Frisco-based House of Tangram is planning to construct two state-of-the-art hotels in Mansfield.
The hotel development company recently secured 30 acres of land within the $2.5 billion Staybolt Street District in Mansfield. The district will eventually be anchored by a 7,000-seat sports stadium that will be home to the North Texas Soccer Club. It will also include a convention center, a High5 Entertainment venue, retail, and houses.
House of Tangram is developing two properties within the 100-acre district. The Carbon Mansfield, which the firm says is the world’s first patented, athlete-first hotel, will include 288 rooms.
“Carbon is the training ecosystem—designed with the complete 360° athlete in mind. Anchored by a state-of-the-art performance center, Carbon eliminates the concept of “away games” by creating a home for peak performance, recovery, and elite-level living, wherever athletes travel,” reads a description on the project’s website.
The hotel will reportedly leverage biometrics and climate systems that adapt to each guest.
The developer is also building a dual-branded hotel in the district called Cache Legitimate & KUBO. The hotel of the future is expected to include drone delivery, robotic bartenders, and immersive media walls.
House of Tangram CEO Shawn Ellis says he wants the district to be “one of the most ambitious sport-anchored, technology-integrated hospitality developments in the U.S.”
“This project is more than just mixed-use… The district is designed as a live-operating system for modern life: convention centers reimagined, hotels with AI in their walls, retail that moves like culture — think adaptive storefronts, curated activations and brand-first experiences,” he said, per Dallas Business Journal.
Mansfield Mayor Michael Evans believes the projects will turn the Staybolt Street Entertainment District into “the place to be.”
“Mansfield has always been known for sports and bringing a hotel concept that focuses on athletes next to our incoming Mansfield Stadium is a home run… This innovative project aligns with our goals to focus on the future and develop a strong economy.”
The projects are expected to break ground next year and finish in mid-2028.