Quote:
Originally Posted by Quixote
How so? Austin is quite centralized with the seat of the state government and a large, nationally renowned public university adjacent to each other in its urban core. Together, they clearly form the lifeblood of the city as far as civic institutions and employment are concerned. Heck, even the Oracle campus is a few miles away. This is obviously a radical departure from LA.
Austin also lacks the regular grid and cross-metro commercial arteries that wholly define LA’s urban framework. This is the biggest underlying difference, as the grid structure informs LA’s public transportation network and densification/urbanization efforts and potential. I like your Detroit analogy a lot more.
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Honestly, the Austin-L.A. resemblance didn't click for me until the last time I visited in 2019. Austin had grown like crazy since I was there about 5 years before that. But specifics: the gridded areas near downtown Austin around 6th Street with all the bars and nightclubs reminds me a little of the nightlife corridors around Hollywood and West Hollywood. Then, some of the newer apartment low-rise apartment buildings popping up in Austin reminds me of architecture that I associate with California (for instance:
https://goo.gl/maps/Ha3bXMA8658PN4LS6). Also, some of the larger residential high-rises sprouting up in downtown are reminiscent of the newer residential towers going up in downtown L.A.
I do think the Detroit and L.A. resemblance is a bit stronger, though. Particularly because of the pre-war architecture and similarities in the grid layout. But it looks like Austin is being heavily influenced by contemporary L.A.