Dickies Arena and Why Fort Worth Gets the Final Texas Night
Tour routing is part logistics, part strategy, and closing out Texas in Fort Worth on a Friday tells you something about how Teddy Swims' team views this venue. Dickies Arena has earned a reputation as a favorite among touring artists since its 2019 opening, and it's easy to see why — the arena was built specifically for entertainment, not retrofitted from a sports facility, and that difference shows in everything from the acoustic treatment to the loading setup backstage. Artists consistently cite it as one of the best-sounding rooms they play all year.
The arena's position in the Cultural District puts it in good company. The Kimbell Art Museum, the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, and the Amon Carter Museum are all within a few blocks. It's a side of DFW that sometimes gets overlooked in favor of the Dallas nightlife scene, but Fort Worth's Cultural District holds its own, especially on event nights when the surrounding restaurants and bars are buzzing with pre-show crowds. Joe T. Garcia's is a local institution for Tex-Mex, and if you want something more upscale, Lonesome Dove Western Bistro on the Stockyards is worth the detour.
For those coming from Dallas proper, the drive west on I-30 takes about 35 minutes depending on traffic, and the arena's parking infrastructure handles big events smoothly. If you're flying in, DFW Airport sits almost exactly between the two cities. BigStub has verified tickets with transparent pricing — grab yours before this Friday closer sells through.