
Our Plano logo carries the Texas longhorn and the Lone Star, the shared retro emblem of our Texas places. Drawn in worn black-and-white that recalls a branding iron, a rodeo poster, or old barn signage, the longhorn stands for ranching toughness and the agricultural grit that built the town, while the star is Texas itself. It's the through-line that links Plano to every other Texas place we make. What makes this one Plano is everything behind it — the black prairie, the 1891 farmstead, the brick downtown, and the railroad that started it all.
The twentieth century brought the electric Interurban, whose 1908 depot now houses a railway museum, and then a transformation no early Planoite could have pictured. As Dallas spilled north in the 1960s, '70s, and '80s, the farm town became one of the fastest-growing suburbs in the Sun Belt; corporate headquarters followed, the population multiplied many times over, and Plano grew into the ninth-largest city in Texas — home now to more transplants than native Texans. Yet the old bones show through: straight section-line roads, a preserved downtown, and, every September, a Blackland sky full of hot-air balloons rising over ground that was prairie long before it was a city.
Why People Visit Plano
Plano rewards visitors who want Texas history without the crowds of a tourist town — a genuine 1891 farmstead, a brick Main Street rebuilt after the great fire, an electric-railway museum, and nature preserves on the old Blackland Prairie. People come for the Heritage Farmstead and the downtown arts district, for the September balloons over the prairie, and for an easy, welcoming North-Texas day with real roots behind it.