by the city to provide quality low- to moderate-income housing, is gearing up to break ground on phase five of a six-phase redevelopment initiative to transform the city’s Stop Six community.

The city and Fort Worth Housing Solutions were awarded grants to fund the transformation of the neighborhood in 2020, according to a press release from the agency. The funds come from the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) Choice Neighborhood grant program.

The HUD grants are expected to trigger more than $345 million in investment and improvements for the community.

When complete, the development will include 542 mixed-income units where the former Cavile Place public housing community once stood, according to the press release.

Fort Worth Housing Solutions broke ground on the first phase of the development in 2023, welcoming the first group of residents in 2025.

Some 302 units are included in phase five of the development. Residents will have a choice between 1–4-bedroom units at varying rates. The units will be part of a broader development called Hughes House. 

“The Stop Six transformation has provided a meaningful impact to our residents,” Deborah Peoples, Fort Worth City Councilmember for District 5, said in a press release.

The broader initiative for the community also includes a recreation hub, education, health services and commercial space. In 2025, CVS Health opened the CVS Workforce Innovation and Talent Center in Stop Six in partnership with Fort Worth Housing Solutions.

The center features a pharmacy and a classroom where students can work in a pharmacy setting.

The groundbreaking is set for June 2.

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