Halo Vista To Break Ground March 25, 2026 In North Phoenix
Halo Vista To Break Ground
North Phoenix is shifting fast. Roads, land, utilities, jobs, all of it. Here at Williams Luxury Homes, we track these moves closely on LUXE BLOG because they shape where people want to live next in Greater Phoenix. And now, one date stands out. March 25, 2026 marks the groundbreaking for Halo Vista, a project just north of TSMC that signals a new chapter for "The Valley."
Quick Points
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Halo Vista breaks ground on March 25, 2026
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The site sits just north of TSMC
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The project is split into major employment zones
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Phoenix projects a 35-to-1 infrastructure return
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North Phoenix keeps pulling new demand
Also Read: AZ’s NorthPark Transforms With TSMC Expansion & Pulte Plans

Why This Day Matters In North Phoenix
March 25, 2026 is not a routine ceremony. It marks the moment a long-range vision starts taking physical shape in North Phoenix. For years, this part of "The Valley" has been building momentum around advanced manufacturing, supplier networks, infrastructure, and housing demand. Halo Vista pushes that story forward in a very visible way. It also reflects a new form of growth in Arizona, where large-scale employment ecosystems are planned with far more intention from day one. That matters for buyers, builders, employers, and the broader Greater Phoenix market. You can feel the direction of travel now.
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North Phoenix keeps changing fast
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TSMC changed the map
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Halo Vista adds another layer
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March 25 makes it real
This is one of those moments people may look back on years from now and point to as a turning point.
Land Moves First & Then Everything Follows
A lot of people drive through that corridor and still don’t see what is coming. The scale is easy to miss from the road. But the land story tells you plenty. The site where Halo Vista will rise was purchased through an Arizona State Land Department auction in May 2024 for $56 million. Nearby, TSMC acquired 900 acres through that same process in January 2024 for $197 million. That is not random activity. It shows a serious land grab in the North Valley, and it shows how quickly this corridor is being repositioned for major employment growth.
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State land auction sale
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$56 million for Halo Vista land
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TSMC bought 900 acres nearby
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North Valley momentum is real
When land trades at that scale, the story usually gets bigger from there. That is exactly what appears to be happening here.
Inside Halo Vista & What Is Planned
What sets Halo Vista apart is the way it has been organized into distinct sections with clear roles. This is not a loose concept with vague language. It is structured. One major piece is The Forge, a planned 12 million square feet built for companies that support the semiconductor supply chain. Think chemical providers, equipment groups, materials firms, and other operations that need to stay close to TSMC’s manufacturing campus. Proximity matters in the chip business. Halo Vista is being shaped around that reality.
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The Forge is 12 million square feet
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Supplier firms need nearby space
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The layout supports chip production
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The plan is highly targeted
That kind of planning tells you this project is tied to function, not hype. It is meant to serve a real industrial need in North Phoenix.
Also Read: AZ’s NorthPark Transforms With TSMC Expansion & Pulte Plans

Sonoran Oasis Brings In The Talent Side
Halo Vista is not only about supplier space. It also includes Sonoran Oasis, a dedicated research and technology park planned at 3.5 million square feet of office and engineering space. That matters because major semiconductor growth needs more than fabrication plants and supply buildings. It also needs engineers, researchers, technical staff, and the companies that want to cluster around that talent base. Sonoran Oasis points straight at that side of the equation. It gives the project another lane, and it broadens what this area can become over time.
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Sonoran Oasis totals 3.5 million square feet
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Office space is part of the plan
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Engineering uses are expected
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Talent attraction is a focus
This is how districts start to gain depth. One use pulls in the next, and the next, and soon the whole corridor feels different.
Phoenix Is Betting On The Corridor
The public side of this story matters too. The City of Phoenix is projecting a 35-to-1 return on its infrastructure investment tied to this area. That is a bold number, and it speaks to how much economic activity officials expect Halo Vista and the surrounding semiconductor ecosystem to generate over time. Infrastructure spending usually follows where leaders think the next wave is headed. In this case, that wave is plainly aimed at North Phoenix. The roads, utilities, services, and long-term planning are being aligned around growth. That creates ripple effects well outside the project boundaries.
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Phoenix sees major upside
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Infrastructure is part of the play
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Public investment signals confidence
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The corridor keeps gaining weight
Once cities start planning at this scale, the local market tends to feel it in stages, then all at once.
A 25-Year Build Starts With One Date
Halo Vista is planned as a 25-year build, which says a lot about the size of the vision. This is not a quick infill project. It is a long-horizon commitment that will likely shape how people think about North Phoenix for years. Yet even a project with that long a runway still has a first real moment. March 25, 2026 is that moment. Dirt turns. Construction begins. The idea leaves paper and enters the landscape.
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This is a long buildout
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The timeline stretches 25 years
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Groundbreaking changes the tone
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The first step still matters
Big projects often take years to show their full impact. Even so, the beginning counts because it confirms the direction.
Growth In The North Valley Keeps Pulling Buyers
Arizona has been adding about 200 new residents per day over the past decade, and the North Valley is positioned to absorb a meaningful share of what comes next. That is one reason buyers keep watching this part of Greater Phoenix so closely. Jobs bring attention. Infrastructure brings confidence. Planned communities follow. Then housing demand starts moving ahead of the next release cycle. We are already seeing that in parts of North Phoenix and North Peoria, where major community planning is drawing real interest from people who want to get in early.
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Population growth keeps pressing north
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Buyers are tracking the corridor
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New communities are drawing attention
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Housing interest often moves early
That is how these areas change. Not overnight, but faster than many people expect.
Also Read: Why AI Growth Is Good For Arizona

What This Means For Buyers Right Now
Here at Williams Luxury Homes, we pay close attention to the real estate market surrounding North Phoenix growth corridors like this one. We have been helping clients buy in the area because many people do not want to wait for future community launches to begin. Projects like Norterra, NorthPark by PULTE, Verdin, and large-scale planning such as Saddleback in North Peoria continue to keep this part of "The Valley" in focus. Some communities already offer opportunities today. Others are still in earlier phases, which can leave buyers trying to read timing, location, lot position, builder strategy, and long-term upside. That is where strong representation matters.
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We track this submarket closely
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Buyer demand is already active
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Verdin is selling now
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NorthPark by PULTE draws interest
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Timing matters in new communities
A lot of buyers assume going straight to a builder is the smart move. In many cases, it makes far more sense to have your own representation helping you read the details that are easy to miss.
Where Williams Luxury Homes Comes In
We help clients make sense of the moving parts in these fast-growth areas. That includes understanding location within a community, traffic flow, future development nearby, lot selection, builder timing, resale outlook, and the intangibles that do not show up on a glossy brochure. In a changing corridor like North Phoenix, those details matter. They can shape your day-to-day life, and they can shape the long-term value of the property you choose. If you are watching the area around TSMC, Halo Vista, Verdin, or NorthPark by PULTE, our team at Williams Luxury Homes is here to help you sort through it with clear guidance, local insight, and representation that stays centered on you.
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