A state filing puts a price, size and projected construction schedule on Roadster 33, a planned convenience store at 3491 FM 720 W. in Little Elm.
The Texas accessibility project record describes a privately funded, one-story building covering 5,571 square feet. It lists an estimated project cost of $668,520 and identifies the work as a new convenience store.
The same filing gives projected construction dates of April 1 through Sept. 30, 2026. Those dates describe the schedule submitted with the project, not verified progress at the site and not an announced opening date.
A separate Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission record lists an application for Roadster #33 at the same address. Application 622920 remains pending and in review.
What the project filing confirms
The accessibility record supplies several details that are useful for tracking the FM 720 project: its stated use, physical scale, estimated cost, funding type, owner, design firm and projected construction window.
According to the filing, Roadster 33 would occupy a new, single-story convenience-store building. The registered area is 5,571 square feet, and the estimated cost is $668,520. The record categorizes the project as privately funded rather than publicly financed.
The filing names Oakpoint Real Estate LLC as the owner. It identifies MB&B Architects and Engineers as the design firm associated with the project.
The accessibility review is marked complete. That status applies to the review recorded in the state accessibility system; it does not establish that construction is complete, that the store is ready for customers or that every other approval has been secured.
The distinction matters because the filing combines firm project descriptors with estimated dates. The address, submitted building size, estimated cost and named parties are recorded details. The April-to-September construction window remains a projection.
What the calendar does — and does not — show
The submitted schedule calls for construction to begin April 1 and end Sept. 30, 2026. The record does not confirm whether work began on that first date, how far any work has advanced or whether the anticipated completion date has changed.
It also does not provide an opening day. A projected construction end date should not be read as a promise that a business will begin serving customers then. Based on the approved records, no opening date has been announced.
Residents following the site can therefore use Sept. 30 as the end of the filed construction window, but not as a confirmed completion or opening date. Any claim about current progress would require evidence beyond the records approved for this report.
The alcohol application is a second project signal
TABC’s public inquiry system separately lists Roadster #33 at 3491 W. FM 720. The address corresponds to the Roadster 33 location in the accessibility filing despite the records formatting the road name differently.
The commission lists application 622920 as pending and in review. That is the present status supported by the alcohol record. It does not show that the application has been approved, and it does not supply a store opening date.
Taken together, the two state records show a convenience-store project with a defined building plan and an alcohol application moving through review. They do not confirm that construction milestones have been reached or that the business is operating.
That separation helps avoid two common misreadings of development records: treating submitted construction dates as observations from the site, or treating a pending license application as proof of an imminent opening. Neither conclusion appears in the approved material.
Who is attached to Roadster 33
Oakpoint Real Estate LLC is the owner named in the accessibility filing. MB&B Architects and Engineers is the listed design firm. Those names establish the parties identified on the submitted project record, without adding claims about their broader roles or other work.
The state record’s complete accessibility-review status is another specific checkpoint. It can be tracked separately from the projected construction schedule and from TABC’s still-pending application. Each status belongs to a different part of the overall project record.
For readers comparing nearby business developments, those distinctions also apply to other license-driven stories. DFW Daily Brief has separately reported on a pending application for Flavors of India in Lewisville and TQM Café’s plans in The Colony. Those are separate businesses with their own records and timelines.
What remains unresolved
The records do not establish Roadster 33’s construction progress, completion, opening date or alcohol-application outcome. They also should not be stretched into claims about services beyond the convenience-store description and pending TABC filing.
The most concrete local picture is narrower but still substantial: a privately financed, 5,571-square-foot convenience store is registered for 3491 FM 720 W.; its estimated cost is $668,520; Oakpoint Real Estate LLC and MB&B Architects and Engineers are named in the filing; and the accessibility review is complete.
The projected construction window runs through Sept. 30, while application 622920 remains pending and in review. Future state-record updates could change either part of that picture. Until then, the dates are projections and the alcohol application is unresolved.
For Little Elm residents watching the FM 720 address, those records provide firm reference points without supplying an opening countdown. The clearest next developments would be documented construction progress, a revised project schedule, a final TABC decision or an opening announcement. None is confirmed in the approved record reviewed here.