
“Our hearts are heavy because this isn’t the outcome that we wanted tonight. Other conditions Rusthoven highlighted include minimums of one office building and three residential/hotel towers, with at least 40,000 square feet of pedestrian-oriented uses (like retail, bars, or restaurants) to ensure a "truly mixed-use project." Those include a commitment that 95% of the 4,000 parking spaces built for the project will be underground (currently, that's four floors of below-grade parking the SCW plan had envisioned six to eight floors of above-grade parking). "Myself and all the other city staff that have been working on this case for the past 2½ years, kept that in mind," he told Council, before outlining what he considers to be key elements in the still-under-negotiation development deal between Endeavor and the city. While introducing the case to Council, Chief Zoning Officer Jerry Rusthoven described the site as the "most prominent location" he has worked on in his nearly three decades at the city's ever-changing planning department. (The developers have committed to retaining public access to the bat viewing area near the Ann Richards Congress Avenue Bridge.) Designers also plan to work with the city to improve pedestrian and bike access to and on the site and a future Project Connect Blue Line station on the southeastern corner of the site.

The plan also includes around 8 acres of open space – parks and plazas accessible to the public along the lakefront. Plans for the PUD include an estimated 1,378 residential units, a 275-bed hotel, 1.5 million square feet of office space, and about 150,000 square feet of restaurant and retail space, contained within six towers in three different zones allowing maximum heights of 250, 480, and 525 feet. Insiders call the project the Statesman PUD (i.e., planned unit development, like Mueller) formally, it's 305 South Congress, the address of the Statesman building, known for years in this newspaper as the Batcave.ĭeveloper Endeavor Real Estate Group is working with architects from Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and with Armbrust & Brown attorney Richard Suttle to shepherd the PUD through the city's land use slog. Owned by the Cox family, which held onto the property after selling the Statesman itself in 2015, the 18-acre tract fronts Lady Bird Lake and anchors the 118 acres of real estate known as the South Central Waterfront, for which Council adopted a high-level master plan in 2016. Job postings come from NLx external site, by the National Labor Exchange, which is co-sponsored by the Direct Employers Association external site and the National Association of State Workforce Agencies external site.ĭisclaimer: Links to non-DOL Internet sites are provided for your convenience and do not constitute an endorsement.The prime piece of Downtown real estate that formerly housed the Austin American-Statesman's newsroom and printing press inched closer toward redevelopment last week, as Council at its April 7 meeting unanimously approved on first reading various land use changes requested by the landowner. Department of Labor, Employment and Training Administration. This data is delivered by an API from CareerOneStop external site, sponsored by U.S.

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