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Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex








Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex


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Metroplex in Texas, United States































Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington
Metroplex

Downtown Dallas, Texas, in 2005
Downtown Dallas, Texas, in 2005


Downtown Fort Worth, Texas, in June 2010
Downtown Fort Worth, Texas, in June 2010


AT&T Stadium in Arlington
AT&T Stadium in Arlington

CountryUnited States
StateTexas
Principal cities

  • Dallas

  • Fort Worth

  • Arlington

  • Plano

  • Garland

  • Irving

  • McKinney

  • Frisco

  • Denton

  • Richardson

  • Allen

Area
 • Urban
1,407.0 sq mi (3,644.2 km2)
 • Metro
9,286 sq mi (24,059 km2)
Highest elevation
1,368 ft (417 m)
Population (2010)[1][2]
 • Density634/sq mi (245/km2)
 • Urban
5,121,892 (6th)
 • MSA
6,426,214 (4th)
 • CSA
6,817,483 (7th)
 MSA/CSA/Urban: 2010
Time zone
UTC-6 (CST)
 • Summer (DST)
UTC-5 (CDT)
Area code(s)
214, 254, 469, 682, 817, 903, 940, 972
Interstates
I-20.svgI-30.svgI-35.svgI-45.svg
I-35E.svgI-35W.svgI-345.svgI-635.svgI-820.svg

The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex (officially designated the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX Metropolitan Statistical Area by the US Office of Management and Budget),[3], encompasses 13 counties within the U.S. state of Texas. Residents of the area also refer to it as the Dallas–Fort Worth Metroplex, DFW, or the Metroplex. It is the economic and cultural hub of the regions of North (North Central) Texas, and it is the largest inland metropolitan area in the United States.[4]


The Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex's population is 7,399,662 according to the 2017 U.S. Census estimate,[5] making it the largest metropolitan area in both Texas and the South, the fourth-largest in the US, and the seventh-largest in the Americas. In 2016, DFW ascended to the number one spot in the nation in year-over-year population growth.[6] In 2016, the metropolitan economy surpassed Houston, Texas to become the fourth-largest in the nation, with a real GDP of just over $511 billion in 2016.[7] As such, the metropolitan area's economy is ranked 11th largest in the world.


The region's economy is primarily based on banking, commerce, telecommunications, technology, energy, healthcare and medical research, and transportation and logistics. In 2017, Dallas–Fort Worth is home to 22 Fortune 500 companies, the third-largest concentration of Fortune 500 companies in the nation, behind New York City (63) and Chicago (34).[8] The metroplex encompasses 9,286 square miles (24,100 km2) of total area: 8,991 sq mi (23,290 km2) is land, while 295 sq mi (760 km2) is water, making it larger in area than the states of Rhode Island and Connecticut combined.




Contents





  • 1 Origin of the term


  • 2 Metroplex counties


  • 3 Metroplex cities, towns, and CDPs

    • 3.1 Places with more than 100,000 inhabitants


    • 3.2 Places with 10,000 to 99,999 inhabitants


    • 3.3 Places with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants


    • 3.4 Unincorporated places



  • 4 Demographics


  • 5 Combined Statistical Area

    • 5.1 Components


    • 5.2 Demographics



  • 6 Geography


  • 7 Economy


  • 8 Higher education

    • 8.1 Notable colleges and universities



  • 9 Politics


  • 10 Transportation


  • 11 Largest area employers


  • 12 Media

    • 12.1 TV stations


    • 12.2 Radio stations



  • 13 Sports

    • 13.1 Major professional sports teams


    • 13.2 Other notable professional and amateur teams


    • 13.3 Division I college athletics


    • 13.4 Sports events hosted



  • 14 See also


  • 15 References


  • 16 External links




Origin of the term[edit]



A portmanteau of metropolis and complex, the term metroplex is credited to Harve Chapman, an executive vice president with Dallas-based Tracy-Locke which was one of three advertising agencies that worked with the North Texas Commission (NTC) on strategies to market the region.[9] The NTC copyrighted[10] the term "Southwest Metroplex" in 1972 as a replacement for the previously-ubiquitous "North Texas", which studies had shown lacked identifiability outside the state. In fact, only 38 percent of a survey group identified Dallas and Fort Worth as part of "North Texas", with the Texas Panhandle also a perceived correct answer, being the northernmost region of Texas.[11]



Metroplex counties[edit]





Counties in the Dallas–Fort Worth, TX–OK Combined Statistical Area[12]

  Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX MSA

  Sherman-Denison, TX MSA

  Athens, TX μSA

  Corsicana, TX μSA

  Durant, OK μSA

  Gainesville, TX μSA

  Sulphur Springs, TX μSA

  Bonham, TX μSA

  Mineral Wells, TX μSA



  • Collin County

  • Dallas County

  • Denton County

  • Ellis County

  • Hood County

  • Hunt County

  • Johnson County

  • Kaufman County

  • Parker County

  • Rockwall County

  • Somervell County

  • Tarrant County

  • Wise County


Metroplex cities, towns, and CDPs[edit]


Note: Cities and towns are categorized based on the latest population estimates from the North Central Texas Council of Governments (as of January 1, 2018).[13] No population estimates are released for census-designated places (CDPs), which are marked with an asterisk (*). These places are categorized based on their 2010 census population.[14]



Places with more than 100,000 inhabitants[edit]




Northern Dallas metropolitan area at night – astronaut photo, courtesy NASA (November 15, 2012)


Places designated "principal cities" by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) are italicized.[15]


1,000,000+



  • Dallas (1,286,380)

500,000–999,999



  • Fort Worth (829,560)

200,000–499,999



  • Arlington (383,950)


  • Plano (281,390)


  • Irving (237,490)


  • Garland (236,030)

100,000–199,999



  • Grand Prairie (189,430)


  • McKinney (179,970)


  • Frisco (172,940)


  • Mesquite (143,350)


  • Carrollton (132,330)


  • Denton (130,990)


  • Richardson (110,140)


  • Lewisville (104,780)


Places with 10,000 to 99,999 inhabitants[edit]



  • Addison

  • Allen

  • Anna

  • Azle

  • Balch Springs

  • Bedford

  • Benbrook

  • Burleson

  • Cedar Hill

  • Celina

  • Cleburne

  • Colleyville

  • Coppell

  • Corinth

  • Crowley

  • DeSoto

  • Duncanville

  • Durant

  • Ennis

  • Euless

  • Farmers Branch

  • Fate

  • Flower Mound

  • Forest Hill

  • Forney

  • Glenn Heights

  • Grapevine

  • Greenville

  • Haltom City

  • Highland Village

  • Hurst

  • Keller

  • Lancaster

  • Little Elm

  • Mansfield

  • Midlothian

  • Mineral Wells (partial)

  • Murphy

  • North Richland Hills

  • Prosper

  • Red Oak

  • Rockwall

  • Rowlett

  • Royse City

  • Sachse

  • Saginaw

  • Seagoville

  • Southlake

  • Terrell

  • The Colony

  • Trophy Club

  • University Park

  • Watauga

  • Waxahachie

  • Weatherford

  • White Settlement

  • Wylie



Places with fewer than 10,000 inhabitants[edit]



  • Aledo

  • Alma

  • Alvarado

  • Alvord

  • Annetta North

  • Annetta South

  • Annetta

  • Argyle

  • Aubrey

  • Aurora

  • Bardwell

  • Bartonville

  • Blue Mound

  • Blue Ridge

  • Boyd


  • Briar*

  • Briaroaks

  • Bridgeport

  • Caddo Mills

  • Campbell

  • Celeste

  • Chico

  • Cockrell Hill

  • Combine

  • Commerce

  • Cool

  • Cooper

  • Copper Canyon

  • Corral City

  • Cottonwood

  • Crandall


  • Cresson (partial)

  • Cross Roads

  • Cross Timber

  • Dalworthington Gardens

  • Decatur

  • DeCordova

  • Dennis

  • DISH

  • Double Oak


  • Eagle Mountain*

  • Edgecliff Village

  • Everman

  • Fairview

  • Farmersville

  • Ferris

  • Garrett

  • Glen Rose

  • Godley

  • Granbury

  • Grandview

  • Grays Prairie

  • Gun Barrel City

  • Hackberry

  • Haslet

  • Hawk Cove

  • Heath

  • Hebron

  • Hickory Creek

  • Highland Park

  • Hudson Oaks

  • Hutchins

  • Italy

  • Josephine

  • Joshua

  • Justin

  • Kaufman

  • Keene

  • Kemp

  • Kennedale

  • Knollwood

  • Krugerville

  • Krum

  • Lake Bridgeport

  • Lake Dallas

  • Lake Worth

  • Lakeside

  • Lakewood Village

  • Lavon

  • Lincoln Park

  • Lone Oak

  • Lowry Crossing

  • Lucas


  • Mabank (partial)

  • Maypearl

  • McLendon-Chisholm

  • Melissa

  • Milford

  • Millsap

  • Mobile City

  • Nevada

  • New Fairview

  • New Hope

  • Newark

  • Neylandville

  • Northlake

  • Oak Grove

  • Oak Leaf

  • Oak Point

  • Oak Ridge

  • Ovilla

  • Palmer

  • Pantego

  • Paradise

  • Parker


  • Pecan Acres*

  • Pecan Hill

  • Pelican Bay

  • Pilot Point

  • Ponder

  • Post Oak Bend City

  • Princeton

  • Providence Village

  • Quinlan


  • Rendon*

  • Reno

  • Rhome

  • Richland Hills

  • Rio Vista

  • River Oaks

  • Roanoke

  • Rosser

  • Runaway Bay

  • Saint Paul

  • Sanctuary

  • Sanger

  • Sansom Park

  • Scurry

  • Shady Shores

  • Springtown

  • Sunnyvale

  • Talty

  • Union Valley


  • Van Alstyne (partial)

  • Venus

  • West Tawakoni

  • Westlake

  • Weston

  • Westover Hills

  • Westworth Village

  • Willow Park

  • Wilmer

  • Wolfe City



Unincorporated places[edit]



  • Ables Springs

  • Acton

  • Avalon

  • Bolivar

  • Brock

  • Cash

  • Copeville

  • Elizabethtown

  • Elmo

  • Floyd

  • Forreston

  • Garner

  • Greenwood

  • Heartland

  • Ike

  • Lantana

  • Lillian

  • Merit

  • Paloma Creek

  • Peaster

  • Poetry

  • Poolville

  • Rockett

  • Sand Branch

  • Savannah

  • Slidell

  • Telico

  • Westminster

  • Whitt



Demographics[edit]























Historical populations – Dallas MSA (1950–1980)
CensusPop.

1950614,799
19601,083,60176.3%
19701,555,95043.6%
19802,974,80591.2%

U.S. Decennial Census
2011 estimate
















Historical populations – Fort Worth MSA (1950–1970)
CensusPop.

1950361,253
1960573,21558.7%
1970762,08632.9%

U.S. Decennial Census
2011 estimate




















Historical populations – Dallas–Fort Worth (1980–2010)
CensusPop.

19802,974,805
19903,885,41530.6%
20005,221,80134.4%
20106,426,21423.1%

U.S. Decennial Census
2011 estimate

As of the 2010 United States census,[16] there were 6,371,773 people. The racial makeup of the MSA was 50.2% White, 15.4% African American, 0.6% Native American, 5.9% Asian, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 10.0% from other races, and 2.4% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 27.5% of the population.


The median income for a household in the MSA was $48,062, and the median income for a family was $55,263. Males had a median income of $39,581 versus $27,446 for females. The per capita income for the MSA was $21,839.





























































































County
2017 Estimate
2010 Census
Change
Area
Density

Collin County
969,603
782,341

+23.94%
841.22 sq mi (2,178.7 km2)

1,152.621,153/sq mi (445.03445/km2)

Dallas County
2,618,148
2,368,139

+10.56%
871.28 sq mi (2,256.6 km2)

3,004.943,005/sq mi (1,160.221,160/km2)

Denton County
836,210
662,614

+26.20%
878.43 sq mi (2,275.1 km2)

951.94952/sq mi (367.54368/km2)

Ellis County
173,620
149,610

+16.05%
935.49 sq mi (2,422.9 km2)

185.59186/sq mi (71.6672/km2)

Hood County
58,273
51,182

+13.85%
420.64 sq mi (1,089.5 km2)

138.53139/sq mi (53.4953/km2)

Hunt County
93,872
86,129

+8.99%
840.32 sq mi (2,176.4 km2)

111.71112/sq mi (43.1343/km2)

Johnson County
167,301
150,934

+10.84%
724.69 sq mi (1,876.9 km2)

230.86231/sq mi (89.1489/km2)

Kaufman County
122,883
103,350

+18.90%
780.70 sq mi (2,022.0 km2)

157.40157/sq mi (60.7761/km2)

Parker County
133,463
116,927

+14.14%
903.48 sq mi (2,340.0 km2)

147.72148/sq mi (57.0457/km2)

Rockwall County
96,788
78,337

+23.55%
127.04 sq mi (329.0 km2)

761.87762/sq mi (294.16294/km2)

Somervell County
8,845
8,490

+4.18%
186.46 sq mi (482.9 km2)

47.4447/sq mi (18.3218/km2)

Tarrant County
2,054,475
1,809,034

+13.57%
863.61 sq mi (2,236.7 km2)

2,378.942,379/sq mi (918.51919/km2)

Wise County
66,181
59,127

+11.93%
904.42 sq mi (2,342.4 km2)

73.1873/sq mi (28.2528/km2)

Total
7,399,662
6,426,214

+15.15%
9,277.78 sq mi (24,029.3 km2)

797.57798/sq mi (307.94308/km2)


Combined Statistical Area[edit]


The Dallas–Fort Worth, TX–OK Combined Statistical Area is made up of 20 counties in north central Texas and one county in southern Oklahoma. The statistical area includes two metropolitan areas and seven micropolitan areas. As of the 2010 Census, the CSA had a population of 6,817,483 (though a July 1, 2015 estimate placed the population at 7,504,362).[17] The CSA definition encompasses 14,628 sq mi (37,890 km2) of area, of which 14,126 sq mi (36,590 km2) is land and 502 sq mi (1,300 km2) is water.



Components[edit]


Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs)


  • Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington (Collin, Dallas, Denton, Ellis, Hunt, Hood, Johnson, Kaufman, Parker, Rockwall, Somervell, Tarrant, and Wise counties)


  • Sherman-Denison (Grayson County)

Micropolitan Statistical Areas (μSAs)


  • Athens (Henderson County)

  • Bonham (Fannin County) (delineated and added in 2015)

  • Corsicana (Navarro County)

  • Durant, OK (Bryan County, Oklahoma)

  • Gainesville (Cooke County)

  • Mineral Wells (Palo Pinto County)

  • Sulphur Springs (Hopkins County)

Note:
The Granbury micropolitan statistical area (Hood and Somervell counties) was made part of the Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, Texas Metropolitan Statistical Area effective 2013.



Demographics[edit]


As of the census[16] of 2000, there were 5,487,956 people, 2,006,665 households, and 1,392,540 families residing within the CSA. The racial makeup of the CSA was 70.41% White, 13.34% African American, 0.59% Native American, 3.58% Asian, 0.08% Pacific Islander, 9.62% from other races, and 2.39% from two or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were 20.83% of the population. It is home to the fourth-largest Muslim population in the country.[citation needed]


The median income for a household in the CSA was $43,836, and the median income for a family was $50,898. Males had a median income of $37,002 versus $25,553 for females. The per capita income for the CSA was $20,460.



Geography[edit]


The metroplex overlooks mostly prairie land with a few rolling hills dotted by man-made lakes cut by streams, creeks and rivers surrounded by forest land. The metroplex is situated in the Texas blackland prairies region, so named for its fertile black soil found especially in the rural areas of Collin, Dallas, Ellis, Hunt, Kaufman, and Rockwall counties.


Many areas of Denton, Johnson, Parker, Tarrant, and Wise counties are located in the Fort Worth Prairie[18] region of North Texas, which has less fertile and more rocky soil than that of the Texas blackland prairie; most of the rural land on the Fort Worth Prairie is ranch land. A large onshore natural gas field, the Barnett Shale, lies underneath this area; Denton, Tarrant and Wise counties feature many natural gas wells. Continuing land use change results in scattered crop fields surrounded by residential or commercial development.


South of Dallas and Fort Worth is a line of rugged hills that goes north to south about 15 miles (24 km) that looks similar to the Texas Hill Country 200 miles (320 km) to the south.



Economy[edit]





Headquarters of AMR Corporation and American Airlines


The cities of Dallas and Fort Worth are the two central cities of the metroplex, with Arlington being a third economically important city; it is a center for sporting events, tourism and manufacturing. Most other incorporated cities in the metroplex are "bedroom communities" serving largely as residential and small-business centers, though there are several key employers in these regions. Due to the large number of smaller, less well-known cities, metroplex residents commonly divide the region roughly in half along Texas Interstate 35, which runs north-south, splitting into two 'branches' (I-35E in Dallas and I-35W in Fort Worth) through the metroplex. They refer to places as being on the "Dallas side" or the "Fort Worth side", or in "the Arlington area," which is almost directly south of the airport. It is nominally between the two major east-west interstates in the region (I-20, passing to the south of both downtowns, and I-30, connecting Dallas and Fort Worth city centers).


Dallas and its suburbs have one of the highest concentrations of corporate headquarters in the United States. Business management and operations is a major part of the economy. The metroplex also contains the largest Information Technology industry base in the state (often referred to as Silicon Prairie or the Telecom Corridor, especially when referring to US-75 through Richardson just north of Dallas itself). This area has a large number of corporate IT projects and the presence of numerous electronics, computing and telecommunication firms such as Microsoft, Texas Instruments, HP Enterprise Services, Dell Services, Nokia, Cisco, Fujitsu, i2, AT&T, Alcatel-Lucent, Ericsson, CA, Google, and Verizon in and around Dallas. On the other end of the business spectrum, and on the other side of the metroplex, the Texas farming and ranching industry is based in Fort Worth. According to the Dallas Business Journal 's 2006 Book of Lists, American Airlines is the largest employer in the metroplex. Several major defense manufacturers, including Lockheed Martin, Bell Helicopter Textron, and Raytheon, maintain significant operations in the metroplex, primarily on the "Fort Worth side." They are concentrated along State Highway 170 near I-35W, commonly called the "Alliance Corridor" due to its proximity to the Fort Worth Alliance regional airport. ExxonMobil, the #2 corporation on the Fortune 500 listings, is headquartered in Irving, Texas. Toyota USA, in 2016, relocated its corporate headquarters to Plano, Texas. Southwest Airlines hold their headquarters in Dallas. The airline has more than 53,000 employees as of October 2016 and operates more than 3,900 departures a day during peak travel season. In October 2016, Jacobs Engineering, a Fortune 500 company and one of the world’s largest engineering companies, relocated from Pasadena, California to Dallas.[19]


Changes in house prices for the metroplex are publicly tracked on a regular basis using the Case–Shiller index; the statistic is published by Standard & Poor's and is also a component of S&P's 20-city composite index of the value of the U.S. residential real estate market.



Higher education[edit]




Notable colleges and universities[edit]
































































Public universities
School
Enrollment
Location
Mascot
Athletic Affiliation
(Conference)
University System

UTAPlanetarium.PNG
University of Texas at Arlington
39,714

Arlington

Mavericks

NCAA Division I
(Sun Belt)
Non–Football

University of Texas System

University of North Texas September 2015 11 (Hurley Administration Building).jpg
University of North Texas
37,979

Denton

Mean Green

NCAA Division I FBS
(C–USA)

University of North Texas System

UTD Visitor Center.jpg
University of Texas at Dallas
26,793

Richardson

Comets

NCAA Division III
(American Southwest)
Non–Football

University of Texas System

Twu-old-main-night.jpg
Texas Woman's University
15,472

Denton

Pioneers

NCAA Division II
(Lone Star)
Women's sports only

Independent

TAMUC Campus.PNG
Texas A&M University–Commerce
12,385

Commerce

Lions

NCAA Division II
(Lone Star)

Texas A&M University System

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
3,255

Dallas
No Mascot
(N/A)
No Athletics
(N/A)

University of Texas System

UNT Dallas Campus.jpg
University of North Texas at Dallas
3,030

Dallas
Jaguars
No Athletics
(N/A)

University of North Texas System

University of North Texas Health Science Center
2,243

Fort Worth
No Mascot
(N/A)
No Athletics
(N/A)

University of North Texas System

Texas A&M University School of Law
412

Fort Worth
Aggies
No Athletics
(N/A)

Texas A&M University System










































Private universities
School
Enrollment
Location
Mascot
Athletic Affiliation
(Conference)

SMU Library.JPG
Southern Methodist University
11,643

University Park

Mustangs

NCAA Division I FBS
(American)

Campustcu.JPG
Texas Christian University
10,394

Fort Worth

Horned Frogs

NCAA Division I FBS
(Big 12)

Mahler Student Center, Dallas Baptist University.jpg
Dallas Baptist University
5,445

Dallas

Patriots

NCAA Division II
(Heartland)
Non–Football, compete in the Missouri Valley Conference at the Division I level for baseball

Texas-Wesleyan-Law-School-2307.jpg
Texas Wesleyan University
3,378

Fort Worth

Rams

NAIA
(Sooner)

Carpenter Hall front.JPG
University of Dallas
2,387

Irving

Crusaders

NCAA Division III
(SCAC)
Non–Football, compete in Texas Rugby Union at the Division II level for Rugby

Sagu.jpg
Southwestern Assemblies of God University
2,012

Waxahachie

Lions

NAIA NCCAA
(Sooner and Central States Football League)

PQC.jpg
Paul Quinn College
600

Dallas

Tigers

NAIA
(Red River)
Non–Football


Politics[edit]






















Presidential Election Results
Year

Republican

Democratic

2016

53% 1,217,018
46% 1,062,196

2012

57% 1,202,585
43% 896,612

2008

55% 1,190,150
45% 970,130

2004

62% 1,190,362
38% 732,787

2000

62% 973,070
38% 587,889

Since the late 20th century and the realignment of party affiliations, white conservatives have shifted to the Republican Party, and its national candidates have won in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, including in presidential elections. Democratic voters dominate a majority of areas in the large cities of Dallas, Fort Worth, Grand Prairie, and Arlington (especially areas east of Interstate 35W).[20][21] Republicans dominate North Dallas, western Fort Worth and the rest of Tarrant County, most suburbs, and the rural areas of the metroplex.



Transportation[edit]








Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport


The Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport (IATA airport code: DFW), located between the cities of Dallas and Fort Worth, is the largest and busiest airport in the state of Texas. At 100 square kilometres (39 sq mi) of total land area, DFW is also the second-largest airport in the country and the sixth-largest in the world. It is even the third-busiest airport in the world in terms of aircraft movements and the world's seventh-busiest by passenger traffic, transporting 62.9 million passengers in FY 2014.[22] Based in Fort Worth, American Airlines' headquarters are adjacent to DFW. Recently having regained the title as the largest airline in the world in terms of both passengers transported and fleet size, American is a predominant leader in domestic routes and operations.[23]


Love Field Airport (IATA airport code: DAL) is located in northwest Dallas. Based in Dallas, Southwest Airlines is headquartered next to Love Field.




Diagram of public rail transit in the Dallas–Fort Worth area


Public transit options continue to expand significantly throughout the metroplex. However, it is limited in several outlying and rural suburbs. Dallas County and portions of Collin and Rockwall counties have bus service and light rail operated by Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART), covering thirteen member cities. DART's rail network currently sprawls for 93 miles throughout the area. The Red Line extends north to Plano and southwest to Westmoreland Road. The Blue Line reaches from Rowlett in the northeast to the University of North Texas at Dallas campus near I-20 in the south. The 28-mile Green Line, which opened in December 2010, connects Carrollton in the northwest through Downtown Dallas to Pleasant Grove in the southeast. The Orange Line, which completed expansion in 2014, parallels the Red Line from Plano to Downtown Dallas and the Green Line from Downtown Dallas to Northwest Hwy before extending through the Las Colinas area of Irving to reach DFW International Airport.


Denton County has bus service limited to Denton, Highland Village, and Lewisville (with commuter service to downtown Dallas) provided by the Denton County Transportation Authority (DCTA). The A-train, a diesel commuter rail line, parallels I-35E to connect Denton, Highland Village, Lewisville, and Carrollton. Several smaller towns along this line, Corinth, Shady Shores, and Lake Dallas, voted to abstain from DCTA and do not have stations. There is an across-the-platform transfer in Carrollton to the DART Green Line. A-Train service began June 20, 2011.[24]


Tarrant County has bus service operated by the Fort Worth Transportation Authority (known as 'The T'), available only in Fort Worth. The diesel commuter train that serves Fort Worth and its eastern suburbs is operated as the Trinity Railway Express; it connects downtown Fort Worth to downtown Dallas, where it links to the DART light rail system. A station near its midpoint, Centerport, serves DFW Airport via a free airport shuttle bus. The TRE is jointly owned by FWTA and DART.[25]Amtrak serves two stations in the Metroplex - Dallas Union Station and Fort Worth Intermodal Transportation Center. Both are served by the Texas Eagle route, which operates daily between Chicago and San Antonio (continuing on to Los Angeles three days a week), though only the latter station is served by the Fort Worth-Oklahoma City Heartland Flyer.




DFW freeway map


The Dallas–Fort Worth area has thousands of lane-miles of freeways and interstates. The metroplex has the second-largest number of freeway-miles per capita in the nation, behind only the Kansas City Metropolitan Area. As in most major metropolitan areas in Texas, most interstates and freeways have access or frontage roads where most of the businesses are located; these access roads have slip ramps allowing traffic to transition between the freeway and access road. North-south interstates include I-35 and I-45. East-west routes include I-30 and I-20. I-35 splits into I-35E and I-35W from Denton to Hillsboro: I-35W goes through Fort Worth while I-35E goes through Dallas. (This is one of only two examples of an interstate splitting off into branches and then rejoining as one; the other such split is in Minneapolis-St. Paul where I-35E goes into St. Paul and I-35W goes through Minneapolis.) I-30 connects Dallas and Fort Worth, and I-45 connects Dallas to Houston. The "multiple-of-5" numbers used for the interstate designations are notable, as these numbers were designed to be used for major multi-state arteries of the U.S. Interstate Highway System. The North Texas region is the terminus for two of them, and I-45 is located only within Texas.


HOV lanes exist along I-35E, I-30, I-635, US 67, and US 75. I-20 bypasses both Dallas and Fort Worth to the south while its loop, I-820, goes around Fort Worth. I-635 splits to the north of I-20 and loops around east and north Dallas, ending at SH 121 north of DFW Airport. I-35E, Loop 12, and Spur 408 ultimately connect to I-20 southwest of Dallas, completing the west bypass loop around Dallas. A large number of construction projects are planned or are already underway in the region to alleviate congestion. Due largely to funding issues, many of the new projects involve building new tollways or adding tolled express lanes to existing highways, which are managed by the North Texas Tollway Authority. It was originally established to manage the Dallas North Tollway and oversees several other toll projects in the area.[citation needed]


As of 2016 the Taiwanese airline EVA Air operates a shuttle bus service from George Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston to Richardson, so that Dallas-based customers may fly on its services to and from Houston.[26]



Largest area employers[edit]


Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex[27]




















Company
No. of employees
locally
Type of business

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
34,000
Retail

American Airlines
27,000
Commercial airline

Texas Health Resources
22,296
Health care

Dallas Independent School District
19,740
Education

Baylor Health Care System
16,500
Health care


Media[edit]


The cities of Dallas and Fort Worth have their own newspapers, The Dallas Morning News and the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, respectively. Historically, the two papers had readership primarily in their own counties.[citation needed] As the two cities' suburbs have grown together in recent years (and especially since the demise of the Dallas Times Herald in 1991), many sites sell both papers. This pattern of crossover has been repeated in other print media, radio, and television. Since the 1970s all of the television stations and most of the FM radio stations have chosen to transmit from Cedar Hill so as to serve the entire market, and are programmed likewise. There has been a rise in "80–90 move-ins", whereby stations have been moved from distant markets, in some cases as far away as Oklahoma, and relicensed to anonymous small towns in the metroplex to serve as additional DFW stations. According to RadioTime, the market has 38 AM stations, 58 FM stations (many of them class Cs), and 18 full-power television stations. Dallas–Fort Worth is the fifth-largest television market in the United States, behind only New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Philadelphia.


Two metroplex AM radio stations, 820 WBAP and 1080 KRLD, are 50,000-watt stations with coverage of much of the North American continent and beyond during nighttime hours.


The South Asian population (Indian Sub-continent) has increased considerably in the DFW metroplex. They have the FM 104.9 radio channel and 700 AM radio.[28] Recently Sony TV, a subsidiary of Sony TV Asia, launched its FTA (free to Air OTA) channel on 44.2 station in DFW. It was one of the two locations they chose in USA; the other being NYC, where there is also a large South Asian demographic.



TV stations[edit]


The following are full-powered stations serving the Dallas–Fort Worth television market. Network owned-and-operated stations are highlighted in bold.




























































































































































































ChannelCall Sign
(branding)
Primary Network AffiliationSubchannel(s)City of LicenseOwner
2.1KDTNDaystarNoneDenton, TX
Word of God Fellowship
(Community Television Educators of DFW, Inc.)
4.1
KDFW
(Fox 4)
FoxNoneDallas
Fox Television Stations
(NW Communications of Texas, Inc.)
5.1
KXAS-TV
(NBC 5)
NBC5.2 Cozi TV
Fort Worth
NBCUniversal Owned Television Stations
(Station Venture Operations, LP)
8.1
WFAA
(WFAA-TV Channel 8)
ABC8.2 AccuWx
8.3 Justice Network
Dallas
Tegna Media
(WFAA-TV, Inc.)
11.1
KTVT
(CBS 11)
CBS11.2 Decades
Fort Worth
CBS Corporation
(CBS Stations Group of Texas, Inc.)
13.1
KERA-TV
(KERA)
PBS13.2 KERA Kids
13.3 Create
Dallas
North Texas Public Broadcasting
18.1KPFW-LD
Hope Channel broadcasting
NoneDallas
Iglesia JesuCristo es mi Refugion, Inc.
(Sale to DTV America Corporation pending)
20.1KBOP-LDInfomercial20.2 Infomercial
20.3 3ABN (Spanish)
20.4 3ABN
Dallas
Randolph W. Weigner
(D.T.V., LLC.)
21.1
KTXA
(TXA 21)
Independent21.2 MeTV
Fort Worth
CBS Corporation
(Television Station KTXA Inc.)
22KNAV-LPHot TV NetworkNone
(low-power analog)
DeSoto, TX
Tuck Properties
23.1
KUVN-DT
(Univision 23)
Univision23.2 Bounce TV
23.3 Escape
23.4 LAFF
Garland, TX
Univision Communications
(KUVN License Partnership, LP)
25.1K25FW-DHSNNoneCorsicana, TX
Ventana Television, Inc.
26.1
KODF-LD
(KODF-TV)
Guide US TV26.2 Soul of the South TV
26.3 Almavision
26.4 HSN2
Britton, TX
Mako Communications, LLC
27.1
KDFI
(My27)
MyNetworkTV27.2 Movies!
27.3 Buzzr
27.4 Heroes and Icons
27.5 Light TV
Dallas
Fox Television Stations
(NW Communications of Texas, Inc.)
28.1KHPK-LDSonLife28.2 Guide US TV
28.3 Shop LC
28.4 Soul of the South TV
DeSoto, TX
Mako Communications, LLC
29.1
KMPX
(Estrella TV KMPX 29)
Estrella TV29.2 Inmigrante TV
Decatur, TX
Liberman Broadcasting
(Liberman Television of Dallas License LLC)
31.1K31GL-DSonLife31.2 Hot TV Network
31.3 Hot TV Network
31.4 RTV
DeSoto, TX
Mako Communications, LLC
33.1
KDAF
(CW33)
The CW33.2 Antenna TV
33.3 This TV
Dallas
Tribune Broadcasting
(Sale to Sinclair Broadcast Group pending)
(KDAF, LLC)
34.1
KJJM-LD
(Access 34)
HSN34.2 Shop LC
34.3 HSN2
34.4 Jewelry TV
34.5 Infomercial
Dallas & Mesquite, TX
Mako Communications, LLC
38.1
KVFW-LD
(KVFW 38)
Infomercial38.3 RTN
38.4 Rev'n
Fort Worth
CMMB America
(New York Spectrum Holding Company, LLC)
39.1
KXTX-TV
(Telemundo 39)
Telemundo39.2 TeleXitos
Dallas
NBCUniversal
(NBC Telemundo License LLC)
44.1
KLEG-CD
(Vmas)
TVC+Latino44.3 Diya TV - America's first South Asian broadcast television network
44.4 SAB TV (Indian)
DallasDilip Viswanath
46.1
KUVN-CD
(Univision 23)
UnivisionNone
(mirror broadcast of KUVN-DT)
Garland, TX
Univision Communications
(KUVN License Partnership, LP)
47.1
KTXD-TV
(Texas 47)
Independent47.2 Comet
47.3 LATV
47.4 Tele Vida
47.5 SonLife
Greenville, TX
London Broadcasting Company
(KTXD License Company, LLC)
49.1
KSTR-DT
(UniMás 49)
UniMás49.2 GetTV
49.3 Grit
Irving, TX
Univision Communications
(UniMas Dallas, LLC)
51.1KHFD-LDThe Walk TV51.2 Cornerstone Television
51.4 Global Christian Network
Cedar Hill, TXRandall & Adrienne Weiss
(EICB-TV West LLC)
52.1KFWDSonLife52.3 QVC Plus
52.4 Evine
Fort WorthNRJ Holdings LLC
(NRJ TV DFW License Co, LLC)
55.1
KAZD
(Azteca 55)
Azteca América55.2 MBC America (Korean)
55.3 SBTN (Vietnamese)
55.4 QVC
55.5 VietFace TV (Vietnamese)
55.6 Biz Television
55.7 Spanish-language infomercials
Lake Dallas, TXNorthstar Media, LLC
(Northstar Dallas License, LLC)
58.1KDTX-TVTBN58.2 Hillsong Channel
58.3 JUCE TV
58.4 Enlace
58.5 Smile
Dallas
Trinity Broadcasting Network
(Trinity Broadcasting of Texas, Inc.)
68.1
KPXD-TV
(Ion Television)
Ion Television68.2 qubo
68.3 Ion Life
68.4 Ion Shop
Arlington, TX
Ion Media Networks
(Ion Media Dallas License, Inc.)


Radio stations[edit]


  • Category:Radio stations in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex


Sports[edit]


The metroplex is one of the twelve American metropolitan areas that has a team in each of the four major professional sports leagues. Major professional sports first came to the area in 1952, when the Dallas Texans competed in the National Football League for one season. In 1960, major professional sports returned when The Dallas Cowboys began competing in the National Football League and the Dallas Texans began competing in the American Football League. (The Texans later relocated to Kansas City and became the Chiefs). In 1972, Major League Baseball's Washington Senators moved to Arlington to become the Texas Rangers, named after the statewide law enforcement agency. The National Basketball Association expanded into North Texas in 1980 when the Dallas Mavericks were added to the league. The fourth sport was added in 1993 when the Minnesota North Stars of the National Hockey League moved to Dallas, becoming the Dallas Stars.


The Major League Soccer team FC Dallas is based in Frisco, and the Dallas Wings of the WNBA play in Arlington. The area is also home to many minor-league professional teams, and four colleges that compete in NCAA Division I athletics. The metroplex has hosted many premiere sports events on both an annual and one-time basis.



Major professional sports teams[edit]










































Club
Sport
Founded
League
Venue

Cowboys huddle.jpeg
Dallas Cowboys

Football
1960

NFL

AT&T Stadium

HankBlalock.jpg
Texas Rangers

Baseball
1972^

MLB

Globe Life Park in Arlington

Jason Kidd mavs allison.jpg
Dallas Mavericks

Basketball
1980

NBA

American Airlines Center

Jamie Benn - Dallas Stars.jpg
Dallas Stars

Hockey
1993^

NHL

American Airlines Center

SuperligaLAFCD.jpg
FC Dallas

Soccer
1996

MLS

Toyota Stadium

Philips Arena Dream game 2008.jpg
Dallas Wings

Basketball
2015^

WNBA

College Park Center

Dallas Rattlers

Lacrosse
2018^

MLL

The Ford Center at The Star

^- Indicates year team relocated to the area



Other notable professional and amateur teams[edit]





















































































































Club
Sport
Founded
League
Venue

Allen Americans

Ice hockey
2009

ECHL

Allen Event Center

Lone Star Brahmas
Ice hockey
1999

NAHL

NYTEX Sports Centre

Mid-Cities Junior Stars
Ice hockey
2013

NA3HL

Dr. Pepper StarCenter

Texas Jr. Brahmas
Ice hockey
2014

NA3HL

NYTEX Sports Centre

Dallas Snipers
Ice hockey
2011

Western States Hockey League

Dr. Pepper StarCenter

Dallas Sidekicks

Indoor soccer
2012

Major Arena Soccer League

Allen Event Center

Frisco RoughRiders

Baseball
2003^

Texas League

Dr Pepper Ballpark

Cleburne Railroaders

Baseball
2017

AAIPBL

The Depot at Cleburne Station

Fort Worth Vaqueros

Soccer
2014

NPSL

LaGrave Field

Grand Prairie AirHogs

Baseball
2007

AAIPBL

QuikTrip Park

Texas Legends

Basketball
2010^

NBA G League

Dr Pepper Arena

Texas Revolution

Indoor football
2011^

Champions Indoor Football

Dr Pepper Arena

Dallas City FC

Soccer
2013

NPSL

Roffino Stadium

Dallas Roughnecks

Ultimate
2015

American Ultimate Disc League

The Colony Five Star Complex

FC Dallas

Soccer
1996

Women's Premier Soccer League

Dr. Pink Stadium

FC Dallas U-23

Soccer
1996

Women's Premier Soccer League

Toyota Soccer Complex

Texas Spurs FC

Soccer
1998

Women's Premier Soccer League

Willow Springs Middle School

FC Cleburne

Soccer
2017

PDL

The Depot at Cleburne Station

Texas United

Soccer
2017

PDL

AirHogs Stadium

Arlington Impact

Women's American football
2015

Women's Football Alliance

Pennington Field

Dallas Elite

Women's American football
2015

Women's Football Alliance

Alfred Loos Stadium

Dallas Fuel

eSports
2017

Overwatch League

Blizzard Arena

^- Indicates year team relocated to the area



Division I college athletics[edit]


























School
City
Mascot
Conference

Texas Hall game.jpg
University of Texas at Arlington

Arlington

Mavericks

Sun Belt Conference

US Navy 071110-N-8053S-140 During the Navy vs. University of North Texas (UNT) football game, Navy Midshipmen running back, Shun White, attempts a to run against UNT's defense.jpg
University of North Texas

Denton

Mean Green

Conference USA

Shawnbrey McNeal stiffarm.jpg
Southern Methodist University

University Park

Mustangs

American Athletic Conference

Andy Dalton.jpg
Texas Christian University

Fort Worth

Horned Frogs

Big 12 Conference

Joan and Andy Horner Ballpark, Dallas Baptist University.jpg
Dallas Baptist University

Dallas

Patriots

Missouri Valley Conference (baseball only)

The headquarters for both the Big 12 and Conference USA are located in Irving, and the Southland Conference headquarters are in Frisco.



Sports events hosted[edit]


Note: Venues are listed with their current names, not necessarily those in use when an event took place.


































































































































































Event
Sport
Year(s)
Venue

Red River Rivalry

College Football
1912–present

Cotton Bowl

Battle for the Iron Skillet

College Football
1915–present

Cotton Bowl, Amon G. Carter Stadium, Ownby Stadium, Texas Stadium, Ford Stadium

Fort Worth Classic

College Football
1921

Panther Park

Dixie Classic

College Football
1922, 1925, 1934
Fair Park Stadium

State Fair Classic

College Football
1925–present

Cotton Bowl

PGA Championship

Golf

1927,

1963



Cedarcrest Golf Course, Dallas Athletic Club

AT&T Cotton Bowl Classic

College Football
1937–present

Cotton Bowl, AT&T Stadium

U.S. Open

Golf

1941

Colonial Country Club

Byron Nelson Golf Classic

Golf
1944–present
Multiple courses in Dallas

Colonial National Invitational

Golf
1946–present

Colonial Country Club

Pro Bowl

Football

1973

Texas Stadium

The Players Championship

Golf
1975

Colonial Country Club

Dallas Grand Prix

Auto Racing
1984–1996

Fair Park, Addison, Reunion Arena

NBA All-Star Game

Basketball

1986, 2010

Reunion Arena, AT&T Stadium

NCAA Men's Final Four

Basketball

1986, 2014

Reunion Arena, AT&T Stadium

NCAA Women's Final Four

Basketball

2017

American Airlines Center

U.S. Women's Open

Golf

1991

Colonial Country Club

FIFA World Cup Preliminaries

Soccer
1994

Cotton Bowl

Major League Baseball All-Star Game

Baseball

1995

Globe Life Park in Arlington

Duck Commander 500

Auto Racing
1997–present

Texas Motor Speedway

Bombardier Learjet 550

Auto Racing
1997–present

Texas Motor Speedway

Big 12 Championship Game

College Football

2001, 2009, 2010, 2017–present

Texas Stadium, AT&T Stadium

Bell Helicopter Armed Forces Bowl

College Football
2003–present

Amon G. Carter Stadium

Frisco Bowl

College Football
2017–present

Toyota Stadium

Breeders' Cup

Horse Racing
2004

Lone Star Park

AAA Texas 500

Auto Racing
2005–present

Texas Motor Speedway

MLS Cup

Soccer

2005, 2006

Toyota Stadium

NHL All-Star Game

Hockey
2007

American Airlines Center

CONCACAF Gold Cup

Soccer

2009, 2011, 2013, 2015

AT&T Stadium, Toyota Stadium

Cowboys Classic

College Football
2009–present

AT&T Stadium

Southwest Classic

College Football
2009–2011

AT&T Stadium

Heart of Dallas Bowl

College Football
2010–present

Cotton Bowl

Manny Pacquiao vs. Antonio Margarito

Professional Boxing
November 13, 2010

AT&T Stadium

NCAA Division I Football Championship

College Football
2011–2014

Toyota Stadium

Super Bowl XLV

Football
2011

AT&T Stadium

Heart of Dallas Classic

College Football
2013

Cotton Bowl

College Football Playoff National Championship

College Football
2015

AT&T Stadium

WrestleMania 32

Wrestling
2016

AT&T Stadium

NHL Entry Draft

Hockey
2018

American Airlines Center


See also[edit]


  • Dallas/Fort Worth Area Tourism Council

  • Dallas–Fort Worth Property Tax Rates by City and County

  • Greater Dallas Korean American Chamber of Commerce

  • List of museums in North Texas

  • List of metropolitan statistical areas

  • Texas Triangle



References[edit]




  1. ^ "Table 1. Annual Estimates of the Population of Metropolitan and Micropolitan Statistical Areas: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2009 (CBSA-EST2009-01)". 2009 Population Estimates. United States Census Bureau, Population Division. 2010-03-23. Archived from the original (CSV) on June 15, 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-24..mw-parser-output cite.citationfont-style:inherit.mw-parser-output qquotes:"""""""'""'".mw-parser-output code.cs1-codecolor:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-free abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-registration abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-lock-subscription abackground:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registrationcolor:#555.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration spanborder-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-errordisplay:none;font-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-errorfont-size:100%.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-formatfont-size:95%.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-leftpadding-left:0.2em.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-rightpadding-right:0.2em


  2. ^ American Community Survey Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington Urbanized Area (2008 estimate)


  3. ^ This has been rendered various different ways, with and without capitalization, with hyphens or slashes instead of dashes, and with or without spaces around those marks, and in abbreviated forms, sometimes without "Arlington", such as "Dallas–Forth Worth–Arlington MSA", "Dallas–Fort Worth Metropolitan Area", "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington Statistical Area", "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington Metro Area", "Dallas–Fort Worth Area", etc. The term is often rendered, especially in government documents, as "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX Metropolitan Statistical Area", "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX (MSA)", "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX Metro Area", etc., using the US Postal Service code "TX" for Texas, and often without the syntactically expected comma after "TX". Other versions include the full word "Texas", and some give a shortened but redundant form such as "Dallas Area, Texas (Metro Area)". Other words are sometimes used, e.g. "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington Urbanized Area".


  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-01-02. Retrieved 2011-08-29.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)


  5. ^ Bureau, U.S. Census. "American FactFinder – Results". factfinder.census.gov. Archived from the original on May 12, 2016. Retrieved 2016-05-10.


  6. ^ "Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington, TX MSA Population". U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 23, 2017.


  7. ^ "Real GDP". US Dept of Commerce. Retrieved September 21, 2017.
    [dead link]



  8. ^ "Greater Houston Partnership Research" (PDF).


  9. ^ Alsobrook, Bruce. "Harve Chapman’s left an indelible mark on North Texas, failing at only one goal he’s set for himself: Retirement," The Sulphur Springs (TX) News-Telegram, Saturday, December 10, 2011.


  10. ^ North Texas Commission. "History". Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 1 October 2013.


  11. ^ North Texas Commission (1 January 2002). ""Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex" brand serves region well". Archived from the original on December 28, 2004. Retrieved 27 June 2006.


  12. ^ "OMB Bulletin No. 17-01: Revised Delineations of Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Micropolitan Statistical Areas, and Combined Statistical Areas, and Guidance on Uses of the Delineations of These Areas" (PDF). United States Office of Management and Budget. August 15, 2017. Retrieved January 2, 2018.


  13. ^ Population by City. North Central Texas Council of Governments, 2018. Retrieved 2018-05-19.


  14. ^ "2010 Census: Population of Texas Cities Arranged in Alphabetical Order". Texas State Library and Archives Commission. Retrieved 2012-09-05.


  15. ^ "OMB Census". arlingtonTX.gov. Retrieved November 12, 2012.


  16. ^ ab "American FactFinder". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on September 11, 2013. Retrieved 2008-01-31.


  17. ^ "Table 2. Annual Estimates of the Population of Combined Statistical Areas: April 1, 2010 to July 1, 2012". 2012 Population Estimates. United States Census Bureau, Population Division. March 2013. Archived from the original (CSV) on May 17, 2013. Retrieved April 19, 2013.


  18. ^ "Cross Timbers and Prairies Ecological Region".


  19. ^ Carlisle, Candace. "Global engineering firm to relocate headquarters from California to Dallas". bizjournals.com. Dallas Business Journal.


  20. ^ "2016 election: Division in a key Texas Republican stronghold?". star-telegram. Retrieved 2016-11-23.


  21. ^ "Tarrant County: 2016 election results by precinct".


  22. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-11-17. Retrieved 2015-11-16.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)


  23. ^ IATA. "IATA – Page not found". iata.org. Archived from the original on 2011-06-12. Retrieved 2012-02-17.


  24. ^ Peterson, Matt (June 20, 2011). "A-train railway begins rolling, carrying commuters from Denton to Carrollton". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved June 20, 2011.


  25. ^ "About – Trinity Railway Express (TRE)". Trinity Railway Express. Retrieved 2013-04-22.


  26. ^ "Dallas – Houston – Dallas Free Shuttle Service Schedule." EVA Air. Retrieved on February 29, 2016.


  27. ^ "North Texas Largest Employers". bizjournals.com. Dallas Business zJournal. July 16, 2016.


  28. ^ Name (Required):. "Sony launches free-to-air SAB TV in the US". Rapid TV News. Retrieved 2013-04-22.




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