Del Rio Sports Complex Construction Kicks Off With Hundreds of Sand Loads
More than 200 truckloads of sand have already hit the Precinct 4 site, with nearly 500 total loads needed before Del Rio's new sports complex opens its first fields.

More than 200 truckloads of sand have already landed on a former raw parcel in Precinct 4, and the earthmoving is less than half done. Precinct 4 Commissioner Gustavo Flores said the project will ultimately require nearly 500 loads to bring the site to playable condition, a scale of material placement that reflects the ambition behind Del Rio's new multipurpose sports complex.
Site preparation mobilized in late March, with county crews and contractors working through early April to level the land and begin defining fields, parking areas, and internal circulation routes. Crews paused over the weekend before resuming work Monday.
The phased build-out Flores described offers the clearest picture of when Precinct 4 residents will see usable facilities. Certain practice fields could open within weeks once grading and site stabilization wrap up, with key areas targeted for completion before year's end. Full build-out will extend beyond those early openings, and operational details including scheduling, security, restrooms, and concessions remain to be addressed as construction progresses.
The near-term reality for the surrounding neighborhood is sustained heavy truck traffic: roughly 300 more sand loads are still inbound, along with workday noise and dust as graders shape the site. The volume of construction vehicles on local roads will be noticeable for weeks.
When fields do open, the complex addresses a long-standing gap. Del Rio's youth sports leagues and school programs have lacked modern, local practice space, pushing families to travel to other communities for organized athletics. Priority access is expected to center on those youth leagues and school programs, consistent with Flores's framing of the project as a community asset. The complex's tournament-ready footprint could also anchor weekend competitions, generating hotel, restaurant, and retail spending that carries real weight in a regional economy that counts on visitation.
Alongside the practice fields, the design includes a large parking lot sized for family-event traffic and playground amenities, with internal circulation built to handle simultaneous events across multiple areas of the site.
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