Moxies to open at The Star in Frisco in 2027
Moxies plans a 12,971-square-foot restaurant at The Star, with construction set for July 28 and an $800,000 renovation in the former City Works space.

Moxies is set to move into the former City Works space at The Star in Frisco, bringing another national dining brand into one of Collin County’s busiest growth corridors. The planned restaurant at 3680 The Star Blvd. is listed as a renovation and alteration project with construction scheduled to start July 28 and wrap up March 8, 2027, ahead of a spring 2027 opening.
The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation filing pegs the project at about $800,000 and identifies it as privately funded, on private land, for private use. The build-out covers 12,971 square feet, a sizable footprint inside a complex that has become one of the city’s most watched destinations for offices, retail, restaurants and entertainment.
That location matters because The Star is no ordinary shopping center. The 91-acre campus is tied to the Dallas Cowboys’ world headquarters and practice facility and was developed through a partnership involving the City of Frisco and Frisco ISD. Nearby, Fields is pushing the corridor even further with a 2,545-acre master-planned development built around retail, restaurants, office space and entertainment.
For Frisco, the arrival of Moxies adds to a dining mix that already includes a steady stream of concepts aimed at workers, visitors and residents who want a premium meal close to home. The chain already operates in Plano and Southlake, giving North Texas diners another familiar option before the Frisco location even opens.

Moxies says it operates more than 60 restaurants in Canada and the United States, and its franchise materials say eight U.S. locations are open with four more under construction. Public filings identify Eatz Hospitality as the tenant for the Frisco project.
The move into The Star also fills a former City Works space, continuing the turnover that has helped keep the campus active as retail and hospitality demand has followed Frisco’s growth. For diners, it means another destination in a district already built to pull traffic from across Dallas-Fort Worth. For the local market, it is another sign that restaurant groups still see The Star and the surrounding development zone as a reliable place to expand.
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