Though its historic significance doesn’t receive due attention outside the city, the Rosewood Courts public housing complex in East Austin is the first federal housing project in the nation built for African Americans. Funded by the United States Housing Authority of the New Deal thanks to the famously tireless politicking of then-Congressman Lyndon B. Johnson and completed in 1939, the…
At 701 Rio, Downtown’s Latest Office Addition Tops Out in a Changed World
First announced in 2018 and breaking ground in January 2020 right before everything went sideways, the office development at 701 Rio Grande Street celebrates its official “topping out” today. We’re not sure whether its developers Diana Zuniga and Jason Berkowitz, pursuing the project under the name B&Z Development in partnership with global investment management firm Barings, are bothering with the…
Affordable Housing Unlocks Surprising New Heights at Cambrian East Riverside
Despite the explosive variety of multifamily housing development along East Riverside Drive in Southeast Austin, one thing is almost always the same — the buildings are six floors tall at most, the ubiquitous wood-framed apartment configuration known in cities all over the country as a one-plus-five. (You’ll notice the first image on the Wikipedia entry for this building style literally…
A Bigger H-E-B Won’t Fix Hancock Center, but It’s Not a Bad Start
We usually have a good time ragging on the outdated urban planning principles of the later 20th century — urban renewal, highways everywhere, other weirdness — so it’s a little embarrassing to admit that Hancock Center, the 34-acre strip mall you know and love(?) at East 41st and Red River Streets, was a more pleasantly-designed environment for human beings between its…
Austin’s Swinging ’60s Survive Behind Stucco at the Downtowner Motor Inn
At first glance, the most interesting thing about the La Quinta Inn at the corner of East 11th and San Jacinto Streets is the fact it’s still standing, renting likely the cheapest rooms in downtown Austin only a stone’s throw from the Texas Capitol out of a building that doesn’t look much at all like…
Atlanta Might See This Austin Tower Before Austin, Somehow
EXTREMELY IMPORTANT UPDATE: In a classic twist of dramatic irony, mere hours after publishing this article the Republic tower project showed its first city permit activity in roughly two years — if we didn’t know better, we’d think it had something to do with us pestering the folks at Lincoln for this story all week….