HomeDiagramsDatabaseMapsForum About
     

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > United States > Texas & Southcentral > Austin


Reply

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
     
     
  #2661  
Old Posted May 2, 2026, 2:57 AM
clubtokyo's Avatar
clubtokyo clubtokyo is offline
クラブトクヨ
 
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Austin, TX
Posts: 2,248
Wow the samsung project is huge, Taylor is going through some major growth
__________________
Let’s keep building up Austin! #letsgetdense
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2662  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 2:26 AM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
Appears Grimes County just east of College Station is the big winner for the Terafab.

SPACEX / TERAFAB: The County of Grimes, Texas, will be home to SpaceX's Multiphase, next gen, vertically integrated semiconductor manufacturing and advanced computing fabrication facility.

Estimated capital for initial phase is $55 billion. Estimated total investment of $119 billion.

The agreement covers the SpaceX Reinvestment Zone No. 1 – 2026-001 located at Gibbons Creek Reservoir and surrounding areas.


https://x.com/SERobinsonJr/status/2051829712196878562
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2663  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 1:27 PM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
Quote:
Originally Posted by ATX2030 View Post
Appears Grimes County just east of College Station is the big winner for the Terafab.

SPACEX / TERAFAB: The County of Grimes, Texas, will be home to SpaceX's Multiphase, next gen, vertically integrated semiconductor manufacturing and advanced computing fabrication facility.

Estimated capital for initial phase is $55 billion. Estimated total investment of $119 billion.

The agreement covers the SpaceX Reinvestment Zone No. 1 – 2026-001 located at Gibbons Creek Reservoir and surrounding areas.


https://x.com/SERobinsonJr/status/2051829712196878562
Musk later tweeted that this is one of several locations under consideration for what will be the largest and most advanced chip fabrication facility in the world.

Grimes was the first to be made public. Will be interesting to see the other locations under consideration.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2664  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 2:14 PM
DaHaTra DaHaTra is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2024
Posts: 8
The Grimes county location is basically adjacent to where the proposed Texas High Speed Rail project intends to have a station (at Roans Prairie). Given Elon’s historic aversion to rail, I wonder if it’ll influence him. I could see it either way; either he will want to avoid being near it, or by setting up shop nearby he might get some political power to interfere with it if it ever starts looking like it could actually happen.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2665  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 2:49 PM
chinchaaa chinchaaa is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 784
Quote:
Originally Posted by DaHaTra View Post
The Grimes county location is basically adjacent to where the proposed Texas High Speed Rail project intends to have a station (at Roans Prairie). Given Elon’s historic aversion to rail, I wonder if it’ll influence him. I could see it either way; either he will want to avoid being near it, or by setting up shop nearby he might get some political power to interfere with it if it ever starts looking like it could actually happen.
I was wondering this. Considering Elon has consistently aggressively worked to prevent public transit and rail of any kind, I don't think he will be the savior of this project and I don't think it will have any impact on his decision to select a site.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2666  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 3:50 PM
SproutingTowers's Avatar
SproutingTowers SproutingTowers is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Feb 2020
Location: Austin TX
Posts: 515
Quote:
Originally Posted by DaHaTra View Post
The Grimes county location is basically adjacent to where the proposed Texas High Speed Rail project intends to have a station (at Roans Prairie). Given Elon’s historic aversion to rail, I wonder if it’ll influence him. I could see it either way; either he will want to avoid being near it, or by setting up shop nearby he might get some political power to interfere with it if it ever starts looking like it could actually happen.
It is also near a water source where an average chip fab can use 10 million gallons of ultrapure water per day. In the likes of server farms residents may be concerned with Elon's Terafab.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2667  
Old Posted May 6, 2026, 4:56 PM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
Apple eyes Samsung for iPhone chips after decade with TSMC

Apple executives have toured Samsung's Texas fab as TSMC strains to meet AI chip demand

https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10731970


Apple is exploring a possible return to Samsung Electronics and Intel as foundry partners for its main device processors, in what would mark its most significant attempt in over a decade to loosen Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.'s near-total grip on the chips that run iPhones and Macs.

Bloomberg reported Tuesday that Apple has held early-stage talks with Intel about its chipmaking services, while Apple executives have visited the Samsung foundry plant under construction in Taylor, Texas, which is targeting operations in the second half of this year.

No orders have been placed and the work with both suppliers remains preliminary, according to the report, which cited people familiar with the deliberations.

On Apple's most recent earnings call, CEO Tim Cook told investors the company is short of the advanced processors that go into iPhones and Macs, and that the constraint is hitting growth.

"We have less flexibility in the supply chain than we normally would," Cook said, adding that "the primary constraint is the availability of the advanced nodes our SoCs (systems on chip) are produced on, not memory." He said it would take several months to reach supply-demand balance.

The squeeze stems from the artificial intelligence build-out. Nvidia, AMD and other chip designers have absorbed much of TSMC's leading-edge capacity, leaving even Apple, one of the world's largest silicon buyers, unable to secure the volume it wants. Apple is already shifting some production to TSMC's Arizona plant and expects to source roughly 100 million chips there this year, but that covers only a fraction of its annual device shipments.

For Samsung, an Apple processor win would be the highest-profile credibility test for a foundry business that holds less than 10 percent of the global market and has long trailed TSMC on yield. The Taylor fab, anchored by a roughly 23 trillion won ($15.8 billion) long-term supply deal with Tesla signed in July last year, is Samsung's largest US foundry bet.

Any deal would likely start narrow. "Apple is unlikely to hand Samsung the full main SoC for its flagship A-series and M-series chips," an industry official said. "A phased dual-sourcing approach is more plausible, with chips for older or midtier iPhones and iPads tested at Samsung's Texas fab first."

The two companies last shared production of an Apple main processor in 2015, when the A9 chip for iPhone 6s was split between Samsung's 14-nanometer and TSMC's 16-nanometer lines. Battery-life differences under heavy loads triggered the "chipgate" controversy, and Apple consolidated production at TSMC from the A10 Fusion onward.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2668  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 1:48 PM
urbancore urbancore is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Zilker
Posts: 1,635
Blue Origin possibly coming to Hutto 2k jobs $88k, not too bad.

from ABJ

"Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin Enterprises LP is considering a Williamson County city for a massive project.

The Hutto Economic Development Corp. during a May 11 meeting held a public hearing to consider financial incentives for what was only referred to as a "Project Blue Hub" in public documents. The company was not mentioned by name and nobody from the public signed up to speak. No action was taken.

It was described by officials as a 1.3 million-square-foot manufacturing, research-and-development, warehouse and logistics project looking at Hutto. It was said to be bringing more than 2,000 jobs with an average salary of $88,000 over the next five years. The capital investment was pegged at more than $650 million."
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2669  
Old Posted May 14, 2026, 5:07 PM
urbancore urbancore is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Zilker
Posts: 1,635
per ABJ

SpaceX appears to be building 1M SF factory in Bastrop County
Rumors of the solar cell factory had been percolating for weeks
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2670  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2026, 4:20 PM
ILUVSAT's Avatar
ILUVSAT ILUVSAT is offline
May the Schwartz be w/ U!
 
Join Date: Sep 2013
Location: Nomadic
Posts: 1,933
So, Samsung announces it's moving its US HQ from New Jersey to Plano (and bringing 1000 jobs with it).

Was Austin even a contender for this relocation?
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2671  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2026, 6:31 PM
WesternSon WesternSon is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Posts: 334
Quote:
Originally Posted by ILUVSAT View Post
So, Samsung announces it's moving its US HQ from New Jersey to Plano (and bringing 1000 jobs with it).

Was Austin even a contender for this relocation?
They already had a huge office in Plano and just consolidating the HQ there.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2672  
Old Posted Jun 3, 2026, 6:44 PM
texastarkus texastarkus is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Far Sub-Urban San Antonio
Posts: 477
Only if....

Quote:
Originally Posted by ILUVSAT View Post
So, Samsung announces it's moving its US HQ from New Jersey to Plano (and bringing 1000 jobs with it).

Was Austin even a contender for this relocation?


I bet Austin was discounted due to a lack of non stop trans-pacific flights. If only there was an outcry of some sort demanding such flights.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2673  
Old Posted Jun 4, 2026, 7:27 PM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
A Transpacific Explosion

Samsung is driving a new wave of Asian business investment in Central Texas

https://www.bizjournals.com/austin/news/...ariant=cx_undefined&cx_artPos=6#cxrecs_s

By Justin Sayers – Senior Staff Writer, Austin Business Journal
Jun 4, 2026

Austin is now home to more than 10,000 Asian-owned employer firms, or companies that employ people, which accounts for 12% of all area businesses. That total has surged more than 42% since 2020 and outpaces the 18% general growth during the same time period.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2674  
Old Posted Jun 9, 2026, 1:23 AM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
Bastrop, Texas will soon become home to one of the largest solar cell and wafer production facilities in North America with @SpaceX's new investments in the area, creating thousands of jobs.

The solar facility is already under construction, and the AI sat facility is expected to start initial production by the end of 2027.

https://x.com/SawyerMerritt/status/2064140130063921153
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2675  
Old Posted Jun 12, 2026, 8:04 PM
LiveattheOasis LiveattheOasis is offline
Bollywood Fanatic
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Zilker
Posts: 313
Sounds like Apollo just chose Austin for it's second HQ. I imagine they have spoken with Related about their South Congress project, if I'm a betting man.
__________________
I can feel it coming back again ...
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2676  
Old Posted Jun 12, 2026, 9:23 PM
Lobotomizer's Avatar
Lobotomizer Lobotomizer is offline
Frontal Lobe Technician
 
Join Date: Jul 2021
Posts: 503
Quote:
Originally Posted by LiveattheOasis View Post
Sounds like Apollo just chose Austin for it's second HQ. I imagine they have spoken with Related about their South Congress project, if I'm a betting man.
Big news! An Austinite became the world's first trillionaire today as well.
__________________
Aw, snap! You just got Lobotomized!
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2677  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2026, 2:14 PM
randalls randalls is offline
randalls
 
Join Date: Jul 2022
Location: Austin, Texas
Posts: 242
Quote:
Originally Posted by LiveattheOasis View Post
Sounds like Apollo just chose Austin for it's second HQ. I imagine they have spoken with Related about their South Congress project, if I'm a betting man.
Doesn't surprise me. I met some guys from Apollo visiting Austin last Fall during F1. They seemed to REALLY like the city.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2678  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2026, 5:53 PM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
Quote:
Originally Posted by randalls View Post
Doesn't surprise me. I met some guys from Apollo visiting Austin last Fall during F1. They seemed to REALLY like the city.
Never thought we had a chance of landing their 2nd HQ!

$1 Trillion Fund Manager Picks Texas Over Florida
The money-managing giant picked Austin over Miami, and the reason matters more than the destination.

Jun 14, 2026 5:03 PM EDT
By Opeyemi Babalola
Stocks, writer

https://www.thestreet.com/markets/1-trillion-fund-manager-picks-texas-over-florida

Apollo Global Management just picked Austin, Texas, as the site of its second headquarters, according to a Seeking Alpha report.

The decision ended a months-long competition that included Miami, Palm Beach, and Nashville. What makes Apollo’s choice notable is not just where it landed, but what it signals about a firm that has quietly become one of the most powerful financial companies in the world.

What Apollo Global actually does

Most people have never heard of Apollo, but they have almost certainly felt its reach. Apollo is what the industry calls an alternative asset manager, meaning it raises money from large institutional investors like pension funds and insurance companies, then deploys that capital into investments that ordinary stock-market funds do not touch.

Those investments include private equity buyouts, private credit lending, and real estates.

The firm manages $1.03 trillion in assets as of the first quarter of 2026, according to its earnings report, making it one of only a handful of financial firms in the world to cross that threshold.

Apollo collects fees on that pool of capital, and fee-related earnings reached $728 million in the first quarter of 2026, up 30% year-over-year, according to its earnings report. For investors holding APO stock, that fee income matters because it is recurring and relatively predictable, unlike gains from selling investments.

Why Austin Beat Miami

Apollo conducted an internal survey of partners and managing directors to gather location preferences before settling on Austin, according to the Financial Times.

The firm had established a foothold in Miami and Palm Beach after the pandemic but ultimately chose Texas over Florida.

The company framed that decision around talent.

“New York does not have a monopoly on talent, and we expect most of our future growth will take place in our second HQ” Apollo said in a statement.

Texas has no personal income tax, a lower corporate tax burden than New York, and a cost of living that makes it easier to recruit mid-career professionals who might hesitate at Manhattan rents.

Apollo’s headcount has grown to over 5,000 employees, and the new Austin site is expected to house the bulk of its future hires.

What This Means for APO Investors

The headquarters move is not a financial event on its own, but it carries implications worth tracking.

A second base in lower-cost city means Apollo can expand headcount without absorbing New York level salary across the entire firm. That matters for fee-related earnings margins over time.

Here is what else investors should keep in mind:

The stock was trading about 18% below its 52-week high of $157.28 as of early May 2026, according to market data, despite record fee earnings. That gap has attracted buyers who believe the underlying business is undervalued relative to its growth trajectory.

Apollo recorded $115 billion in inflows in the first quarter of 2026 alone and $300 billion over the prior twelve months, according to its earnings report. A talent strategy built around a second city is consistent with a firm planning to keep deploying capital at that pace.

The Bigger Shift Apollo Represents

Apollo’s Austin decision is one more data point in a structural change that has been building for years.

Texas had 519,000 financial sector employees in 2024, surpassing the 507,000 financial services workers across the entire state of New York, according to data compiled by analyst Kathryn Wylde. JPMorgan Chase now employs more people in Texas than in New York, and Goldman Sachs is constructing an 800,000-square-foot campus in Dallas designed for more than 5,000 employees, according to company disclosures.

Finance is not the only industry that has made this call. SpaceX moved its headquarters from California to Starbase, Texas, and Tesla relocated to Austin years before that. The pattern is not a coincidence.

What Apollo’s decision adds to this picture is institutional weight. It is not a bank building a hub. It is a firm managing over a trillion dollars in assets, planting its future growth explicitly outside New York.
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2679  
Old Posted Jun 15, 2026, 10:11 PM
Jdawgboy's Avatar
Jdawgboy Jdawgboy is offline
Representing the ATX!!!
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Austin
Posts: 5,843
Quote:
Originally Posted by Lobotomizer View Post
Big news! An Austinite became the world's first trillionaire today as well.
He might live here, some of the time I wager, but he is not nor will ever be an Austinite. Why anyone needs to have that much wealth for himself is beyond any moral and ethical reasoning. Disgusting IMO.
__________________
"GOOD TIMES!!!" Jerri Blank (Strangers With Candy)
Reply With Quote
     
     
  #2680  
Old Posted Yesterday, 6:13 PM
ATX2030 ATX2030 is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2020
Posts: 979
One of the world's largest cos. buys 4,700 acres in Milam County

Entities tied to SoftBank Group took ownership of a huge chunk of the former Alcoa Corp. site

Entities tied to a Japanese multinational investment conglomerate have made a big move in Milam County. This report offers the latest look at how a small town is being brought back due to a revamp of a defunct Alcoa factory site.

https://www.bizjournals.com/austin/news/...county-land-sale-alcoa-rockdale-atx.html

This might be the reason why SpaceX and Tesla had to go with the Gibbons Creek Reservoir site in Grimes County instead of the Alcoa site.

Last edited by ATX2030; Yesterday at 6:24 PM.
Reply With Quote
     
     
End
 
 
Reply

Go Back   SkyscraperPage Forum > Regional Sections > United States > Texas & Southcentral > Austin
Forum Jump



Forum Jump


All times are GMT. The time now is 6:03 PM.

     
SkyscraperPage.com - Privacy Statement - Top

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2026, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.