I have been in Rowlett since 2014. For anyone who just moved here, you have no idea what this city used to look like.
2015-2016: The tornado and the aftermath. The EF-4 tornado on December 26, 2015 ripped through Rowlett along I-30 near Dalrock. It destroyed over 1,000 homes. I remember standing on Chiesa Rd looking at what used to be neighborhoods and seeing nothing but flattened structures and debris piles. FEMA was here for months. That was the lowest point.
2017-2019: The rebuild era. Insurance money and FEMA funds poured in. Builders came in and entire neighborhoods were reconstructed from scratch. The homes that went back up were modern — open floor plans, new materials, better roofing. The rebuild zone around Dalrock and Miller Rd went from the worst-hit area to some of the nicest newer construction in the city.
2019-2020: DART arrives. The Downtown Rowlett DART station opened on the Blue Line. This was the single biggest infrastructure change in a decade. Suddenly you could live on the lake and commute to downtown Dallas on rail. Property values in the areas near the station jumped almost overnight.
2021-2023: Sapphire Bay announced and under construction. The Sapphire Bay development on the north shore of Lake Ray Hubbard is a $1 billion mixed-use project. Crystal lagoon, hotels, restaurants, retail. Rowlett went from a sleepy bedroom community to having one of the most ambitious lakeside developments in DFW.
2024-2026: The new Rowlett. Main Street is revitalizing. New restaurants, a brewery, community events. Bayside and Waterview neighborhoods are fully built out and thriving. Pecan Grove Park and Paddle Point Park got upgrades. The city feels alive in a way it never did before.
The numbers tell the story:
- Population 2014: ~57,000
- Population 2026: ~68,000
- Median home price 2014: ~$185,000
- Median home price 2026: ~$380,000
Rowlett earned every bit of this growth. This city went through a literal disaster and came back better. Not many cities can say that.
Main Street is finally becoming a place you want to hang out. Five years ago there was nothing. Now there are actual restaurants and community events. Progress.