Found 53 blog entries tagged as downtown.

Mikala Compton

Austin American-Statesman reports, "the new year will bring new skyscrapers to downtown Austin.

In the past two decades, downtown has seen an unprecedented high-rise building boom that has transformed the city's central business district with towering condominium, apartment and office buildings along with hotels and scores of new shopping, dining and entertainment options.

Even as downtown's office market has languished as remote work has taken hold since the coronavirus pandemic, people still want to live in the center of the action, and that's keeping downtown's housing, retail and restaurant sectors bustling.

“With falling interest rates and strong population/job growth, I am quite optimistic that the downtown Austin condo market will see…

332 Views, 0 Comments

Northland Properties has constructed many hotels and resorts, such as the Sandman Signature Hotel in the United Kingdom in 2011. (Courtesy Northland Properties)

Community Impact Austin reports, "Dallas Stars owner Tom Gaglardi has chosen Austin and Cedar Park for the first two projects under his newly launched development company Northland Living.

Some background

A sister company of Northland Properties, which focuses on hotel and resort project development, Northland Living focuses on residential towers and mixed-use communities, according to a news release.

Tony Kaleel, who led the development of 44 East Avenue, is at the helm of Northland Living, serving as the president and chief operating officer.

The details

The first project in the Austin area is a downtown residential condo tower planned on a 0.81-acre site just west of the Texas state Capitol near 14th and Guadalupe streets.

Following closely behind…

345 Views, 0 Comments

Austin, Dallas and Houston (Getty)

TheRealDeal writes, "real estate in the Texas Triangle is magnetic, according to the Urban Land Institute.

Austin has the fifth-best real estate market in the nation going into 2024, the Austin Business Journal reported, citing the ULI’s Emerging Trends in Real Estate study, which compiled data and insights from over 2,000 industry experts to analyze shifts in the market and make predictions for the coming year. 

Austin’s ranking, down from No. 3 last year, reflects the city’s status as a “magnet city,” attracting both people and companies. Over recent years, Austin has seen significant investments from major corporations, such as Tesla and Samsung, which have drawn substantial business to the area. 

The city’s industrial sector is thriving,…

481 Views, 0 Comments

Downtown Austin ARNOLD WELLS/ABJ

Austin Business Journal writes, "Austin’s real estate market is still burning at a supernova level, according to a new study.

The Urban Land Institute, which focuses on real estate and land use, released its widely respected 2024 Emerging Trends in Real Estate report on Oct. 31. The report compiled data and insights from over 2,000 real estate industry experts to explore shifts and trends in the property sector and predict 10 markets to watch for the coming year.

Austin ranked fifth on the list this year, down from No. 3 last year. The rest of the top five was rounded out by other Sunbelt cities: Nashville at No. 1, then Phoenix, Dallas-Fort Worth and Atlanta.

ULI conducted the study in partnership with PricewaterhouseCoopers, a professional…

324 Views, 0 Comments

In an aerial view, apartments are seen undergoing construction on February 28, 2023 in Austin, Texas. Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Business Insider reports, "one of the biggest cities in one of the most car-dependent states in the country is cracking down on parking to deal with its housing affordability crisis.

Austin, Texas is getting rid of requirements that new construction — from single-family homes to shopping malls — build parking spots. The City Council voted eight to two last Thursday to eliminate its so-called "parking minimums," which mandate at least two parking spots for every single-family home and one-and-a-half spots for every one-bedroom apartment, with an additional half-spot for each extra bedroom.

The regulatory change won't eliminate existing parking or stop developers from building parking, it will just end a mandate that they build a certain number of…

338 Views, 0 Comments

Ryman Hospitality Properties, Inc. is set to begin a $40 million renovation of Austin’s Block 21 development including the ACL Live at the Moody Theater and the W Austin hotel following its 2022 purchase of the downtown mixed-use development. RYMAN HOSPITALITY PROPERTIES, INC.

Austin Business Journal reports, "Opry Entertainment Group, a subsidiary of Ryman Hospitality Properties Inc. (NYSE: RHP), will begin work this week on a $40 million renovation of downtown Austin’s Block 21, the Second Street mixed-use development home to Austin’s ACL Live at the Moody Theater and the W Austin hotel.

The renovation will include the construction of a new 2,060-square-foot terrace enclosure over the existing PNC Plaza, which will serve as a private event space designed to serve both ACL Live and the W Austin and is planned to be completed by the summer of 2024. Other improvements include a facelift to the W Austin entrance and other public spaces on site including its coffee shop, restaurant and bars. Renovations of the hotel’s more…

321 Views, 0 Comments

Austin American-Statesman writes, "Chase Tower, a high-rise that looms as a 21-story landmark in downtown Austin, is getting a new name.

The name — Procore Tower — was revealed Wednesday. An unveiling event featured a 4-foot-tall cake replica of the building at 221 W. Sixth St., between Colorado and Lavaca streets.

It's being named after Procore, which provides construction management software. Procore leases eight floors —almost 107,000 square feet of space — in the building. The tower, which has undergone multiple changes of ownership and renovations since being completed in 1974, is owned and managed by CIM Group.

Los Angeles-based CIM co-owns the tallest completed building on Austin's skyline — the 58-story downtown high-rise named the…

330 Views, 0 Comments

Pearlstone Partners CEO Robert Lee, Principal Emily Lee and President Bill Knauss stand outside Pearlstone's Parkside at Mueller development. The firm is seeking capital partners for three new condo projects it hopes to break ground on in the coming years. ARNOLD WELLS / ABJ

Austin Business Journal writes, "amid a year of muted activity for commercial real estate development, Pearlstone Partners LLC is betting big on the continued allure of Austin — it has three new projects up its sleeve that could total about $700 million in construction costs. That's on top of Robert Lee and his team forging ahead on three under-construction projects expected to deliver from early 2024 through 2025.

The Austin-based company just unveiled details on three multifamily communities planned to rise on prime sites, spread from Rainey Street to the northwest side of the Central Business District. All three are still in the investment phase, meaning they may not deliver for a few years.

Demand for housing has slowed across the board in…

428 Views, 0 Comments

Austin Business Journal writes, "Oracle Corp. seems about ready to move forward with long-term plans to expand its headquarters campus near downtown Austin.

The software giant in late August filed documents with the city of Austin outlining plans to add a third office building, measuring 287,510 square feet, to the site it owns off East Riverside Drive. It could also build a 255-room hotel.

The growth will be to the west of Oracle's (NYSE: ORCL) existing office buildings, which measure nearly 1 million square feet combined. The company wants to modify a planned unit development, or PUD, that governs the area's zoning by adding a more than two-acre tract bordering Tinnin Ford Road. The tract is home to the former Town Lake Village Condos, which…

765 Views, 0 Comments

CBRE’s Peter Jansen and Jennifer Joseph with 718 Red River Street and 501 East 8th Street (CBRE)

TheRealDeal reports, "an acre of land in downtown Austin primed for redevelopment has hit the market. 

The Salvation Army is selling its parcel at East 7th Street and Red River Street, which currently has two buildings and a half-acre surface parking lot. The larger of the structures is the former Salvation Army Downtown Center at 501 East 8th Street, and the other is a 1,500-square-foot retail building at 718 Red River Street, which sits noticeably tenantless amid a string of happening bars and restaurants.

The parcel, half a city block in total, has the potential to be redeveloped as a 230,000-square-foot, mixed-use development. Peter Jansen and Jennifer Joseph of CBRE are marketing the property.

Red River Street sits between the more…

348 Views, 0 Comments