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  #101  
Old Posted Jun 24, 2005, 4:01 PM
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Regional Retail Developments Planned

I have located a great article on the numerous regional shopping centers in the planning stages and under construction in metro Austin. This article is from the ICSC website:

http://www.icsc.org/srch/sct/sct1104/focus_texassw_1.html

RETAIL RUSH

With more than 20 centers on the way, Austin gets much-needed infusion

BY JILL MAUNDER

Part state capital, part college town and part high-tech hub, Austin boasts a thriving music scene, beautiful natural surroundings and a quirky sense of humor.

Above all, it seems to be a treasure trove of retail opportunities.

Simon certainly thinks so. The firm already has a lock on Austin’s regional mall business, with seven centers in operation, amounting to nearly 5 million square feet of space. But Austin’s economy and demographics are just too good to leave things at that, Schneider says. He will be visiting Austin a lot over the next several years, because Simon plans to double its holdings there, building eight new retail projects totaling 5 million square feet.

Simon is not alone. Currently, there are eight retail centers totaling 2.2 million square feet under construction. In addition, at least 17 lifestyle, community and neighborhood centers are in the hopper as well, says Greg Blackburn, vice president of retail at the CB Richard Ellis Austin office.

This retail-building explosion amounts to a delayed response to the city’s skyrocketing population, which grew at about 4 percent a year on average through the 1980s and ’90s and continues to expand by 1.5 percent annually, says Ryan Robinson, the city’s demographer.

The metro-area population totals about 1.4 million today, double what it was two decades ago. And there is plenty of spending power. Robinson says the median family income is $66,900 a year. Though that is down from a peak of $71,100 in 2002, it is still significantly higher than the household incomes in similar-sized markets, such as Las Vegas or Orlando, Fla.



Through its boom, Austin beckoned to people of various age groups and interests, as well as to large high-tech employers. “We were a high-flying community in the ’90s,” Robinson said. But the tech industry collapse of 2001 did hurt, he adds, and the local economy is only now starting to recover.

Nowadays government — city, county, state and federal — is still the No. 1 employer. But the local Chamber of Commerce continues to support the expansion of the semiconductor and computer software and hardware industries, and has lured biomedical, wireless communications and automotive components companies in the past year. The influx of new companies is keeping the job market healthy.

“Jobs are up, with unemployment at 4.7 percent,” and the retail real estate investment market is heating up, said Blackburn. Retail sales, up each year, are projected to hit $20 billion by year-end, he adds.

But in spite of Austin’s phenomenal growth — or perhaps because of it — “we’ve been underserved for retail,” said Todd Wallace, Austin vice president for retail at Dallas-based Staubach Co., which is a full-service real estate brokerage with 19 offices across the United States. Staubach recently began operating in the market. “There’s a tremendous amount of growth in Austin and the suburbs of Round Rock and Buda.”

As is true of most growing cities, the majority of Austin’s new retail development is taking place in the suburbs. New rooftops are rising in western Austin, Round Rock and Pflugerville. And the south Interstate 35 corridor in Hays County is a hot zone for retail, with a planned Cabela’s store expected to spur still more development (see story).

Retail space metrics are holding up well too. Rents average $35.54 per square foot at regional centers and $18.85 per square foot for nonregional space, according to Blackburn. Neighborhood center rents average $19.96 and strip centers, $16.47. Anchor rates in new centers are typically about $9 to $15 per square foot, with junior anchors paying $12 to $20 per square foot and in-line shops paying $20 to $60, he says. (All figures are triple net, including taxes, insurance and common-area-maintenance fees, Blackburn said.) Nationally, rents per square foot average $40.12 at regional malls, $20.42 at power centers and $17.43 at grocery store-anchored neighborhood service centers, according to the 2004 Global Market Report by NAI, a real estate brokerage network.

IN THE PIPELINE

Buda Town Center
Developer: Simon Property Group Size: Lifestyle center, size to be determined Status: Predevelopment

CityWay at Double Creek Village
Developers: Forest City California, Walters Southwest Size: 600,000 square feet of retail in mixed-use development of 330 acres Status: Predevelopment

The Domain
Developers: Simon Property Group, Endeavor Real Estate Group Size: 750,000 square feet of open-air village set on 50 acres Status: Predevelopment

Hill Country Galleria
Developers: International Development Management, Lincoln Property Co. Size: 1.7 million-square-foot mixed-use development, including 1 million-square-foot retail center Status: Opening fall 2006

The Market retail district(five downtown blocks)
Developer: Schlosser Development Co. Size: 900,000-square-foot downtown project Status: 80,000-square-foot Whole Foods Market opening early 2005, 200,000 square feet of retail opening late 2006

Round Rock Premium Outlets
Developer: Chelsea Property Group Size: 430,000 square feet Status: Opening fall 2006

Shops at the Galleria
Developers: International Development Management, Lincoln Property Co. Size: 570,000 square feet Status: Opening October 2005

Wolf Ranch
Developer: Simon Property Group Size: 750,000-square-foot center under construction on 101 acres Status: Opening July 2005


Big-box boom

It’s a sign of Austin’s growth, Blackburn notes, that Wal-Mart is moving out of established stores of 50,000 to 100,000 square feet and into larger supercenters (about 225,000 square feet in this market) built nearby. Other retailers then take over the vacancies. Blackburn handled four sales of Wal-Mart properties now occupied by second-generation users including Oklahoma City-based crafts company Hobby Lobby Stores, Columbus, Ohio-based closeout specialist Big Lots and Nashville, Tenn.-based Tractor Supply Co.

Value-oriented big boxes are driving many of the new projects in the suburbs. Sears, which already has two full-line stores in the market, chose Austin for its fifth Sears Grand store. (The company foresees having at least a dozen Sears Grands in the United States by the end of 2005.) Preliminary site work began in September on the one-level, 180,000-square-foot store, which is going up at I-35 and Parmer Lane, says spokeswoman Lisa Gibbons. The freestanding one-stop home and family shopping store, located next to Tech Ridge Shopping Center, will carry everything from milk to refrigerators and is slated to open next fall.

Developers plan to bring some 6.9 million square feet of retail space next year, with an additional 4 million square feet coming online in 2006, says Blackburn. This year Austin is absorbing about 2 million square feet of new space, and the occupancy rate on multitenant retail properties is holding at 93.5 percent, he adds.

Kohls, Target and T.J. Maxx are among the 12 that will anchor Simon’s Wolf Ranch, which is under construction in Georgetown, a suburb north of Austin. The 750,000-square-foot open-air center, scheduled to open in July, will be perched on a bluff overlooking the San Gabriel River, says Myles Minton, Simon’s senior vice president for development. Other announced anchors include Linens ’n Things, Michaels, Office Depot and PetsMart.

Thanks to its acquisition of Chelsea Property Group, Simon also counts the 430,000-square-foot Round Rock Premium Outlets among its upcoming projects in the market. This will be the second Premium Outlets center in Texas, the first being in Allen, near Dallas. A Chelsea spokeswoman says construction will start in mid-2005 for a fall 2006 opening. Round Rock is the home of tech manufacturer Dell, the area’s largest private employer.



On the western edge of Austin, locally based International Development Management and partner Dallas-based Lincoln Property Co. are building the first of two centers planned for the Village of Bee Cave. (Invesco is an equity partner in the project.) Long referred to as the Shops at the Galleria but likely to be renamed, the 570,000-square-foot center is going up on an 88-acre tract near state highways 71 and 620. The opening is scheduled for next October. It is one component of a mixed-use development that International Development President Christopher Milam says will include 200,000 square feet of offices and 450 housing units.

International Development and Lincoln also plan to build a larger lifestyle center of 1.7 million square feet on a 145-acre tract north of the Shops at the Galleria project. (Phoenix-based Opus West is an equity partner in this project.) It has been referred to as Hill Country Galleria for several years, but this name, too, may change because its scope was reduced from four anchors to two, Milam says. A department store, a high-end grocery store, a bookstore and a multiplex cinema have signed on, though he would not identify them. Construction on the first retail phase (440,000 square feet) is scheduled to start in April, and the opening is targeted for the fall of 2006. At the southern tip of Austin, Forest City California reportedly will enter the market for the first time, teaming up with Walters Southwest, of Austin, to develop a 600,000-square-foot center called CityWay at the planned mixed-use Double Creek Village. The developers declined to comment about the project or its timetable. The Austin American-Statesman described CityWay as a master-planned development on 330 acres straddling FM 1626 west of Interstate 35.

But not all Austin’s retail activity is suburban. Storied Texas institution Neiman Marcus is opening an outpost downtown at The Domain, a joint venture between Simon and Austin’s Endeavor Real Estate Group. Set in the heart of the city, near the University of Texas, the 750,000-square-foot retail village concept is scheduled to start construction next year. The 50-acre site is part of 235 acres Endeavor bought from IBM. The property, which boasts 2,600 feet fronting MoPac Expressway, is within a mile of another Simon center, The Arboretum.

“It came down to waiting until the right property came along,” says Wayne Hussey, senior vice president of properties and new store development at Neiman Marcus, which has a Last Call clearance center in Austin. “There’s a lot of money in Austin right now. Economically, it’s been through some tough times, but it’s coming back, and they love Neiman Marcus.” Devotees of the tony chain now drive three hours each way to shop at its Dallas and Houston stores, Hussey says. Neiman Marcus plans to open a store in San Antonio’s Shops at La Cantera, 70 miles to Austin’s south, next year.

Though development is chugging along in Austin, it’s not necessarily the easiest place to build. “It’s as close to developing in Southern California as you get in Texas,” Milam said. “There are lots of hills and lakes and environmental issues to be addressed. It’s unlike Dallas and Houston, where the land is flat and you can build on every corner.”

But there’s an upside to that for those who have projects on the way: It will keep the competition at bay.
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  #102  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2005, 6:51 PM
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any new pics of austin?
     
     
  #103  
Old Posted Jul 1, 2005, 8:22 PM
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HANDY ANDY Grocery is downtown and there is a Walgreens and Eckerds and several other grocery type stores.
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  #104  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2005, 10:56 PM
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If your talking about San Antonio's Handy Andy, they pulled out of there a long time ago. But on Austin's retail rush, its awesome, experiancing the same thing we are, but I'm just wondering will San Antonio or Austin be able to support every single little thing that is thrown at them, its just millions of sq. feet being poured into both markets, its a lot. Maybe I'm just a pessimist, I don't know, it just seems like a lot of retail.
     
     
  #105  
Old Posted Jul 7, 2005, 5:36 PM
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Updated/Larger Rendering of 24-story ZOM apt tower

I have located an updated and larger rendering of the planned 24-story ZOM residential tower development on W 5th, in the West End district:



http://www.zomholland.nl/austin.htm

ZOM Austin I, L.P. is being formed to develop a 290 unit luxury high rise rental project in Austin, Texas. Located at the western edge of Austin’s Central Business District overlooking Shoal Creek, ZOM Austin I will be the city’s first AA luxury rental high-rise, at a new epicenter of pedestrian-oriented development in downtown Austin. With unparalleled views of downtown, Town Lake and the lush rolling hills of West Austin, the distinctive twenty-four story residential tower will join an already vibrant neighborhood. The building complex will feature 290 residential units and 8,140 square feet of street level retail. The residential units will be housed in a 24-story high-rise tower, with a four-story townhome structure over the retail shops. Targeted to the affluent lifestyle renter, ZOM Austin I will offer a variety of large living spaces with unit features and building amenities not presently available in the downtown Austin market, and is sure to become Austin’s prestige urban living address. The $19 million equity offering of limited partnership interests is being marketed through ZOM Holland B.V. Groundbreaking is scheduled for September 2005.
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  #106  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2005, 1:30 PM
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UT baseball stadium to get face-lift

UT baseball stadium to get face-lift

Disch-Falk Field work scheduled to be finished by 2008.

Before:


After:


Before:


After:




By Cedric Golden
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Friday, July 08, 2005

Club seating, a new facade and about 1,400 additional seats top the list of planned improvements being considered for 30-year-old Disch-Falk Field, the baseball stadium at the University of Texas.

Texas men's athletics director DeLoss Dodds said the locker rooms and bullpens also will be revamped as part of an $18 million renovation that is projected to begin within 12 to 18 months and be completed in two to 2 1/2 years. Under that schedule, the renovated stadium would be in place in time for the Longhorns' 2008 season.

The Longhorns will continue to play at their home field near Interstate 35 and Martin Luther King Boulevard during the construction. Texas Coach Augie Garrido has long maintained he is not interested in playing in another stadium while Disch-Falk is renovated.

Once the project wraps up, some fans seated down the base lines can expect a better view of the playing field, as the foul territory will be lessened in order to add extra seats and move the dugouts closer to the field.

The bleachers located down the the right-field line also will be moved closer to the field and raised in elevation — to match the level of the grandstand seats, Dodds said.

In all, the seating capacity of Disch-Falk is projected to rise from 6,649 to 8,000.

Plans also call for the concourse to be remodeled to include new concession areas and bathrooms. The area will be widened to make room for the club boxes, which will be located atop the concourse and near the top row of stadium seats.

The plan is to get the club seating up and running to generate immediate revenue to help pay for the project. Before the remodeling takes place, Dodds will seek input from Garrido and his assistant coaches and players, the Texas sports information department and the media. Surveys also were sent to Longhorns fans to gather their ideas, and Dodds said Texas officials also plan to study stadium projects at other schools.

Dodds added that Garrido will have the final say about how to allocate funds for the renovation.

"I'm personally glad they're keeping the stadium in the same location,'' said Garrido, who led Texas to a sixth national championship last month. "Because there will come a time when the campus will expand and that will probably will be east. So the stadium will one day become part of the campus.''

Dodds said the Texas athletics department will raise $7 million of the $18 million cost through private donations while the remainder will be financed with bonds. He said construction will not begin until the athletics department's $7 million portion is raised, but that $2 million in pledges already has been received.

Pending approval of the project by the men's athletics council and the Board of Regents, an architect and construction firm will be hired within 12 to 18 months.

"This will take a lot of people helping us,'' Dodds said. "Everybody that loves Texas baseball will get a chance to be part of this project, and we will begin that initiative within the next few weeks.''

As for the playing surface at Disch-Falk, the athletics department will consider replacing the AstroTurf field, which was installed in 1999, with grass once the turf wears out. Dodds estimated that won't happen for three or four more years.

Grass could spring up sooner, though.

If private donations surpassed the $7 million mark and reached $9 million to $10 million, Dodds said, grass could become part of the revised Disch-Falk landscape sooner rather than later.

[email protected]; 912-5944



The existing stadium

Opened: 1975
Cost to build: $2.5 million
First game: April 19, 1975 (Texas defeats TCU 18-3)
Playing surface: AstroTurf
Seating capacity: 6,649

Proposed renovation

Project's price tag: $18 million

Planned improvements:
New facade similar in style to that of Royal-Memorial Stadium; club seating with elevator access; new press box; new bullpens; about 1,400 additional seats; new lighting and sound systems; new locker rooms; bigger concourse area with concessions and restrooms.

Ballpark figures

A look at the Big 12 baseball stadiums:

School Venue Opened/
Renovated Capacity Surface
Baylor Baylor Ballpark 1999 (O) 5,000 Grass
Kansas Hoglund Ballpark 1999 (R) 2,500 Grass
Kansas State Tointon Stadium 2002 (R) 2,000+ Grass
Missouri Taylor Stadium 2000 (O) 2,200 Grass
Nebraska Hawks Field 2001 (O) 8,500 Grass
Oklahoma L. Dale Mitchell Park 2002 (R) 2,700 Grass
Oklahoma State Allie P. Reynolds Stadium 1994 (R) 4,000 Grass
Texas Disch-Falk Field 2003 (R) 6,649 AstroTurf
Texas A&M C.E. Olsen Field 1994 (R) 7,053 Grass
Texas Tech Dan Law Field 1996 (R) 5,050 Grass/AstroTurf

Note: (O) designates year opened; (R) designates year of latest renovation to seating facilities.
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  #107  
Old Posted Jul 8, 2005, 4:57 PM
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well alright. Its about time for one of the greatest programs in all of college sports. Now it will match the rest of campus finally.

And I don't know how I feel about the turf. Baseball should be on grass, but its almost like a UT landmark or something to play on the huge field with the fast artificial turf. Doesn't matter I guess. UT wins on any surface, anyywhere.
     
     
  #108  
Old Posted Jul 26, 2005, 7:49 PM
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Re: Height Restriction?

Quote:
Originally Posted by davinSA
Does the city of Austin have a height restriction on tall buildings? I would guess because of our State Capital. Anyone know???
No, I've heard this straight from the City of Austin itself saying that there are no height restrictions in downtown, except for a few capitol view corridors and there is a limit of 180 feet along the river. And in the West Campus area on the far northwestern end of downtown buildings can only go to 175 feet, but they may also exceed that if they meet other guidelines for density and pedestrian-friendliness. Outside of downtown they cap it at 120 feet. That may also change in a few years as they are planning for density pockets around lightrail stations across the city. And there's a huge plan at the intersection of Loop 1, (Mopac), Loop 360, and 183 near the Arboretum for an "edge city". They've compared it to Houston's and Dallas' Galleria areas and there would also be a mall similar to those. So I would expect height restrictions at those locations, espectially the "edge city" one to go up. Back in the late 80s/ early 90s there was a plan for twin 25-story towers just few miles south of there. Plans were ultimately scrapped. But who knows it might have happened. There are already a few buildings that were built in the 70s and 80s outside of downtown that do exceed 120 feet by only 25 to 40 feet. But there aren't any like what you see in Houston, Dallas and San Antonio. That could change, and will most likely have to if Austin is serious about making itself more dense.
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  #109  
Old Posted Jul 26, 2005, 8:11 PM
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Oh man, look at that, the ZOM Tower. That's the first I've seen of it. I can't wait to see that thing rise. I have to get its height. That will be the first 200 footer in the West End. That building is really going to stand out.


By the way, some more updates here.

I had a chance to view the blueprints for the new Marriott Residence Inn/Courtyard. It is going to be one building, 12 floors tall. The height - 141 feet, 12 floors, and it will be finished by July of 2006. I had 20 minutes all by myself (with permission), to sit and view the blueprints. I'll get this info up on Skyscrapers.com in just a few minutes. This makes the new Marriott the 2nd tallest building under construction in Austin right now. The Milago Condominiums is just 1 foot taller and 1 floor taller. I also was able to view the blueprints for that building.

The Residence Inn side will be the higher side, 141 feet to the top of the penthouse. The mainroof floor is at 122 feet and the parapet is at 132 feet. The top floor height, floor number 12 is at 111 feet.

The Courtyard Inn side will be shorter, this is on the eastern end of the building and will rise to 130 feet to the penthouse, the mainroof floor will be at 111 feet, and the parapet will be at 121 feet. The top floor height, floor number 11, will be at 100 feet above the street.

I also spoke with Allan Nutt who is the architect for the Piazza Novona and he says the building will be only 74 feet tall. They squeezed in the 7 floors by having only 9 1/2 foot floor slabs. This was because the city considers any building over 75 feet to be a "highrise". There's also another 7-story residential building going up just 3 or 4 blocks from the Piazza Navona. I couldn't find anyone to talk with about it, and I didn't even get the name. No signs!

Anyway, with all the highrise projects coming up later this year and next, I'll be busy looking up their info.
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  #110  
Old Posted Jul 27, 2005, 3:36 AM
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I was adding a building, and connecting the companies, and one of them had this on their site. The Southwest Quadrant of downtown Austin. Looks like it will be busy there in the future if developers have their way. Check out the before and after aerial pics. Note: the site work going on for the Frost Bank Tower at right.

Scroll down, check out the rendering/model at the bottom. You can make out the Frost Bank Tower, (tallest in image, pointy top), 300 West Sixth, (rounded top), One Congress Plaza, (short building situated diagnally on it's site), 100 Congress across the street from it. And the blue tower, is the proposed 27-story 101 Colorado. To the left of it is are the CSC Buildings with city hall between them. Behind city hall is the Block 21 Tower. Now that huge section of blue models to the left of city hall is throwing me off. I'
m not sure what those are. But to the left of those you can see Seaholm, (power plant, with smoke stacks). The next group of blue models to the left of Seaholm, I think that's supposed to be the Gables project. They want to put a 12 to 15 story tower, and a 8 to 9 story tower there.
http://www.blackvernooy.com/aboutus/news/swquadrant/web_swquadrant.pdf

Go here also. Take a look at 721 Congress. That's a nice little project.
http://www.blackvernooy.com/aboutus/news/news.htm
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  #111  
Old Posted Jul 28, 2005, 9:04 PM
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36 STORY CONDO PLANNED FOR SW DOWNTOWN AUSTIN

Big news... a huge condo tower is planned for the west-end district of downtown, near 5th and Lamar. This thing is huge. see today's Austin American Statesman article below

------------------------------

New downtown condo tower will rise 36 stories

Project will be tallest west of Congress

By Shonda Novak
AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
Thursday, July 28, 2005

http://www.statesman.com/business/content/business/stories/07/29tower.html




A dramatic change is coming to downtown Austin's skyline, with plans under way for a $60 million condominium high-rise that would tower 36 stories over downtown's southwestern edge.

Developers expect to start construction in about a year on the tower, slated for an acre at Third and Bowie streets. The site is just west of the Gables West Avenue Lofts and two blocks south of Whole Foods Market's flagship store.

Called Spring, the tower will have several levels of parking above and below ground, plus shops on the ground floor with 20-foot sidewalks shaded by awnings.

Plans call for 220 condo units priced from about $200,000 to $400,000.

Most of the units will sell for about $250,000, said Larry Warshaw, who is developing the project with Perry Lorenz, Robert Barnstone and Diana Zuniga.

Lorenz and Barnstone were partners in the Nokonah condominiums on North Lamar Boulevard and Ninth Street. Warshaw and Lorenz co-developed the Pedernales Lofts condominiums east of downtown. Zuniga, a well-known broker, also is a principal in the partnership that sold the land.

Although some nearby neighborhood groups have opposed proposed high-rise buildings in the area, developers say their tower would be constructed so as to not block view of downtown or the Capitol.

The project will require a zoning change because the tower will rise 400 feet, nearly four times the site's existing 120-foot height limit.

It will be the tallest project west of Congress and the second tallest among a wave of new downtown towers. The highest is a 41-story residential/retail/hotel tower that developer Tom Stacy plans at Congress Avenue and Fifth Street.

"There will always be folks who think a building is too tall," Lorenz said. "You have to weigh those personal preferences against city policy and good urban planing principles" that encourage density in downtown areas."

He said the design maximizes usable space, allowing the condos to be priced below the going rate for downtown, where the average price is about $500,000.

Developers, who have briefed city officials and City Council members on the project, say they do not plan to ask for financial incentives.

Mayor Will Wynn said the project will mean a significant increase in city tax revenue — Barnstone estimates the figure at $1.5 million a year — without requiring any additional public investment in infrastructure or services.

"That's tax revenue straight to the bottom line, to help pay for things like parks, libraries and public safety," Wynn said in a statement.

http://www.statesman.com/business/content/business/stories/07/29tower.html
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  #112  
Old Posted Jul 28, 2005, 11:02 PM
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Oh my gosh. I've added it to Skyscrapers.com. 400 feet tall, that's what I thought when I read it, "Tower would be tallest west of Congress". The One American Center sits just west of Congress and it's 395 feet. I'm really very excited about the prospects for some views of this thing in my neighborhood. Typically we don't have views of downtown until you get to a spot in our neighborhood where you have a wide open view. Our neighborhood sits just a little too far west for us to have views on our street. But with this thing being in the West End, and at 400 feet tall, that might change. Two streets over on my aunts street she has "seasonal views" when the trees lose their leaves, you can see the crown of the Frost Bank Tower, mostly at night, and once in a while even a glimpse of it from the top of my street. But like I said, this thing will be farther west, so who knows. I'm stoked! So for everyone who doesn't know folks, this would be Austin's current 2nd tallest behind the Frost Bank Tower--515 feet--33 floors, and infront of the One American Center 395 feet--32 floors. But it would rank 3rd with the completion of 501 Congress a 680 foot 41-story residential/hotel/retail project slated to breakground next year.

Guys, next year is going to be very interesting. Hopfully those neighborhoods will realize that this thing really isn't going to block many views. It looks really narrow, maybe only a street's width, 80 feet wide. Better up than out.
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Last edited by KevinFromTexas; Jul 28, 2005 at 11:27 PM.
     
     
  #113  
Old Posted Jul 29, 2005, 1:11 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by KevinFromTexas
Better up than out.
Very true.
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  #114  
Old Posted Jul 29, 2005, 6:57 PM
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A Vancouver, British Columbia architect is designing it. Foad Rafii. The American Statesman also put out an updated article about the project in today's paper. They missed the deadline for yesterday's paper. One of the developers of the tower, Robert Barnstone, says he admires the City of Vancouver for it's urbanity. Here's what the article said about him. "Barnstone often cites Vancouver, British Columbia, as a city that has embraced high-rise development while maintaining its scenic beauty and liveability." Developers are calling this tower one of the first steps towards making it possible for teachers, firefighters, young professionals, and middle income families, not just the very wealthy. This is what we need folks, a sort of saturation of large scale cheaper projects so everyday people can live downtown if they want/need to.

From the Austin Business Journal


36-story condo project to rise in downtown Austin

A new 36-story with more than 200 condominium units is being planned for downtown.

behind the project, called Spring. Zenith Partners is led by some well-known names in local real estate: Perry Lorenz, Larry Warshaw, Robert Barstone and Diana Zuniga.

"The unique design of this building -- tall and thing, on a small footprint -- is the key to making the units very affordable," Lorenz says. "For the first time, living in downtown Austin will be a real option for teachers, firefighters, young professionals, and middle-income families -- not just the very wealthy."

Most units in Spring will be priced around $250,000, with some units under $200,000, according to Lorenz.

The project's partners will ask the City of Austin to change the site's zoning to accommodate the additional height needed.

Austin Mayor Will Wynn says he's supportive of what the project could do for the city.

"A project like this in downtown Austin will, first and foremost, mean a significant increase in city tax revenue, without requiring any additional public investment in infrastructure or services," Wynn says. "That's tax revenue straight to the bottom line, to help pay for things like parks, libraries, and public safety."
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  #115  
Old Posted Jul 31, 2005, 7:14 AM
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Good to see ya back Kevin. Thiis is huge news of course. I'm trying to picture what is on this piece of land at the moment? If memory serves correct, it is nothing more than a parking lot, right?

Hopefully the NIMBY's wont have any serious effect on the peliminary height of this tower.
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  #116  
Old Posted Jul 31, 2005, 9:09 PM
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I'm not really sure what's there now. Probably just a parking lot, or vacant building. I checked my map of downtown, (the one that the city has on their website with the building locations/names) and it's too far west to be on that map. But I checked it on a city map street map of course it doesn't show what's there now. But I did notice that my street runs north south perfectly in line with that lot. So there's a good chance there may be a view of it from the top of our street.
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  #117  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2005, 9:27 PM
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I found some good pictures, (aerials) to show where Spring will rise. Whoever took these, ThANK YOU, they're beautiful.

See more of these pictures here.
http://skyscraperpage.com/gallery/showga...11&cat=500&perpage=12&sort=1&ppuser=9171

In this picture Spring will rise to the left, (west). Note the last bridge on the left side of the picture. The tower will rise 1 block to the right of that bridge, and 3 blocks north of the river. It will be 400 feet tall. For comparison to the Frost Bank Tower, it will rise to a point just below the crown on the Frost Bank Tower. Eventually Austin's skyline will encompass everything you see here from Interstate 35, at right, (east), to Lamar Boulevard, (main large street at left) basically doubling the current size of the skyline. Developers and the city both say that downtown Austin is only half developed.


A closer in view of downtown. The yellow tower crane in the lower right is for the new Marriott at the Convention Center, 141 feet tall with 12 floors.


And um, City of the Violet Crown indeed...
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  #118  
Old Posted Aug 3, 2005, 10:45 PM
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great photos Kevin
     
     
  #119  
Old Posted Aug 5, 2005, 11:59 PM
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Thanks but those aren't mine. I posted the link to the rest of them in that post above the pics. Go see them, they're incredible.
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  #120  
Old Posted Aug 8, 2005, 3:11 AM
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Wow, its starting to look like the boom from a few years back was the tip of the iceberg.
     
     
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