Systemates, Inc is a renovation/alteration project at 740 East Campbell Road, Suite 620, Richardson, in Dallas County, TX, tracked from its Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) registration. Construction complete (TDLR inspection passed Jan 2026). The project has an estimated value of $550K across about 12,305 sq ft.
Final inspection completed, awaiting project closure
Systemates, Inc is a Renovation/Alteration project located at 740 East Campbell Road, Suite 620, Richardson, TX 75081 in Richardson, Texas. The project has an estimated value of $550K covering 12,305 sq ft. AGF Spring Creek Coit II, Ltd is the property owner and DFW Design Depot, LLC is the design firm of record. The project was registered with TDLR on August 20, 2025.
Systemates, Inc is a renovation/alteration project at 740 East Campbell Road, Suite 620 in Richardson, Texas, registered with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR). Scope of work: Renovation of existing office space.
Construction on Systemates, Inc is complete โ TDLR records show the project passed its required accessibility inspection in Jan 2026. The building is finished and very likely open.
Systemates, Inc is located at 740 East Campbell Road, Suite 620, Richardson, TX, 75081, in Dallas County.
AGF Spring Creek Coit II, Ltd is the property owner/developer of record for Systemates, Inc, per its TDLR project registration.
DFW Design Depot, LLC is the design firm of record for Systemates, Inc, according to its TDLR filing.
Systemates, Inc has an estimated construction value of $550K and approximately 12,305 square feet (about $45/sqft), based on its TDLR filing.
Renovation of existing office space.
Note: This project is registered under the Texas Accessibility Standards (TAS) program. TDLR registration is required for commercial and public facility construction to ensure compliance with accessibility requirements under Texas Government Code Chapter 469.
Filed
Aug 20, 2025
Review Complete
Aug 20, 2025
Inspection Complete
Jan 10, 2026
Closed
143d
Construction phase