Namely, that it is still a very large hole in the ground and not the 175 acres of apartments, offices and high-end retail space promised by Atlanta-based Thomas Land & Development back in 2014. But in the nation's fastest-growing city – whose growth has been propelled by an influx of exactly the kind of wealthy new residents you'd expect to make a giant project like Wade Park successful – how is it that a showpiece development is floundering? The Dallas Morning News talked to experts about what Wade Park's struggles say about the region's economy more broadly.

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