Great Southwest is the DFW mid-market density anchor
Spread between Arlington on the east and Grand Prairie on the west, Great Southwest has been absorbing DFW industrial demand since the 1970s. The stock is a mix of older tilt-wall (50,000–150,000 sqft typical), newer 2015–2022 vintage spec-build, and some legacy single-tenant manufacturing conversions. Average unit size is smaller than Alliance or South Dallas, which means more tenancies per square foot — and more same-building match per scan.
For DFW brokers working the mid-market (50K–200K sqft listings), Great Southwest is where most of the transactional churn happens. The neighbour strategy converts mechanically here because the estate geometry and tenant density are genuinely favourable.
What a scan returns for a Great Southwest listing
Example: a scan of 2100 W Bardin Rd, Grand Prairie at 650 ft radius.
| Field | What you get |
|---|---|
| Neighboring businesses | ~52 within 650 ft |
| Same-building matches | Typically 5–9 in multi-tenant tilt-wall buildings |
| Verified contacts | ~24 decision-makers with confirmed emails |
| Unverified contacts | The remainder, flagged but not hidden |
| Industries | 3PL mid-market, automotive aftermarket, aerospace supply chain, freight brokerage, specialty manufacturing, trade services, industrial supply distribution |
| Common titles | VP Operations, Regional Director, Facility Manager, Managing Director, GM, Owner, Plant Manager |
Key Great Southwest streets and corridors
Great Southwest Pkwy
The submarket spine. Runs north-south through the center of the industrial corridor. Densest multi-tenant tilt-wall along this stretch. Same-building match fires on essentially every scan along Great Southwest Pkwy.
Trinity Blvd
East-west corridor running through Arlington and parts of Fort Worth. Mix of industrial and commercial. Trinity Blvd frontage carries some of the larger single-tenant distribution buildings.
N Great Southwest Pkwy / 161st St
Northern section of the submarket. Tends slightly toward larger tenancies — 75K–200K sqft range. Mix of 3PL regional distribution and specialty logistics.
108th St / 180th St / Mayfield Rd
Cross streets connecting the main north-south corridors. Denser mix of small-to-mid-size trade services, specialty manufacturing, and local distribution. These cross streets are where the highest tenancy density per square foot of building is.
Avenue H / Avenue J / Division St (Arlington side)
Arlington-side industrial streets. Older stock, smaller average tenancy size. Very dense owner-operator tenant base.
Why Great Southwest is where SCAYLED pays off fastest
- Density = same-building frequency — most multi-tenant buildings here have 8–12 units. Any scan returns multiple same-building matches almost guaranteed.
- Turnover is the highest in DFW — mid-market tenants renew on 3–5 year cycles vs big-box at 7–10 years. More churn = more opportunities per month.
- Tenant migration stays in-submarket— Great Southwest tenants who outgrow their unit almost always expand next door or to an adjacent building. Moving to Alliance means losing the supply chain, the labor pool, and the aerospace/auto-adjacency they've built over years.
- Family-owned tenant share = unique data advantage — SCAYLED catches operators that Apollo and ZoomInfo miss because we pull from live web data rather than cached B2B records.
Pricing
| Plan | Credits | Listings/month | USD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free Trial | 20 | 1 | $0 |
| Starter | 200 | up to 5 | $79/mo |
| Pro | 425 | up to 10 | $149/mo |
One credit per contact reveal. 15 credits per 650 ft scan, 25 credits per 1,200 ft scan. See the full DFW industrial map →