The developers filed for the usual 180-day extension to work through Austin's onerous permitting process. They now have until 12/06 to clear comments on the site plan.
Here are a couple renderings from the site plan that I thought I saw posted before, but they're not in this thread. So this is just something to look at while this project crawls its way the permitting process:
Are there any buildings in Austin that are being built taller than 500 feet? It seems they all are in the 400 feet range. I just visited Austin two weeks ago and boy, does it look awesome. A couple of 500 ft towers, are taller, would be a dream,
Are there any buildings in Austin that are being built taller than 500 feet? It seems they all are in the 400 feet range. I just visited Austin two weeks ago and boy, does it look awesome. A couple of 500 ft towers, are taller, would be a dream,
There are five proposals that top 500'. But none of the U/C ones are over 500'.
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This one reminds me of the W. I want it built badly.
Details from the article:
448 feet.
39 stories.
5th tallest.
500k starting price.
154 condo units.
Demolition starts this month.
No disclosure of total cost, but funding in place it seems.
Location: Austin -> San Antonio -> Columbia -> San Antonio -> Chicago -> Austin -> Denver
Posts: 5,303
My only question is this: how much of the block will this building take up? The article mentions that demolition will start on the building that housed the Texas Press Assocation, which is only 1/4 of the area bounded by 5th, 6th, West, and Rio Grande.
But the renderings seem like the building will be getting rid of Austin Urban Vet and Kung Fu Saloon. Does anybody have insight here?
I really like this tower and Riverside Resources always does a good job with their projects. The interior condo unit renderings look very modern - white and open - but what decade, exactly, is this lobby and dog park from? From the red barrel light fixtures to the furniture to all the wood paneling, it looks so 70s to me. And those hanging chairs in the 1st and last rendering. Maybe if they added macrame to those hanging planters, they could take it all the way. I grew up in the 70s, btw.
My only question is this: how much of the block will this building take up? The article mentions that demolition will start on the building that housed the Texas Press Assocation, which is only 1/4 of the area bounded by 5th, 6th, West, and Rio Grande.
But the renderings seem like the building will be getting rid of Austin Urban Vet and Kung Fu Saloon. Does anybody have insight here?
Apparently they are only using 1/4 of the block. Below is a screen snip of the tax record from CoStar. 5th & West LLC only owns that one-quarter block, and there appears to be an easement running through the middle of that block and the adjacent one, separating the parcels. The other picture is an image from their marketing materials. The unmarked orange square in the middle is 5th & West.
My only question is this: how much of the block will this building take up? The article mentions that demolition will start on the building that housed the Texas Press Assocation, which is only 1/4 of the area bounded by 5th, 6th, West, and Rio Grande.
But the renderings seem like the building will be getting rid of Austin Urban Vet and Kung Fu Saloon. Does anybody have insight here?
DAB says the neighbors will remain, but doesn't cite a source for this, other than they're probably looking at the same parcel ownership records cited above.
That DAB post also says they're targeting an average price of $740/foot, which is a good 50-60% higher than ACL next door. Granted, the amenities are higher end, but it'll be fascinating to see if they can command that premium, and how quickly the market absorbs 150 units at that price point.
I really like this tower and Riverside Resources always does a good job with their projects. The interior condo unit renderings look very modern - white and open - but what decade, exactly, is this lobby and dog park from? From the red barrel light fixtures to the furniture to all the wood paneling, it looks so 70s to me. And those hanging chairs in the 1st and last rendering. Maybe if they added macrame to those hanging planters, they could take it all the way. I grew up in the 70s, btw.
That style is in a revival renaissance, I've seen quite a lot of new decor like that lately. All styles are eventually recylced in some form. I actually think its kinda cool. It wasn't so much the actual style but how colors were used that made a lot of decor from the late 60s through early 80s off putting. I mean who decided that throwup pea green and orangy brown nasty were great colors to use? With the right coloration the actual decor and furniture designs are not bad.
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