OXNARD, Calif. -- Goodbye, Valley Ranch. Hello, Frisco.

The Dallas Cowboys got final approval Monday on a deal that will end a four-decade affiliation with Irving and move the team's practice facility to another Dallas suburb.

The Frisco City Council and the city's school board voted to approve a $115 million agreement to build a complex that will include an indoor stadium and new headquarters for the Cowboys about 30 miles north of Dallas.

The school district is contributing $30 million, and its high schools will play games in the stadium. The Cowboys aren't putting any money up front but will have to pay any extra costs. The team also has agreed to develop the remaining land on the 91-acre tract.

Frisco officials want to have the facility ready for the 2016 season.

"We're pleased of course with what they've done so far in the meetings," Cowboys owner Jerry Jones said before the school board vote. "It's a plus."

Jones later declined comment before leaving practice at training camp to fly back to the Dallas area for a news conference scheduled for Tuesday.

The Cowboys were entirely a Dallas operation until 1971, when Texas Stadium in Irving opened. They played their first 11 seasons at the Cotton Bowl and had a training facility in Dallas.

Irving added the Valley Ranch headquarters in 1985, but the facility is showing its age as other NFL teams have been building fancier training homes.

"It sounds great," said tight end Jason Witten, the franchise leader in receptions. "I think as players you don't really have any control over that. It's a new facility, and you always appreciate everything about this organization is first-class. I'm sure that won't be any different."

In 2009, the Cowboys left Texas Stadium for $1.2 billion AT&T Stadium in Arlington, a modern marvel with a retractable roof, a huge video screen hanging over the field and more than 300 luxury suites.

That was the first blow for Irving, which now is losing its lone connection to the NFL about the same time the city got word that the PGA Tour's Byron Nelson Classic would move to Dallas in 2018.

"I wouldn't say it's a sad day," Irving City Councilman Gerald Farris said. "Irving is a very robust city, and we have a lot to be proud of."

Farris said Irving was involved in discussions to keep the training facility, and one of the possible locations was the old Texas Stadium site. It's now a staging area for road construction while Irving decides what to do next.