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Dude Perfect planning new $3 million office in Frisco

Construction is set to begin Dec. 18 and be finished by May 20, 2024, according to the filing.
Credit: AP Images for Hasbro
Dude Perfect members from left, Cody Jones, Coby Cotton, Tyler Toney, Garrett Hilbert and Cory Cotton pose for photos.

FRISCO, Texas — Dude Perfect, the wildly popular North Texas-based YouTube trickshot artists, aren't building their dream headquarters just yet, but they are getting a new office space.

Filings with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation show plans for a new $3 million project for an office space at 15900 Gateway Drive in Frisco. Construction is set to begin Dec. 18 and be finished by May 20, 2024, according to the filing.

The finished office will be 20,000 square feet of space in an existing industrial building in the Star Business Park, which sits just east of the Dallas North Tollway, across from the new PGA Frisco development.

Star Business Park is owned by Cowboys owner Jerry Jones' Blue Star Land company, according to the filing.

It won't be much of a change in scenery for Dude Perfect, which is currently headquartered at 6644 All Stars Ave. in Frisco, about 10 minutes down the road from the new office site. 

Richardson-based Alliance Architects is listed as the design firm on the office project.

The new office doesn't appear to be the same entertainment destination Dude Perfect announced last year, when they unveiled plans for a sprawling headquarters featuring a 330-foot tower. More details on that project haven't been released, and it would take about two years to build, the group said last year.

Dude Perfect’s five co-founders and owners — Tyler Toney, Garrett Hilbert, Cody Jones and twins Cory and Coby Cotton — all hail from Texas and “would love for it to be nearby,” Coby Cotton told the Dallas Business Journal. “That said, we are exploring all different options and we’ve had a lot of interest from different cities.”

Dude Perfect has around 60 million subscribers on YouTube, and their videos, often featuring trick shots and various stunts ("We Made a REAL Plasma Blaster," for example), rack up millions and millions of views.

They've also gone on an arena tour, and last year they debuted an alternate broadcast to Amazon's Thursday Night Football, streaming live from their headquarters.

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