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"AUSTIN, Texas — In March 2020, the outlook in Austin was bleak after the pandemic forced business closures, lockdown or...
03/24/2021

"AUSTIN, Texas — In March 2020, the outlook in Austin was bleak after the pandemic forced business closures, lockdown orders and the cancellation of South by Southwest, the annual festival that brings in millions of dollars for the city.

A year later, optimism has replaced despair. Across the nation, the coronavirus remains a threat and empty office buildings and restaurants have hampered growth, but Austin, the Texas capital, has emerged as a hot spot for commercial real estate investment and a magnet for out-of-state corporate relocations that are strengthening its allure as a center of high-tech industry.

“It’s the hottest market in the country right now,” said Mike McDonald, vice chairman at Cushman & Wakefield who represents pension funds, insurance companies and real estate investment trusts. “Millennials are moving to the Sun Belt, and companies are following the millennials. Investors are following the companies.”

The city has become the No. 1 destination in the United States for potential commercial real estate investment, according to the CBRE Group, a national real estate services and investment firm. It displaced Greater Los Angeles as the most preferred market for 2021 because of the resilience in its labor market and an outlook for steady growth, according to an investor survey that CBRE will release this week.
The economic impact of the pandemic resulted in a net loss of 33,400 jobs in the Austin metropolitan area in 2020, according to the Austin Chamber of Commerce, but the influx of new companies helped Austin sustain the blow better than most other cities. A record 22,114 new jobs were attributed to businesses either expanding in Austin or moving to the city in 2020, compared with 13,562 in 2019, the chamber said.

The city’s prosperity is part of a broad economic wave that has spread across parts of the Sun Belt. The Dallas-Fort Worth area, which ranked No. 2 on CBRE’s investment survey, has also been high on the list of urban centers that have seen stability during the pandemic.

“The Sun Belt markets of Austin, Dallas, Phoenix and Atlanta were among the top-performing metros where the least number of jobs were lost in 2020,” CBRE said in its survey.

Home to offices of tech giants such as Apple, Dell, Facebook, IBM and Samsung, Austin is increasingly considered one of the nation’s dominant tech hubs after Silicon Valley, promoting itself as “Silicon Hills,” a reference to its location in the Texas Hill Country.

That cachet has helped lure others. Elon Musk, the chief executive of Tesla, said in December that he had moved to Texas from California, an announcement made as construction crews were erecting a $1.1 billion, 5,000-employee Tesla factory in the East Austin area. Oracle, one of the world’s largest database companies, announced in December that it was moving its headquarters to Austin from Silicon Valley.

“It’s become the second home for a large cluster of the larger tech companies,” said Charlie W. Malet, president and chief investment officer of San Francisco-based Shorenstein Properties, which invests in 22 markets across the country, including Austin. “It’s no secret that a market like Northern California, the Silicon Valley job market, is incredibly tight. There’s massive competition for talent. And many of the growing tech companies have decided that ‘we can’t have everything in one location; we need to spread our wings.’”

Nationwide, office vacancy rates rose to 17.1 percent by the end of 2020, the third consecutive quarterly increase, according to a report released in January by JLL, a commercial real estate services company. But the market in Austin was strong, “with less than 1 percent net occupancy losses in 2020,” the report said.

New projects in Austin are adding skyscrapers downtown and creating retail and residential complexes elsewhere in the city. Although the pandemic has not held back development, it has influenced design changes like touch-free elevators, expanded open space, operable windows and improved ventilation.

Experts attribute Austin’s counterintuitive economic performance to a number of factors: a stature as an education center and tech hub, a business-friendly climate, an abundance of social attractions and the charming eccentricity that spawned the slogan “Keep Austin Weird.”

“All the things that make Austin an attractive place before the pandemic are still here despite the pandemic,” said the mayor, Steve Adler, who noted that South by Southwest returned this month as an online event and that organizers were working toward its physical return in 2022.

The flood of job-seekers coming to Texas has led to an influx of out-of-state investment capital, said William C. Jenkins, a principal of Stonelake Capital Partners, a developer in Austin that is planning a 50-story office and residential tower downtown. As migrating companies create new jobs in the Lone Star State, he said, institutional investors are looking for “new cutting-edge, best-of-market real estate in Austin and in Texas” with an eye to “write big investment checks” for major projects.

Much of the city’s appeal stems from its posture as a “very socially progressive and eclectic, creative city” that benefits from being in a state with lower regulation and lower taxes, said Colin Connolly, the president and chief executive of Cousins.

Brandywine Realty Trust, the largest landlord in its hometown, Philadelphia, has operated in the Austin market for 15 years and is starting a multiyear development on a 66-acre site near the Domain. The Broadmoor campus, which is anchored by an IBM complex, is expected to be completed in about 10 years, at a cost of about $3 billion. Planners say it will infuse the area with an uptown vibe combining office, residential and retail space among at least 11 acres of parks.

The company is also nearing completion on the 405 Colorado, a 25-story office tower that will begin housing tenants this summer.

“People believe long term that Austin is on a roll and continues to be,” said William D. Redd, Brandywine’s executive vice president and senior managing director. “If you’re a big investment firm, you want a piece of that action.”"

The Texas city is a hot spot for commercial real estate investment and a magnet for corporations looking to move to a high-tech hub.

"Austin's median home price inside the city limits hit $491,000, yet another record."
03/20/2021

"Austin's median home price inside the city limits hit $491,000, yet another record."

Neither snow nor ice nor power outages can slow the Central Texas real estate market. Last month, despite a crippling winter storm, Austin's median home price inside the city limits ...

03/19/2021

"California-headquartered Google LLC announced March 18 it plans to invest $50 million in Texas this year in office space and data center sites."

- Austin Business Journal

"Sales of single-family homes, townhomes and condos soared almost 24% in January, with 2,523 homes changing hands, a rec...
03/02/2021

"Sales of single-family homes, townhomes and condos soared almost 24% in January, with 2,523 homes changing hands, a record volume for the month.

Half of the houses sold for more than $365,000 and half sold for less, a January record for the median price and an increase of nearly 20% over January 2020's median."

Central Texas home sales soared almost 24% in January, and the region's median home-sales price jumped almost 20% to $365,000.

02/27/2021

The package passed the House but a provision to raise the minimum wage is likely to die in the Senate before it lands on President Biden's desk.

HEB, always pulling for Texans.
02/20/2021

HEB, always pulling for Texans.

Thank you H-E-B for all of you pulling all nighters and being there for our families and being away from yours. the is lucky to have you.
Superhero meetings are on Fridays. Don’t be late, doesn’t like us being late.

"The quick decision that grid operators made in the early hours of Monday morning to begin what was intended to be rolli...
02/19/2021

"The quick decision that grid operators made in the early hours of Monday morning to begin what was intended to be rolling blackouts — but lasted days for millions of Texans — occurred because operators were seeing warning signs that massive amounts of energy supply was dropping off the grid."

Officials with the Electric Reliability Council of Texas said that grid operators implemented blackouts to avoid a catastrophic failure that could have left Texans in the dark for months.

The result was a huge amount of water lost this week, utility Director Greg Meszaros said Thursday.“Tuesday night and We...
02/19/2021

The result was a huge amount of water lost this week, utility Director Greg Meszaros said Thursday.

“Tuesday night and Wednesday morning when this peaked out, we were losing 325,000,000 gallons of water at our peak,” he said. “That is an incredible amount of water, nothing I’ve ever seen before.”

Austin Water says there are tens of thousands of leaks in its system because of these winter storms and many have not been detected.

02/19/2021

Among the deceased animals was 58-year-old Violet, who was the sanctuary's oldest chimp.

02/19/2021

Rachel Maddow looks at the bitter cold snap that hit Texas in February of 2011, knocking out the electricity grid, and the subsequent report that warned of the necessity to winterize the state's power infrastructure or risk exactly the type of calamity that Texans have been suffering this week.

02/19/2021
Below is a list of all HEB's planning to be open.183 & Lakeline Drive620 & 2222Seventh Street & Pleasant Valley RoadSpic...
02/18/2021

Below is a list of all HEB's planning to be open.

183 & Lakeline Drive
620 & 2222
Seventh Street & Pleasant Valley Road
Spicewood Springs & 183
Wells Branch Parkway & 1825
Slaughter Lane & Menchaca Road
Riverside Drive & South Pleasant Valley
183 & 290
FM1431 & 183
North Lamar Boulevard & Rundberg Lane
Parmer Lane & McNeil Drive
Parmer Lane & I35
Anderson Lane & 620
South Congress Avenue & I-35 (Southpark Meadows)

H-E-B is reopening some stores with very limited hours on Wednesday, February 17, following the second in a series of brutal winter storms blasting through Austin. The Texas grocery chain ...

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