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Council denies planned‑development proposal for Lawson‑Clay Mathis corner, leaving retail‑heavy alternatives for future consideration

July 07, 2025 | Mesquite, Dallas County, Texas


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Council denies planned‑development proposal for Lawson‑Clay Mathis corner, leaving retail‑heavy alternatives for future consideration
The City Council voted unanimously to deny on July 7 a planned‑development zoning and comprehensive‑plan amendment that would have allowed retail and flex office/contractor uses at 2200 Lawson Road, east of the Clay Mathis Road intersection.

Adam Bailey, director of Planning and Development Services, said the applicant revised an earlier two‑track submission and was now seeking approval only for the northern tract at Lawson and Clay Mathis. The revised plan proposed three buildings (one roughly 8,000 square feet and two of about 7,500 square feet each) with a mix of neighborhood retail and “flex” spaces that included garage bay overhead doors that would accommodate contractor and specialty trade uses. The proposal would change the future land‑use designation from medium‑density residential to neighborhood retail.

Applicant Matthias Albert, representing the owner, said the owner prefers retail and will pursue retail first but sought the flex‑office allowance as a fallback if tenant demand did not support all retail. He said brokers indicated traditional retail demand in that specific location may support a 5,000–10,000‑square‑foot retail building and that flexibility could help the site be economically feasible.

Council members raised concerns about compatibility with adjacent single‑family neighborhoods, the appearance of bay doors facing Lawson Road, the corner’s future role as a high‑traffic entry corridor and the potential for non‑retail uses to dominate. Several council members said they wanted to preserve the corner for more visible retail that serves neighborhoods, not industrial‑style bays.

Councilmember Kent Merton moved to deny the application; the motion carried 7–0. The applicant and property owner told council that retail remains their priority and said they would continue marketing for retail users or return with a revised plan more clearly focused on retail frontage and neighborhood character.

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