Back in February, we took an early look at some of downtown Austin’s most mysterious upcoming towers. One of the murkiest of the bunch was the residential development planned at 91 Red River Street, a .74-acre plot of land owned by entities associated with mega-firm Endeavor Real Estate Group. Though documents describing the project only use the 91 Red…
West Campus’ remarkable growth, charted
This blog has something of an obsession with West Campus. It’s the neighborhood that lives by upside-down, inside-out rules and it’s a window into the Austin that could be. So when we got a hold of data about West Campus’ growth, we pretty much had no choice but to put it in charts. Part 1: Understanding the scale and…
Block L Project Could Be the Final Phase of the Domain’s Residential Boom
March 7 marked a milestone in the Domain, for that was the day the City of Austin Development Services office issued the last site plan permit of more than a dozen residential building permits in the master-planned mixed-use development. Dallas-based Columbus Realty Partners Ltd., the developer, obtained the permit for Block L, an apartment complex otherwise…
East Austin Office Giving Millennials What They Want: Tons of Wood
Early last year, we got a first look at what was then called Osten Hall, a five-story office project developed by Endeavor Real Estate Group and designed by Delineate Studio at 901 East Sixth Street, just north of Endeavor’s massive Plaza Saltillo site. More than a year later, the structure is well underway, and it’s now apparently going by the name…
34-Story Office Tower Plan at 300 Colorado Gets a New Look
Earlier this year, firms Cousins Properties, Ironwood Real Estate, and Riverside Resources announced their planned 44-story residential tower at 300 Colorado Street in downtown Austin would change its usage to offices, and that the entire building was pre-leased by oil and gas drilling firm Parsley Energy. Back in January, we didn’t know exactly how this switch would impact the…
They Ditched Columbus, and They’ll Ditch You Too
Cities subsidizing private sports stadiums with public money is a racket. That’s not my opinion, it’s the conclusion of nearly every economist who has ever studied the issue. So, why doesn’t anyone listen? There are a few reasons. First of all, Americans love sports — probably too much — and as a politician, who wants to be the guy resisting something that brings…