CENTRAL Allandale By Jackie Potts An active, involved neighborhood association is the heart and soul behind the successful sense of community spirit that inhabits the Allandale neighborhood. Phyllis Brinkley, the editor of the Allandale Neighborhood Association's newsletter, The Allandale Neighbor, lists numerous improvements that the neighborhood has been instrumental in making a reality since she and her family moved to Allandale over 40 years ago. "We're the 28th largest neighborhood group," Brinkley says proudly. "Our annual Fourth of July Parade started in 1960, but it wasn't until October of 1973 that we organized the neighborhood association. Since then, we've been very active in making our community a good place to live." In addition to the Fourth of July Parade, they also sponsor an annual "Candy Cane Lane" at holiday time, and a Shoal Creek Cleanup event. Allandale was just recently redistricted, and is bounded by Anderson Lane on the north, by Shoal Creek at 45th Street (from MoPac to the Shoal Creek waterway, and following the waterway to Hancock Drive) to the south, with Burnet Road as its eastern boundary and MoPac as the western boundary. Zone: Central MLS Area: 2 Zip Code(s): 78757 Zip Code 78757 Demographic Profile The word "active" is almost an understatement Population: 21,197 when applied to the Allandale Neighborhood Median Housing Association. The neighborhood association has $162,725 Value been responsible for, among other things, Avg HH Size: 2.13 working with the city to have a retention pond Median HH Income: $48,818 built in 1986 to prevent flooding, having new Median Age 37.8 bridges built to for flood control, working with % Married: 47% the congressman's office to keep trains from % of HHs with stopping over in the neighborhood and noisily idling their engines for days on 20% Children: end, and building sewer line improvements under Shoal Creek Boulevard that % with College would prevent harming its namesake, Shoal Creek. 42% Degree: Other improvements brought about by the neighborhood association include % Owner Occupied 53% Housing the opening of the Yarborough Branch of the Austin Public Library in what Median Yr Dwelling was once the old Americana Theatre. "We also raised $20,000 of the total 1964 was Built $80,000 expense to improve (Beverly Sheffield Park). Improvements include new children's playground equipment, sidewalks, and restrooms." Brinkley Source: Claritas 2006 points to the library, the Northwest Recreation Center and its facilities, and the neighborhood churches as sure signs that Allandale is a thriving community. Parks: Beverly Sheffield Park includes Olympic-size swimming pool, children's "We're also in an excellent location, close to wading pool, children's downtown, and close to all the shopping and playground; picnic areas, retail in North Austin. We used to be tennis courts, and a pond. considered Northwest Austin. Now, with all the growth, we're Central Austin," laughs Brinkley. Northwest Little League park "We have a pretty good section of middle class includes several baseball folks living here in the Allandale–it's a pretty fields. good mix of older people, young business professionals, and young families. Our house Shoal Creek Boulevard and values (averaging $250,000-$300,000) have stayed pretty steady." Great Northern offer lanes designated for bicycles. But, as Brinkley points out, economics come and go. Neighborhoods are forever. "A lot of people who move here hate to ever have to move out. We A large off-the-leash dog park have pretty good local schools–Gullett Elementary and Lamar Middle School surrounds a water runoff area are on the neighborhood association's "Adopt-A-School" program, and we between Shoal Creek support them through the donation of money and school supplies. We have Boulevard and Great Northern. McCallum, the arts magnet school, as our high school. We have bike routes, The sidewalk in this area swimming pools, parks, ball fields for little league–there are a lot of things provides access to Far West here for the whole family. It's a well-rounded neighborhood. There's always Boulevard. something going on in this neighborhood. Two scenic pedestrian bridges span Shoal Creek. Schools Resources Amenities Austin Independent School Austin Independent Allandale's neighborhood Northwest District's Professional School District Association Search articles Recreation Center Development Academy Gullett Elementary mentioning Beverly Sheffield features a children's play area Lamar Middle School Allandale in the Austin Park and a soccer field. McCallum High American-Statesman's archives. Shoal Creek School Find area restaurants on Austin360 Bryker Woods By Jackie Potts It was the physical beauty of Bryker Woods -- with its lovely old trees and charming old homes -- that attracted Jim Nelson to the neighborhood. It was the family atmosphere that kept him there. Nelson and his wife are raising three children in the home they bought in 1984. And they are staying put. "I love being near downtown but still away from it," Nelson said. "I can be at work downtown in 10 minutes. But because of its well- defined geography, Bryker Woods is confined. There are advantages to that." That confinement makes him feel safe since there is little through traffic. However, some parts of the neighborhood -- such as on 29th Street -- are seeing more traffic as motorists attempt to find shortcuts between MOPAC Boulevard and Interstate 35 to downtown. Bryker Woods is bordered by Westover on the south, 35th on the north, Shoal Creek on the east and MOPAC Boulevard on the west. It was developed between the 1930s and 1950s, mostly with bungalows and a few larger homes surrounded by large, shady trees. "People who buy here are looking for a neighborhood like the one they grew up in," said George McGee of George Sears McGee, Realtors. "They want the charm of an older neighborhood. They tell me to exhaust looking here before they'll consider looking elsewhere." Zone: Central MLS Area: 1B Zip Code(s): 78703 Zip Code 78703 Demographic Profile Population: 16,109 Avg HH Size: 1.95 Median HH Income: $69,882 Median Age 38.7 % Married: 48% % of HHs with 18% Children: % with College 73% Degree: % Owner Occupied 54% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1954 was Built Source: Claritas 2006 Casis Elementary School on Exposition McGee said the price is mainly for the land. He has started to see some teardowns. Shoal Creek Park has distinguishable features include a large covered picnic pavilion, an "outdoor classroom" under a giant live oak tree, Zeriscaped gardens and a section of the Shoal Creek Hike & Bike trail. Bailey Park features include outdoor tennis courts (with Buyers are mainly young professionals -- with and without children, McGee said. Many work in various medical facilities in and around Seton Medical lights), a sand volleyball court, a flagstone covered pavilion Center which is nearby. The University of Texas and downtown offices are built in the 1930's, park minutes away. Grocery stores and small retail establishments are close-by swings, childrens wading pool along 35th/38th streets and Lamar Boulevard. and an area for baseball or softball. The park also has a Because of the convenient location, many homeowners stay in the neighborhood for several years before deciding to move into larger quarters or wide open space for flying add. Nelson said that's the issue he and his wife are grappling with now that their three children are older. Nelson said he doesn't want to leave the neighborhood. kites and other large field activities. Seider's Springs Park has picnic tables and park benches. This park begins the Shoal "The emphasis has always been on family," he Creek Hike & Bike trail said. "People are always walking, including at leading to downtown and night. A lot of people who move here stay a Town Lake. Actual springs long time. It's stable. But there is always an continue to flow from the influx of new families moving in." limestone ledge on the east side of the creek. Because of the emphasis on families, the neighborhood boasts a very active PTA at Bryker Woods Elementary as well as an active neighborhood association. Part of the attraction for young families is the schools, McGee said. Half of the elementary school-age children attend Bryker Woods Elementary and the other half attend Casis Elementary. Of the students taking the Texas Education Agency's Texas Assessment of Academic Skills test in 1995-96 at Bryker Woods, 91 percent passed all portions. At Casis, 90 percent passed all portions. Respective junior and high schools are Martin Junior High or O'Henry Middle and Austin High School. When not studying, children play in the many nearby parks such as Seider's Springs Park, Bailey Park, and Shoal Creek Park. Schools Resources Austin Independent Brykerwood's School District Neighborhood Association Amenities Bryker Woods Seider's Springs Park Search articles mentioning Elementary Bailey Park Bryker Woods in the Casis Elementary Shoal Creek Park Austin Martin Middle School Bryker Woods American-Statesman's O. Henry Middle Neighborhood Association archives. School Find area restaurants on Austin High School Austin360 Crestview By Donna Lin Once considered remote from the hubbub of downtown Austin, Crestview is today a centrally located neighborhood, featuring elegant, gracefully aged homes built along shaded, tree-lined blocks. Longtime resident Chip Harris says he and his wife were attracted to the Crestview area because of the mature trees, the quiet atmosphere and the nice mix of ages of people who live there. "When you move into a new subdivision, a lot of the people there are of the same age. Being an older neighborhood, the diversity of ages was nice. There are people who live there now that could tell you about when Anderson Lane was a gravel road, they've lived there for 50 years," he says. Though some residents of Crestview have lived there for decades, newcomers are attracted to the tranquil, serene environment this community offers. Generally recognized as an ideal environment for families, Crestview is bordered by Anderson Lane to the north, Justin Lane to the south, North Lamar Boulevard to the east and Burnet Road to the west. It is located north of the city's urban core. Zone: Central MLS Area: 2 Zip Code(s): 78757 Zip Code 78757 Demographic Profile Population: 21,197 Avg HH Size: 2.13 Median HH Income: $48,818 Median Age 37.8 A quiet, friendly neighborhood, Crestview's streets are speckled with locally % Married: 47% owned businesses. "We probably have more barbershops per capita than % of HHs with 20% anywhere else," Harris says, laughing. "If you throw a rock, you'll probably hit Children: one. It's the same for churches, too." % with College 42% Degree: % Owner Occupied 54% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1964 Harris says a few places residents frequent include a small restaurant called was Built The Little Deli, and the Crestview Mini-Max, a small grocery store located in the center of the neighborhood. Source: Claritas 2006 Gary Knippa, of Knippa Properties, says Crestview's location is ideal for homeowners wanting an older home without the high price of other established neighborhoods. "The young professional-type crowd typically buys homes in Crestview, the type that doesn't mind rolling up their sleeves and making their homes suit their individual tastes," he says. Typical homes in the area range from 1,100 to 1,200 square feet, and most homes are pier and beam construction, Knippa says most Crestview homes are 2 bedroom, 1 bath, or 3 bedroom, 1 bath. About three-quarters of homes in the Beverly S. Scheffield Northwest Park features a baseball field, basketball, tennis and volleyball courts, playground, picnic table, picnic pavilion, bar-b-que pits, wading and swimming pool, and a fishing pier. neighborhood have been converted from standard air conditioning window unites to CA/CH systems. Brentwood Elementary is just across Justin Lane from Crestview in the Brentwood neighborhood and features a small city pool, ball fields and a playground. Beverly Sheffield Park also is nearby. A much larger public facility, this park offers a public pool, playgrounds, tennis courts, barbecue areas and basketball court. "People enjoy the neighborly quality of living in Crestview," Knippa says. "My sister lived in Crestview for years, and always talked about how everyone knew everyone, and helped each other." Residents of the neighborhood enjoy an active neighborhood association that hosts several different annual events. Harris says a several notable events include an ice cream social held in July, and National Night Out events in August. These nights are part of a program that encourage one person on each block to host a get-together on their front lawn the first Tuesday in August, for neighbors to get to know one another. Harris says the neighborhood is not as ethnically diverse as he would prefer, but things are slowly changing. "There are different socioeconomic groups in the area, because there's a large amount of rentals in the neighborhood," he says. Children in the neighborhood attend Brentwood Elementary School, Lamar Middle School, and McCallum High School. Utilities are provided by the city. Schools Austin Independent School District Brentwood Elementary School Lamar Middle School McCallum High School Amenities Beverly S. Scheffield Northwest Park The Arboretum Northcross Mall Resources Search articles mentioning Crestview in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Down Town Downtown Austin is home to many things, but for an increasing number of residents, it is simply home. A vibrant mecca of commerce and culture, the downtown cityscape has grown significantly in the past five years to include a variety of living quarters that put residents within walking distance of dining, entertainment, recreation and retail destinations. "The residential population is approximately 5,300 people," says Charlie Betts, executive director of the Downtown Austin Alliance. "Presently, there are 1,500 announced units on the drawing boards." While residential quarters run the gamut from small efficiency apartments to posh lofts, Betts says a typical downtown residence is a condominium measuring 1,200 to 1,400 square feet with two bedrooms, two baths, a kitchen, living room and a great view. Sale price per square foot would be about $300, he said. ZONE: Central MLS: 1B, 4 ZIP: 78701 Zip Code 78701 Demographic Profile Population: 4,296 Avg HH Size: 1.44 Kevin Burns, a real estate broker and owner of UrbanSpace Realtors says Median HH Income: $46,431 people are drawn to downtown living for a variety of reasons. Median Age 39.0 % Married: 34% "Most (residents) are location-driven," he says. "They want to be close to the % of HHs with 3% trail, restaurants and bars. Whole Foods is a major amenity. People who live in Children: Austin City Lofts or the Nokonah can walk there. I actually live in the Austin % with College 47% City Lofts and I walk to Whole Foods." Degree: % Owner Occupied 36% Natalie Smith, a three-year resident at Railyard Housing Condominiums and an active participant in the Median Yr Dwelling 1976 Downtown Austin Neighborhood Association, was Built says her life and leisure have become more integrated since Source: Claritas 2006 moving downtown. Zilker Park includes sand "Going out is not as much of a production," she says. "I can step outside and catch a band any day of the week. I can step outside and be on my way to dinner. There are so many things to do down volleyball courts, a nine-hole Disc Golf Course, 9 Soccer Fields, 1 Rugby Field, 2 Multiuse Fields, miniature train ride, canoeing, natural spring pool, dog park, and more. here. You've got the arts, Town Lake, community events like symphony in the park, art openings..." Another often cited reason for living downtown is ease of mobility. "Generally, people can do away with two cars and get by with just one," Betts says. "You can eliminate your commute time and the stress that goes with it." While living downtown may cost more per square foot than living elsewhere, Burns contends that the trade-off of stress, automotive wear-and-tear, commute times and a simplified lifestyle are well worth the extra dollars. "A lot of people are sick of living in the suburbs and dealing with long commutes," he says. "I work downtown, live downtown and play downtown. I'm a real estate broker and I haven't been in my car today. Barton Hills Playground features a basketball court, multi-purpose field, trail miles, playground, and picnic area. Umlauf Sculpture Garden features outdoor art and statues with a trail. Austin Nature and Science Center is a non-profit community center that provides nature exhibits and natural science education resources for all ages. Zilker Botanical Gardens features many different gardens planted by different local designers. "People are more willing to give up their Barton Springs Pool features gameroom and walk to Alamo Drafthouse or give up their exercise room to go natural spring swimming area, run on the trail," he adds. "I see no end to the popularity of living downtown. sunbathing, concession, and It's where the culture of Austin is." lifeguards on duty. Schools Pease Elementary School Mathews Elementary Amenities School Barton Greek Greenbelt Barton Springs Zavala Pool Deep Eddy Pool Shoal Creek Elementary Greenbelt Town Lake Hike-and-Bike Trail School Zilker Gardens Zilker Park Theater/Arts O'Henry Bass Concert Hall Paramount Theatre & Middle State Theatre Zach Scott Theatre School Austin High School University of Texas Resources Down Town's Neighborhood Association Search articles mentioning Barton Hills in the Austin AmericanStatesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Hyde Park By Donna Lin A leisurely springtime stroll in Hyde Park might begin with a morning cup of fresh-brewed coffee from Austin-bred Quack's Coffee House on 43rd Street. It might wind through several blocks, all the while shaded by tall, stately trees arching overhead and crossing the wide streets to say hello to neighbors. Eventually, it might come to an end with a purchase of breakfast tacos at NeWorlDeli on Guadalupe Street. That's one of Glen Coleman's favorite things to do in Hyde Park. A resident of Hyde Park since 1996, Glen knows all the hot spots of the neighborhood. He also serves as co-president of the Hyde Park Neighbors' Association. Zone: Central MLS Area: 2 Zip Code(s): 78751 A relatively small neighborhood, with tree-lined streets and historic houses left and right, Hyde Park is known for its hodgepodge of residences. It is bordered by 48th Street to the north and 38th Street to the south, Guadalupe Street to the west and Duval Street to the east. Zip Code 78751 Demographic Profile Glen says when he moved to the neighborhood, he chose it because it was a community where he could walk to the store or local coffee shop, and could have neighbors of all different ages, ethnicities and income levels. He chose the right place. Convenience stores, restaurants, FreshPlus Grocery Store and Laundromats are just a few blocks away. "Although Hyde Park is Central Austin's densest neighborhood, it's a place where you know your neighbors by name because you've seen them at the store, at the Laundromat and outside watering their yards," he says. Population: 13,450 Avg HH Size: 1.84 Median HH Income: $33,786 Median Age 39.9 % Married: 29% % of HHs with 10% Children: % with College 55% Degree: % Owner Occupied 26% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1963 was Built Hyde Park is not only one of the densest neighborhoods in the city's urban Source: Claritas 2006 core, it is also one of the earliest established. According to the neighborhood association's Web site, the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Land and Town Co. founded Hyde Park in 1891. Elizabet Ney Museum is a free museum which includes sculptures from the late Under the guiding hands of Monroe Martin Elizabet Ney in her original art Shipe, Hyde Park originally featured large studio. residences geared towards the affluent. Sluggish land sales later pushed Hyde Park to Shipe Park and Pool features become a neighborhood for the middle and basketball, multi-purpose and working classes. tennis courts, a playground, picnic and bar-b-que areas, and Gradually, majestic homes gave way to smaller, a swimming and wading pool. more modest houses, resulting in the graceful blend of apartment complexes, small bungalows, large residences and office Hancock Golf Course, the buildings you see today. oldest golf course in the state Glen attributes such contrasting landscapes to the unique combination of an of Texas, is a par 35 and 9 hole golf course. ideal location and a rare commitment to historical preservation. While residents strive to maintain their ties to Monroe's 1891 community, Hyde Park is continually touched by the spread of urban life. "You can see some of Austin's most modern buildings, and look back 100 years in time all at once within one square block in Hyde Park," he says. A typical Hyde Park block includes everything from Craftsman houses to Tudorstyle homes, new office buildings and apartment complexes. Shipe Park Jody Lockshin, broker for Austin real estate company Habitat Hunters, says that homes sold last year ranged from the mid $200s to the mid $400s. Homes varied from 1,000 square feet to 2,000 square feet. Due to the wide variety of dwellings available, apartments and homes are often leased. Apartments last year began at rents of $400 per month, and 3,000square-foot houses at $2800 per month. "Hyde Park caters to all needs, from those who want apartments, to condos, duplexes, houses. It accommodates everyone. That's why the prices range so drastically, because there's so much to offer," she says. Paige Flick, Habitat Hunters realtor, says the biggest attraction to the neighborhood is its family and owner-oriented environment. "It's quiet, the neighbors are friendly, you're within walking distance of restaurants and grocery stores and just two blocks away from the bus," she says. Elisabet Ney Museum on 44th St. Hyde Park offers more than just a convenient location to its residents; it offers a lively community lifestyle. The neighbors are friendly, the neighborhood association is active and involved and there is plenty to see and do. Each year, the neighborhood association hosts its annual Hyde Park Homes Tour. The tour highlights several notable homes within the neighborhood, and at the same time raises money for the organization. The association offers free consulting services for builders and homeowners, to ensure they will develop property within the guidelines of community zoning codes. Advice is given concerning elements such as building height, impervious cover and parking requirements. Children in Hyde Park attend Lee Elementary School, Kealing Junior High School, and McCallum High School in the Austin Independent School District. While electricity, water and trash are provided by the City of Austin Electric Company, cable is provided by Time Warner. Amenities Schools Elizabet Ney Austin Independent School Museum District Shipe Park and Lee Elementary School Pool Kealing Junior High School Hancock Golf McCallum High School Course Resources Hyde Park Neighborhood Association Search articles mentioning Hyde Park in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Old Enfield By Matt Griffin It had been over 25 years since she first resided in the Old Enfield neighborhood as a student at the University of Texas, but when Nona Kean returned to Austin to raise her two children in 1991, she said it was the same nostalgic charm of the neighborhood that made her want to come back. "Other neighborhoods are more concerned with size and acreage," Kean said, "here it's the charm of the houses and the history involved in our neighborhood. It's quality rather than quantity." The neighborhood, also known as Old West Austin, is bordered by West 24th Street on the north and Enfield Road on the south. Lamar Boulevard serves as the east border and MoPac Boulevard is the west border. The neighborhood is conveniently located five minutes from downtown and is accessible to major thoroughfares MoPac, Lamar Boulevard, and Enfield Road. Zone: Central MLS Area: 1B Zip Code(s): 78703 Zip Code 78703 Demographic Profile Population: 16,109 Old Enfield is home to many of the oldest colonial style homes in Austin, Avg HH Size: 1.95 including the historic Pease Mansion, built by Governors Mansion architect Median HH Income: $69,882 Abner Cook. The landmark now privately owned and undergoing restoration Median Age 38.7 serves as a neighborhood centerpiece, and it is one of the few properties left in % Married: 48% the city built before the Civil War. For Nona Kean, the history of the % of HHs with neighborhood is what makes Old Enfield so special, but what she is most 18% Children: proud of is how well that history has been preserved. "Many of the houses are % with College very old," Kean said, "but they are built so well and preserved by our 73% Degree: neighbors that it % Owner Occupied really is 54% Housing amazing." Median Yr Dwelling 1954 was Built All of Old Enfield was part Source: Claritas 2006 of a 320-acre land grant given The Old Enfield Homeowners to C.S. Parish in Association throws an annual 1841 by the picnic for you to mingle and Republic of meet new neighbors. Texas during the presidency of Mirabeau Lamar. The land went through a series of owners and was subdivided in 1910 by the Enfield Realty and Home The Caswell Tennis Center has Building Co. facilities which offer public play, lessons, leagues and Kean returned to Old Enfield to raise her children not only for the chance to tournaments. Reservations may live in a beautiful neighborhood, but also because of the outstanding schools in be made two days prior. Old Enfield. "The schools are very parent-oriented and offer higher level classes, which was very important for me," she said. Casis Elementary, O. Henry Middle School, and Austin High School provided her children both an Pease District Park provides Old Enfield Residents with excellent education and a unique multicultural experience. softball fields, volleyball and multi-purpose courts, playground and picnic areas, disc golf holes, a wading pool, While many of the residents have lived in the neighborhood more than 25 years, the neighborhood is currently attracting young families as well as a few students and singles. Ninety percent of the homes in Old Enfield are owner-occupied. "I've never felt unsafe or unwelcome," Nona Kean said of Old Enfield. The neighborhood's charms have attracted University of Texas students as well as local celebrities. Former Mayor Kirk Watson, former Lt. Gov. Ben Barnes, and actor Luke Wilson have all called Old Enfield home. The neighborhood is a favorite at Christmas time, when the columned porches and majestic balconies are decorated magnificently. Historic Pease Mansion Old Enfield easily blends its smaller two bedroom, one bathroom cottages with the larger, six to eight bedroom mansions, which are architecturally diverse. Giant trees and Pease Park assist the soothing aesthetic of the neighborhood. Many of the houses were built between 1910 and 1950, and homes start in the $200,000s and have sold for more than $500,000. What are the best things about living in Old Enfield? For Nona Kean it's been the same reasons since the 1960s. "I'd say the charm, the schools, and the convenience of being in Central Austin," Kean said, "plus I get to keep my friends I've made throughout the years." Resources Schools Search articles mentioning Amenities Austin Independent School Caswell Tennis Old Enfield in the Austin District Center American-Statesman's Casis Elementary Pease District Park archives. O.Henry Middle School West Enfield Park Find area restaurants on Austin High School Austin360 trails, and a dog park. West Enfield Park, an additional park just west of MoPac, features softball and multi-purpose fields, basketball, tennis and multipurpose courts, neighborhood swimming pool, and picnic areas. Visit the Old West Austin Historic District at www.owahd.org Rosedale By Jackie Potts Charming and old-fashioned while embracing and adapting to the inevitable changes that the times bring, Rosedale is a stand-out neighborhood symbolic of the "old Austin" meeting the "new Austin" as it finds itself incorporating new elements to its neighborhood mélange. "Rosedale certainly is a strange combination of old and traditional and new and funky," says Mark Brucks, co-president of the Rosedale Neighborhood Association. Brucks says the neighborhood's rise in popularity has attracted new residents emblematic of the "new Austin," but the neighborhood still has many homeowners that have stayed in the neighborhood for decades. Zone: Central MLS Area: 2 Zip Code(s): 78756 The starting price for a home in Rosedale is in the high $200,000's, says realtor Socar Chatmon-Thomas of REMAX Austin Skyline, and can be described as Zip Code 78756 "charming cottages" or "quaint bungalows." Homes average about $200 per Demographic Profile square foot, with the median price in the mid $300,000 range. Many of the new residents moving into Rosedale are typically of the upwardly mobile set. Population: 7,473 "With Rosedale's north central location, it's perfect for many young Avg HH Size: 1.77 professionals who want to be close in to Austin, but still want that cozy, Median HH Income: $40,663 homey feeling. Rosedale has quite a few homes that are 2-1, which is the Median Age 37.3 perfect 'starter home' size for a single person or a couple." % Married: 35% % of HHs with 14% Children: % with College 51% Degree: % Owner Occupied 36% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1959 was Built 26 Doors Shopping Center on W. 38 St. Source: Claritas 2006 Rosedale, perfectly located in North Central Austin, has amenities you and your family will love. Ramsey Park, the "heart of Rosedale" has a swimming pool, playground and new landscaping to offer. Rosedale's residents can also enjoy lovely neighborhood walks, since the community Rosedale is located in north central Austin, and its 1,200 homes are bounded works to keep traffic out of the neighborhood. Rosedale with by 38th Street to the south, Shoal Creek to the west, North Loop / Hancock Drive to the north, and Lamar Boulevard to the east. The area receives City of its "charming cottages" and "quaint bungalows" is an Austin utilities, and is part of the Austin Independent School District. Students in south Rosedale attend Austin High School, O. Henry Middle School and enjoyable community for your new home. Bryker Woods Elementary School. Students in the north Rosedale Older homes were just built smaller then, agrees Karen McLinden, secretarytreasurer of the Rosedale Neighborhood Association, and Rosedale is no exception. Some residents have made additions and adjustments to their homes over the years to accommodate growing family needs. "If you just walk through the neighborhood, you'll see the typical Rosedale bungalow from the front, and you'll see this two story addition at the rear of the house." McLinden says that when many Rosedale residents decide to expand their homes, they do so in the back of the home because many home lots have the room to do so in the backyard but not enough to go side to side. neighborhood attend McCallum High School, Lamar Middle School and Highland Park Elementary School. Ramsey Park If there were a heart of Rosedale, it would have to be Ramsey Park. With its swimming pool, playground and now its new landscaping provided as part of a project by a neighborhood Eagle Scout, Ramsey Park has been literally at the center of the neighborhood and its activities for years. Brucks credits Rosedale's older citizens as giving the neighborhood a sense of place in Austin's history. "There's an added sense of uniqueness that we really like. We have so many long-time residents here in this neighborhood, and they possess so much neighborhood lore. Florence and Forrest Preece, for example, might be our longest-lived residents. They know who built many of these old homes and who lived in them. They provided invaluable information when Michael and Karen Collins decided to renovate and restore the MooreHancock Farmstead at 4811 Sinclair Avenue." Moving away from the historic restoration of the Moore-Hancock Farmstead, other residents have been doing their best to maintain the spirit of "Keep Austin Weird" - or at least unique. From the "castle home" at 44th Street and Ramsey to celebrated author-gardener-cook Lucinda Hutson's delectably and eclectically styled home, a drive around Rosedale confirms that Rosedale is indeed a mix of traditional styling meets free-thinking bohemia. Ramsey Park Another charming aspect of Rosedale is that like many other older Austin communities, it is considered a "walking neighborhood." New developments along Burnet Road are carefully monitored, as the Rosedale Neighborhood Association tries to maintain the integrity of their community. "One of the things the neighborhood likes is to have businesses and places to walk to - that's one of the things we try to preserve," says Brucks. "When there's a new business being developed, there's the question of 'cut-through' traffic in the neighborhood, and we try to keep traffic moving along the major arteries and off the neighborhood streets." McLinden agrees with Brucks that vigilance is necessary to maintain Rosedale's integrity. "One of the struggles for any close-in neighborhood is protecting your edges, and when you have a neighborhood like we do there's always a risk that people will buy a home property and then try to get a variance to tear it down and put up an office or a parking lot," says McLinden. We have neighbors who for years have fought anything that will ruin the integrity of this neighborhood. One of our themes is to make a nice place to come home to stay that way, and we intend to make sure that it stays that way." Amenities Ramsey Park Schools Austin Independent Shoal creek greenbelt Resources School District Mayfield Park Search articles mentioning Bryker Woods Elementary Mt. Bonnel Rosedale in the Austin Highland Park Elementary The Elisabet Ney American-Statesman's O. Henry Middle School Museum archives. Martin Jr. High School 26 Doors Shopping Find area restaurants on Lamar Middle School Center Austin360 McCallum High School Central Park Shopping Austin High School Center Lamar Village Tarrytown By Matt Griffin For Austin Realtor Debbie Gainer, who has lived and worked in Tarrytown for the past 20 years, the answer never changed to the question, "Why Tarrytown?" "You just can't beat it," Gainer said, describing her neighborhood as a quaint little town centrally located in the middle of Austin. Gainer said she returned to the area where her husband had spent his childhood, and the two have enjoyed the convenience of living in Central Austin, with easy access to North Austin, South Austin, and downtown. Tarrytown, considered by many to be Old West Austin, is bordered by West 35th Street on the north and Enfield Road on the south. MoPac Boulevard is considered the east border, and Tarrytown is bordered on the west by beautiful Lake Austin. Gainer describes the makeup of the neighborhood as mostly families of all ages with some college students renting in the area. Many of the homes are cottages from the 1920s, and Tarrytown blends Southern style homes along with more modern designs. The homes vary in size in the neighborhood with its smaller cottages and many larger homes, although many of the smaller homes are being torn down for new larger houses. Nearly all are owner-occupied. "It's a friendly neighborhood, where people run into each other all the time and are always friendly," Gainer said. Zone: Central MLS Area: 1B Zip Code(s): 78703 Zip Code 78703 Demographic Profile Population: 16,109 Avg HH Size: 1.95 Median HH Income: $69,882 Median Age 38.7 % Married: 48% % of HHs with 18% Children: % with College 73% Degree: % Owner Occupied 54% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1954 was Built Among the many amenities of Tarrytown are Deep Eddy Pool, Laguna Gloria Art Museum, Mayfield Park, Reed Park, Triangle Park, and Source: Claritas 2006 Lions Municipal Golf Course, where pro golfer Ben Crenshaw plays when he's in town. After Deep Eddy Pool has your 18 holes, you can head down to the Hula recreational swimming, Hut, a local favorite restaurant, and sip swimming lessons, life guards, margaritas on Lake Austin. Other celebrities and lap swimming and is such as Lance Armstrong and Matthew usually open from February to McConaughey, as well as Governor Rick Perry and President George W. Bush September. have all called Tarrytown home. "The schools and churches are very important to all of us," Gainer said, citing Tarrytown's outstanding schools and churches. Casis Elementary is a four-star, parent-oriented school that gives its kids a great start before they go on to O. Henry Middle School and Austin High School. "All of the schools are every parent-oriented," Gainer said. Tarrytown United Methodist Church is where President George W. Bush worships with his family when he is in town. At the Laguna Gloria Art Museum, visitors can tour the restored 1916 Italianate-style villa, view art exhibitions, and stroll the grounds overlooking Lake Austin Reed Park features a softball field, picnic areas, and a swimming and wading pool Casis Elementary School on Exposition A favorite of Tarrytown residents, the West Austin Youth Association is a privately funded organization that provides athletic activities for kids and places for active kids to go and play. "It's like a "Y" in the middle of our neighborhood," Gainer said, "We have really enjoyed it." Recreational activities for boys and girls include soccer, baseball, basketball, football, volleyball, and gymnastics, just to name a few. Tarrytown is considered the most expensive real estate in Austin, with houses ranging from $300,000 to $3,000,000, but the amenities, location, schools, and charm make Tarrytown a strong candidate for any homebuyer. What makes Tarrytown the best place to live? Debbie Gainer answered, "The convenience of where we are, the fact that we are a little community within the city, and all of the things to do here. You really just can't beat it." Amenities Resources Deep Eddy Pool Schools Search articles mentioning Austin Independent School Laguna Gloria Art Tarrytown in the Austin District Museum American-Statesman's Casis Elementary Mayfield Park archives. O. Henry Middle School Reed Park Find area restaurants on Austin High School Lions Municipal Golf Austin360 Course Lions Municipal Golf Course is one of the oldest and most historic public golf courses in Texas. This 6,000 yard, 18hole course is open 364 days a year. There is a driving range, personal golf lessons, and restaurant on the premises. See for yourself at www.tarrytownnews.com Visit the West Austin Youth Association at www.waya.org Visit the Old West Austin Historic District at www.owahd.org UT Area By Olga Angelo Mike McHone has lived in the UT area for 35 years, but he says it only feels like one. "You can never grow old here because there are always 50,000 young faces around you." But this area, which centers around one of Austin's oldest and most prestigious institutions, the University of Texas, in not just a stomping ground for multitudes of college students. With homes ranging from quaint one-bedroom bungalows to large estate mansions hiding behind imposing gates, tons of activities and amenities, and a rich heritage which can still be seen in some home's architecture, the UT area has something for everyone. Zone: C MLS Area: 4 Zip Code(s): 78705 Zip Code 78705 The UT area is made up of a number of small neighborhoods, just minutes Demographic Profile north of another one of Austin's prestigious institutions, the State Capitol. This community is defined by IH-35 to the east, Lamar Blvd. and Shoal Creek to Population: 24,913 the west, Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. to the south and 38th St. moving up Avg HH Size: 1.76 toward Duval St. and 45th St. to the north. Median HH Income: $15,500 Median Age 21.5 "Within a five mile radius, you have anything you could ever want," said % Married: 12% McHone, realtor and Vice President of the University Area Partners. The UT % of HHs with 3% area is close to major shopping with large shopping amenities such as Central Children: Market and the Hancock Center, as well as smaller, funky, independently % with College 74% owned businesses located primarily along Guadalupe Street. Cultural events Degree: are also at residents' fingertips with university facilities open to the public such % Owner Occupied 12% as Bass Concert Hall, the Harry Ransom Housing Center, and the LBJ Library. Median Yr Dwelling 1970 was Built As for outdoors activities, the possibilities are endless. The UT area is home to numerous Source: Claritas 2006 parks including Pease Park, Wooten Park, Adams Park, Hemphill Park, Hancock Park and Pease Park includes a softball the Shoal Creek Hike and Bike. There is even a field, volleyball court, nine-hole golf course located near the Hancock playground, wading pool, disc Center. Additionally, most neighborhoods in golf, picnic tables, and trails. the area offer community pools. Along with the dizzying number of activities and amenities located in the area, a equally Wooten Park includes softball dizzying number of housing possibilities exist. Scattered throughout with field, multi-purpose field, student apartments, this area is home to efficient condominiums, modest basketball court, volleyball 1950's ranch style homes, elegant estate homes, tiny cottages, and anything in court, playground, and picnic between. Many of the homes in this area are older, which according to Evelyn tables. Herczeg, realtor at Prudential Owen Realty, gives them even more appeal to buyers. "Many buyers would rather have a Adams-Hemphill Park includes vintage house with one-of-a-kind features that softball field, multi-purpose were crafted by hand." field, basketball court, and picnic tables. However, houses in this area are limited and expensive. "Proximity of the few available Shoal Creek Hike and Bike houses to downtown and the university makes Trail includes a 4.62 mile trail. them very appealing to those who can afford to buy a house in this area," said Herczeg. "On average, single family houses in Bass Concert Hall features this area have about 2,271 square feet of living space, and so far in 2004, the venues for film, music, ballet, 'average' house here will sell in about 60 days for $478,000, or about $210 per and more. square foot of living space," said Herczeg. Condominiums (which are numerous in the area) are a popular alternative for those who want to live in The Harry Ransom Center the UT area, but are looking for something more modestly priced. According features an historical collection to Herczeg, the average UT area condominium sold in 2004 has about 1,557 of books, photographs, art and square feet of living space and cost about $139,985. the very first photograph. Children living in the area attend Bryker Wood or Lee Elementary, O'Henry or Kealing Middle School and Austin or McCallum High. All of the above schools are within the Austin Independent School District, and some particularly stand out; Lee Elementary is a Blue Ribbon winning elementary school, Kealing is a magnet middle school, and Austin High is the school that President Bush's daughters attended. The UT area has been a popular place for quite some time. "Some of the oldest neighborhoods in Austin exist here," said McHone. Veterans of the Texas Revolution were granted land in the area as a reward for battles fought. These tracts of land were then turned in sprawling plantations with large mansions and estates. In fact, remnants of that past still exist in the area today such as the Wooten Mansion (which has been transformed into a hotel) on MLK and the Neill Cochran House (now a museum) on San Gabriel. "This is a great place to observe older homes that still reflect architectural trends and tastes from the 20th century," said Herczeg. "Many of the homes built in the early 1900's have been well-preserved and some have historic significance." So whether you're looking for a historic home near one of the area's verdant parks or a newer condominium just a short bike ride away from an art exhibit, the UT area probably has something for you. But hurry, they don't last long. This area is attractive to homebuyers as it's ever been. Schools Austin Independent School District Bryker Woods Elementary Lee Elementary O. Henry Middle School Kealing Middle School Austin High School McCallum High School Amenities Bass Concert Hall Harry Ransom Center LBJ Library Pease Park Wooten Park Adams-Hemphill Park Shoal Creek Hike and Bike Resources Search articles mentioning UT Area in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Cat Mountain By Ann Guidry One of Austin's most prestigious residential developments, Cat Mountain, is bordered by Cat Mountain Drive on the north, FM 2222 on the south, Mesa Drive on the east, and Westslope Drive / Twin Valley Drive on the west. Developed primarily in the late 1970s and early 80s, Cat Mountain has experienced a recent surge of interest and undergone something of a boom in new home starts. As a result, empty lots are few and far between. Many homes along Westslope / Twin Valley Drive provide homeowners stunning panoramic views of the Colorado River and the iconic 360 bridge. Other unique characteristics of the area include many zero lot line homes - typically the lowest priced homes in the neighborhood - and several multi-acre lots. Zone: Central MLS Area: 1A Zip Code(s): 78731 Cat Mountain's location allows homeowners close proximity to many professional and recreational destinations. For example, a quick 10-minute Zip Code 78731 drive will get you into downtown Austin, or, going in another direction, The Demographic Profile Arboretum for shopping, restaurants and an independent movie theater. Boating enthusiasts can launch their vessels a mere 5-minute drive away at the Population: 26,231 boat ramp along the river, and techies are a hop, skip and a jump from the high Avg HH Size: 2.00 tech corridor. Further, thrill-seeking mountain bikers will find themselves right Median HH Income: $69,656 at home in the neighborhood as there are Median Age 41.2 plentiful trails to explore. The Cat Mountain % Married: 53% Home Owners Association serves the entire % of HHs with community and charges $42/month. The dues 18% Children: allow members access to the clubhouse, % with College community pool, tennis courts, a basketball 71% Degree: court, playground and picnic area, all of which % Owner Occupied are within walking distance of most homes. 57% Housing Residents also enjoy the heavily wooded natural beauty that defines the Texas hill country, including cohabitation with a Median Yr Dwelling 1979 was Built large population of deer. Source: Claritas 2006 Homes range from the mid $200s to over $1,000,000 with the median price hovering For $42/month members of the around $450,000. The houses themselves vary Cat Mountain Home Owners in size from under 1,500 square feet to well Association members have over 5,000 square feet. Most homes are built access to the clubhouse, with an average of two living areas, four community pool, tennis courts, bedrooms, and a basketball court, playground 2-car garages. and picnic area, all of which Twenty-six percent of the homes come with a swimming are within walking distance of most homes. pool. According to Kevin Scanlan, Cat Mountain homeowner and real estate agent, Residents also enjoy the "Homeowners saw huge leaps in market value heavily wooded natural beauty during Austin's tech boom in 1999-2000, but unlike many areas in the city, this neighborhood that defines the Texas hill country, including cohabitation did not see a significant decrease in home valuations with the subsequent recession. In most cases, increases in value with a large population of deer. have been more common." Texas Gas Service is the main provider of gas, while the City of Austin takes care of electricity, water, and wastewater Just North is North North Cat services. Austin Energy, a department of the City of Austin, provides the Mountain Greenbelt if you just electricity and manages the customer service center for City of Austin utilities need to get back to nature. that includes billing as well as starting and stopping service. The homes in Cat Mountain are served by the Austin Independent School District. Students attend Highland Park or Doss Elementary Schools, Lamar or Murchison Middle Schools, and Anderson or McCallum High Schools. St. Theresa's Catholic School, a private religious and academic institution, provides education to pre-kindergarten through middle school students and is located in the neighborhood. Schools Austin Independent School District Highland Park Amenities Elementary North Cat Mountain Doss Elementary School Greenbelt Lamar Middle School The Arboretum Murchison Middle School Anderson High School McCallum High School Cat Mountain's Neighborhood Association Resources Search articles mentioning Cat Mountain in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 NORTH CENTRAL Barrington Oaks & Laurel Oaks Longtime Barrington Oaks resident Elizabeth Smith was drawn to the neighborhood back in 1992. "My husband and I moved here when we were newly married because it was affordable. We knew that Laurel Mountain was a great school and that was important to us. We were sure there would be children in our future." Twelve years later, affordability and good schools are still the primary attributes that attract prospective homebuyers to this north Austin subdivision. Located in both the City of Austin and the highly acclaimed Round Rock Independent School Districts, homes sold in the last six months have ranged in price from $105,000 to $210,000 and average $97.01 per square foot. Mary Battaglia of Coldwell Banker United is a real estate agent specializing in the area. She says, "All the schools, North Oaks Elementary, Laurel Mountain Elementary, Canyon Vista Middle School and Westwood High School, are Presidential Blue Ribbon Schools. Westwood High is ranked in the top 20 high schools in the nation academically. North Oaks elementary is rated in the top Zone: W MLS Area: 1N Zip Code(s): 78759 ZONE: NC Zip Code 78759 Demographic Profile Population: Avg HH Size: 39,251 2.03 three elementary schools in the Round Rock Median HH Income: $66,451 Independent School District and Canyon Vista Median Age 36.5 is the highest ranked middle school. You can't % Married: 52% go wrong." % of HHs with 21% Children: % with College With easy access to Highway 183 and 64% Degree: Spicewood Springs Road, Barrington Oaks is in % Owner Occupied close proximity to shops, major employers, 45% Housing recreational areas and medical facilities. Median Housing Demographics of the subdivision reveal there are an equal number of married Value of Owner $234,906 couples with children, married couples without children and single people Occupied Housing without children living in the neighborhood. Furthermore, the majority of homeowners are college graduates with professional occupations. The area's very active homeowners association, the Laurel Oaks Neighborhood Source: Claritas 2006 Association (LONA), keeps residents informed about local events and issues and is currently raising money for a new subdivision entrance sign. There's a Barrington Oaks is within YMCA a little over a mile away, and Oak View Park, the heart of the close proximity to shops, neighborhood, has tennis courts, a playground, a hike and bike trail and picnic major employers, recreational areas. In the summertime, residents of Barrington Oaks head to the swimming areas and medical facilities. It pool at nearby Canyon Vista Middle School to cool off. is also connected to its natural surroundings by a hike and Most of the homes on the large lots of Barrington Oaks were built in the 1970s bike trail. through the mid '80s so the vegetation has matured into the lush landscape you see now. Battaglia says, "Barrington Oaks' cable and electrical lines have been laid underground, creating a clean look. Its streets are comfortably wide with curbs, gutters and sidewalks and there is a refreshing variety of home styles, from contemporary to traditional." Predominantly a single-family residence neighborhood, the homes received their water and electrical utilities from the City of Austin, have three to four bedrooms, two-car garages and generous yards with stands of trees. The aforementioned hike and bike trail is not only a big draw to those seeking outdoor recreation, but it also serves to define the neighborhood's connection with its natural surroundings. But outstanding schools, affordable, attractive homes and easy access to shopping centers and employers are not all that Barrington Oaks has to offer. "We've pondered the thought of moving to our ranch out in San Saba," Elizabeth Smith says, "but our son loves his school. He's got lots of friends in the neighborhood and he plays on the baseball team, so we'll probably be here a while." Her son isn't the only one tied to the area. "There are some originals on the block, people who've lived here since the beginning. We all get along really well. We look out for each other." Now isn't that what home ownership is all about? Schools Round Rock ISD North Oaks Elementary Laurel Mountain Elementary Amenities Laurel Oaks Neighborhood Association Oak View Park Resources Search articles mentioning Bryker Woods in the Austin American-Statesman's Canyon Vista Middle School Westwood High School archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Copperfield Do you dream of buying an affordable home that's close to Dell and Samsung, hundreds of restaurants and shops and a greenbelt? Think it's one of those impossible dreams? Well, fear not. The Copperfield neighborhood in north Austin boasts all of these amenities and more. Bound by Yager Lane to the north, IH35 to the west, Dessau Road to the east and Walnut Creek to the south, Copperfield allows for easy access to IH35, 183 and Mopac Expressway. These connections allow for more than just access to shopping - though the shopping and entertainment options in the area are vast and growing. Once you've entered one of these major thoroughfares, you're literally minutes from downtown, Georgetown and Cedar Park. Groundbreaking on the subdivision began in 1982 when the area was sparsely populated and there were few shops or businesses. Since that time, the region has grown into a hotbed of commerce and industry that's recast the once sleepy outpost into a highly desired central location. Residents now love being mere minutes from downtown, but still far enough from the hustle and bustle of big city life. You just can't beat this winning combination. Zone: NC MLS Area: NE Zip Code(s): 78753 Zip Code 78753 Demographic Profile Population: 42,542 Avg HH Size: 2.68 Median HH Income: $44,534 Its prime location is arguably Copperfield's biggest draw, but the affordability of the homes ranks a close second. Craig Allen of The AllenLancaster Company says, "The major attraction is that you can get a lot of home for the money. The subdivision is composed of different sections that are distinguished by the years they were built. Many of the older homes have been updated, which is appealing to many first time homebuyers." Though most of the homes were built in the '80s, new construction continued up through 2003 to keep up with demand, thus the distinct locations and home styles. Because the area has been established for some time, the trees, foliage and landscaping have matured into lush fullness. Besides the obvious aesthetic benefit, the full-blown greenery provides shade that becomes critically important during Austin's sweltering summer months. The houses themselves average 1,388 square feet with a mean price of $86.44 per square foot that brings current home prices in the area to roughly $120,000. Electric utilities, water and wastewater are provided by the City of Austin, and gas service comes from TXU Gas. Median Age % Married: % of HHs with Children: % with College Degree: % Owner Occupied Housing Median Yr Dwelling was Built 30.9 51% 35% 23% 45% 1983 Source: Claritas 2006 The Copperfield neighborhood is close both to high-tech companies and a greenbelt. It also allows for easy access to IH35, 183 and Mopac Expressway, making it easy access to shopping, parks and An important consideration for people looking to buy a home and start a family downtown. is the quality of schools serving the neighborhood. Though located in Austin proper, Copperfield lies in the Pflugerville Independent School District. To the uninitiated, Pflugerville ISD has earned a "Recognized" rating from the Texas Education Agency for the third consecutive year. Outstanding achievement in 2001 TAAS testing earned four campuses in Pflugerville ISD an "Exemplary" and nine campuses a "Recognized" rating for 2001-2002. The highly acclaimed schools that Copperfield students attend include Pflugerville Elementary, Dessau Middle School and Connally High School. So, there's Dell and Samsung, shopping and restaurants, great schools and affordable homes, quiet streets and easy access to downtown. Could you ask for anything more? What about a greenbelt and a sprawling metropolitan park? Would you like that? Well, Copperfield boasts those things, too. The Big Walnut Creek Greenbelt and Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park are central to the neighborhood and one of the highlights of living there. Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park, with a swimming pool, three softball fields, six miles of hike and bike trails, a basketball court, a volleyball court, 41 picnic tables, a barbeque grill, a picnic pavilion and an outdoor facility that may be reserved for family and neighborhood gatherings allows Copperfield residents to stay in the neighborhood when most others have to make the trek to far-flung Zilker. Schools Pflugerville ISD Pflugerville Elementary Copperfield websiteAmenities Big Walnut Creek Greenbelt Resources Copperfield Neighborhood Association Search articles mentioning Dessau Middle School Connally High School Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park Allandale in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Gracy Woods The Gracy Woods neighborhood in north Austin is a great place to begin searching for a home if both value and location are high on your list. Bound by Bittern Hollow and Lincolnshire Drive to the north, Braker Lane to the south, Metric Boulevard to the west and Lamar Boulevard to the east, Gracy Woods is situated close to many high tech employers, shopping centers, the Northridge Austin Community College campus, a number of parks and a treasured greenbelt. Joe Williams of Keller Williams Realty recommends the neighborhood to first-time homebuyers especially. "If you don't mind buying a little older house, you can afford to live close in. I think Gracy Woods is one of the best neighborhoods in Austin to buy a conveniently located starter home." Zone: SW MLS Area: 2N Zip Code(s): 78758 Zip Code 78758 Demographic Profile Population: 45,662 Avg HH Size: 2.32 Median HH Income: $44,985 Median Age 30.6 % Married: 42% % of HHs with 24% Children: Williams was just getting his feet wet in the real estate game back when Gracy Woods was being developed. "It was built in the 1970s," Joe says. "It fed off the early success of Quail Creek but with larger homes and more varied home styles. They built lots of condominiums, single-family houses and town homes. Its development matched that of the Metric corridor." Craig Allen, also of Keller Williams Realty, speaks to the Gracy Woods/Gracy Farms area of today. "The addition of Gracy Farms Plaza Retail Center that's gone up right down the street from the Austin Community College campus has really enhanced the environment of the area." Other amenities include a major hospital and lots of shopping, from businesses along IH35 to those in and around The Arboretum - both areas being easily accessible from the heart of Gracy Woods. But don't let all the commercial amenities fool you. One of the best things about living in Gracy Woods is its access to the Gracy Woods Park and the Big Walnut Creek Greenbelt system. Having a greenbelt that boasts a mile and half of natural trails is a real treat, but the neighborhood's biggest outdoor recreational draw has to be Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park. With a swimming pool, three softball fields, six miles of hike and bike trails, a basketball court, a volleyball court, 41 picnic tables, a barbeque grill, a picnic pavilion and an outdoor facility that may be reserved for family and neighborhood gatherings, residents need look no further for recreational facilities. Though located in Austin proper, the schools of Gracy Woods are served by the Pflugerville Independent School District, a plus for homeowners concerned about the quality of education their children receive.The kids and young adults of Gracy Woods attend River Oaks Elementary School, Westview Middle School and Connally High School. Residents are also lucky to have a relatively new community college campus in the neighborhood, the aforementioned Northridge location of Austin Community College. The majority of homes range from 1,000 to 1,600 square feet (perfect for firsttime homebuyers), and range in price from $137,000 to $155,000 or $81.47 per square foot. The streets are quiet and the yards are generous. Due to the development's longevity, this established area is blessed with mature trees that enhance the landscape and provide much needed shade during Austin's trying summer months. Residents are proud of their active homeowners association, the North Gracy Woods Neighborhood Association, which sponsors a dinner club, a garden club, and a babysitting co-op. Neighbors are encouraged to take part in community-spirit-building activities like Gracy Woods' annual summertime ice cream social, a neighborhood-wide garage sale in the fall, and a holiday lighting competition during the holidays. Prospective homebuyers interested in value, location, great schools, easy access and natural resources in the neighborhood need look no further than Gracy Woods. Schools Amenities Parks % with College Degree: % Owner Occupied Housing Median Yr Dwelling was Built 32% 29% 1984 Source: Claritas 2006 Gracy Woods is ideally located close to many high tech employers, shopping centers and parks which include swimming pools, softball fields, nature trails and more. Pflugerville ISD The Arbortetum River Oaks Gracy Woods Neighborhood Elementary School Association Westview Middle School Connally High School Gracy Woods Park Big Walnut Creek Greenbelt Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park Lamplight Village By Karima Ashinhurst Nearly 30 years have passed since Lamplight Village was first established, and the neighborhood's Parmer Lane location, above, continues to make it desirable. The community is made up of single-family homes that were built between 1976 and 1983 and have from two to four bedrooms. Though Lamplight Village's Parmer Lane location puts it in the heart of North Austin, when the neighborhood was founded nearly 30 years ago, it was Zone: North MLS Area: N Zip Code(s): 78753, 78727 outside of the Austin city limits. Ten-year resident and President of the Lamplight Village Area Neighborhood Association (LVANA), Kim Johnson, recalls her first impressions of the neighborhood: "It was not part of the City of Austin then and had a 'country' feel. It felt safe and was affordable." Zip Code 78753 (primary) Demographic Profile Population: 42,542 Avg HH Size: 2.68 Though Lamplight Village is no longer in the 'country' - it was annexed by the Median HH Income: $44,534 city in 1996 - it has maintained its legacy of reasonably priced homes. Median Age 30.9 According to Shelley Sundermann, a Realtor with JB Goodwin, Lamplight % Married: 51% Village consists of single-family homes built between 1976 and 1983 that % of HHs with 35% feature two to four bedrooms, one or two bathrooms and one- or two-car Children: garages. The homes measure from 1,100 to 1,700 square feet and prices range % with College 23% from $90,000 to $130,000. Degree: % Owner Occupied 45% Housing "Whether you're buying your first home or investing in rental property, Median Yr Dwelling Lamplight Village should prove to be a good value," says Sundermann. 1983 was Built Bordered on the north and east by the newer developments of Scofield Ridge Source: Claritas 2006 and Scofield Farms, and on the west by Tomanet Trail, Lamplight Village also counts Parmer Lane as one of its boundries. The many restaurants and retail stores on Parmer Lane make shopping and dining out a breeze for area Demographic profiles for other residents. "There has been substantial recent growth nearby," adds zip codes: Sundermann, "including the MoPac and Highway 45 extensions, new homes 78727 and many new stores and services." The community's close proximity to both MoPac and Interstate 35 puts it in the middle of a popular and vibrant area of Walnut Creek Metropolitan the city. Park includes softball and soccer fields, basketball and Though Lamplight Village has seen an increase volleyball courts, playground, in commercial and residential development on picnic tables, bar-b-que pits, its borders, and a concurrent rise in property swimming and wading pools, values, Johnson says the neighborhood still and trails. maintains "its integrity as a good place to live and raise a family." She cites demographic diversity and an active neighborhood association as a few of the neighborhood's high points. "(LVANA) works on building community togetherness by hosting different events throughout the year, such as garage sales, Night Out parties and socials," says Johnson. Lamplight Village is in the Pflugerville school district and is served by Parmer Lane Elementary and Westview Middle schools, both of which are within walking distance of the community. Connally High school is accessible by bus. Parmer Lane and Connally are rated "recognized" and Westview features a quarter-mile paved track and other amenities that are available for public use. The property tax rate is 2.83% Lamplight Village is an established neighborhood with wide streets, impressive yards and large trees. This well-maintained, working-class community offers a convenient location and reasonable pricing that makes it ideal for single buyers and young families. If this sounds like what you are looking for, shine a light on Lamplight Village. Schools Pflugerville Independent School District Parmer Lane Elementary Westview Middle School Connally High School Amenities Walnut Creek Metropolitan Park Lamplight Village Homepage Resources Search articles mentioning Lamplight Village in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Milwood By Donna Lin It's a typical Austin summer day. The fluffy white clouds meander slowly across the bright blue sky, vivid green trees wave gently in the breeze. Men and women leave the coolness of their air-conditioned home to stroll down symmetric sidewalks, bordered by perfectly manicured lawns, to check their mailboxes. Very few homes display "For Sale" signs on their front lawns. An occasional "For Lease" sign sprouts up here and there, but it seems Milwood residents are happy right where they are. Why wouldn't they be? With easy access to the rest of Austin, a gorgeous Zone: NC MLS Area: N Zip Code(s): 78727 Zip Code 78727 neighborhood and amenities of all sorts just within reach, Milwood seems to be a good choice to purchase a house in. Milwood is bordered to the North by Parmer Lane, to the South Duval, East Amherst and the Railroad tracks to the West. Demographic Profile It makes sense. Homes range from the $145s to the $160s, with an average range of 1,600 square feet of space. While they are modestly sized, they are well-maintained and boast an extremely reasonable price tag. Source: Claritas 2006 Population: 26,021 Avg HH Size: 2.28 Median HH Income: $66,645 Median Age 33.8 % Married: 53% The houses are generally modern one-story % of HHs with 28% homes placed on small, grassy plots of land. Children: Neighbors are just a stone's throw away, watering their lawns and taking care % with College 52% of small shrubs in their front yards. Degree: % Owner Occupied 53% Housing Harvey Pikoff, a Realtor with Re/Max, says a lot of first-time homebuyers Median Yr Dwelling choose Milwood. "These are people who have lived in Austin for a year or 1995 was Built two, and have been renting. They choose to buy a house in Milwood," he says. Balcones District Park offers Milwood residents a basketball "One of the appeals is there's a lot of mature trees in the neighborhood, and it's and volleyball court, a softball a neighborhood where you can get a modestly priced house without having to field, playground, picnic area, swimming and wading pool really travel into Williamson County," he says. "With the prices these homes and trail miles. have, they're more affordable than buying brand-new houses." The Milwood Home Owners Assocaiation plans many events for the community. Each Fourth of July, the Convenient access to Interstate 35 and Loop 1 make Milwood an ideal location neighborhood association hosts a picnic and parade. The group for those looking to ease their commute to and from work each day. also organizes a neighborhoodwide garage sale, and Several shopping centers and convenience stores are available for Milwood residents. A few highlights include the Cool River Café, the Balcones Park and publishes a newsletter for community members. Pool for residents of all ages and the Milwood Branch Austin Public Library. If price alone isn't enough to lure potential homebuyers, Milwood's location is sure to reel them in. The neighborhood is bordered by Parmer Lane, Amherst Drive, the county line and northwest toward RM 620. Pikoff, having specialized in the Milwood area for 20 years, says another appeal of the area is the neighborhood's image. The picturesque landscape of Milwood makes it an ideal location to raise a family. In addition to a nicely laid-out community, Milwood offers a strong and active neighborhood association. Membership is offered to all residents who pay annual dues. The Milwood Neighborhood Association organizes several committees aimed to improve the community, including beautification, crime and safety, membership and social, newsletter, Web site and zoning information committees. Each Fourth of July, the neighborhood association hosts a picnic and parade for the entire community. The group also organizes a neighborhood-wide garage sale, and publishes a newsletter for community members. In addition to neighborhood-wide activities of this sort, the association also offers scholarships for graduating high school seniors. Children in the area attend Summit Elementary, a school Pikoff says is highly rated, Murchison Middle School and Anderson High School. Utilities are provided by the city. Schools Austin Independent School District Summit Elementary Murchison Middle School Anderson High School Amenities Balcones District Park Milwood Neighborhood Association Resources Search articles mentioning Milwood in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Great Hills For people who like beautiful views, winding roads and living on a cul de sac, Great Hills is a great neighborhood. The 18-hole golf course, along with areas of rugged terrain, dictated that the neighborhood streets follow an irregular pattern. The resulting home sites offer panoramas highlighted by creeks, trees, fairways and other homes in the distance. Realtor Lakki Brown, an agent with Amelia Bullock Realtors, bought her house in Great Hills in 1992. "I wouldn't live anywhere else," she says. Brown had just started in the real estate business when construction in Great Hills began. Zone: nc MLS Area: 1n "I remember Zip Code(s): 78759 when they opened Great Zip Code 78759 Hills in the late Demographic Profile '70s," she says. "They brought Population: 39,251 us over here in a Avg HH Size: 2.03 Jeep because the Median HH Income: $66,451 roads were not Median Age 36.5 in. I remember thinking 'this is going to be neat % Married: 52% place.'" % of HHs with 21% Children: Today there are many things Brown appreciates % with College 64% about the neighborhood. "It's so convenient to Degree: everything," she says. "If I need a gallon of % Owner Occupied 45% milk, the Randall's and H-E-B are right here Housing along with great shopping centers and theaters." Median Yr Dwelling 1987 Other nearby businesses include Home Depot, Container Store, all the stores in was Built The Arboretum, Sam's Club, Costco and many restaurants. "There must be at least 20 restaurants in the area," Brown says. There are two movie theaters in Source: Claritas 2006 the area, Arbor Theatre shows art films and Gateway 16 plays major releases. The Great Hills neighborhood Homes in the neighborhood are typically two stories with lots of brick or stone has many amenities that your on the exterior. The style is traditional though some homes feature more family will love. The contemporary designs. "Most of the homes were built in the '80s," Brown says. Arboretum offers shops, She says the price range for homes in Great Hills is $320,000 to $450,000 restaurants and services. Hill though she sometimes finds homes priced at more than $500,000. Sizes range and Bull Creek parks have from around 2,000 square feet to about 3,400 square feet. basketball courts, playgrounds, swimming, fishing and nature For recreation, there's Austin Hills Park off Floral Park Drive. It features a trails. rugged nature trail for hiking. Bull Creek Park and its greenbelt are 5 minutes away. Much of the recreational facilities actually in Great Hills are found at the country club. "You don't have to play golf to belong to the country club," Brown says. "They have social memberships." There are three levels of membership - stockholder, tennis and social. The stockholder level requires an equity purchase in the club and includes all the facilities including unlimited use of the golf course and driving range. A social membership provides access to the swimming pool and clubhouse. The tennis membership includes swimming pool, clubhouse and tennis courts. The country club is at the heart of the original Great Hills neighborhood. That original neighborhood roughly has U.S. 183 as an east boundary, Loop 360 to the south, Bluegrass to the west and Rain Creek Parkway to the north. Determining the boundaries of Great Hills is a difficult proposition. As the area bounded by Spicewood Springs Road, U.S. 183 and Loop 360 has filled in with houses (new homes continue to be built in the area) new neighborhoods have grown up contiguous to Great Hills. Consequently there are numerous neighborhood associations in the area in addition to Great Hills Homeowner's Association. Children living in Great Hills may attend school in either the Round Rock Independent School District or Austin Independent School District depending on where they live. Residents in AISD attend Hill Elementary, Murchison Middle School and Anderson Hill School. Those in RRISD attend North Oaks Elementary, Canyon Vista Middle School and Westwood High School. "It's very confusing," Brown says. "I remember one guy who bought a house and thought the kids were going to go to Anderson and it was Westwood. Anybody buying up here should check it out thoroughly." City of Austin provides electricity, wastewater and trash pickup. Texas Gas Service provides gas to most homes though some have propane tanks. Schools Austin Independent School Resources District Search articles Amenities Hill Elementary The Arboretum mentioning Murchison Middle School Great Hills Country Club Great Hills in the Anderson High School Great Hills Homeowner's Austin Round Rock Independent Association American-Statesman's School District Austin Hills Park archives. North Oaks Elementary Bull Creek Park Find area restaurants Canyon Vista Middle on Austin360 School Westwood High School NORTH Block House Creek By Karima Ashinhurst As a Realtor with Coldwell Banker United, Cecilia Roberts not only sells homes in Block House Creek - she lives in one. In fact, she and her family were one of the first residents to move into the community when it opened for homeowners in 1983. Though the community was in its infancy ("there was a hole in the ground for the pool"), Roberts was impressed by the potential of Block House Creek, a potential that is now almost fully realized. Block House Creek, named after the waterway that runs through the community, is within 20 houses of being fully built out, Roberts says. At build out, Block House Creek will be home to approximately 2,200 residences. In addition to the namesake creek, and attendant greenbelt, Roberts says that Block House Creek features "every amenity that you could possibly want." The community is home to five parks (for residents' useonly) that are maintained by the Block House Municipal Utility District (MUD), of which Roberts is vice president. The jewel of Block House Creek is the 21-acre Tumlinson Park, home to a beach-entry pool with water slide, and Walker House. Walker House, which is available for residents to reserve, is located on the site of the former Walker Ranch. Apache Park features a year-round heated pool, home base of the community swim team, the Tidal Waves. Between them, the parks at Block House Creek feature lighted tennis, basketball and skate courts, hike-and-bike trails, ball fields and even a dirt-bike jump. Homes in Block House Creek range in size from approximately 1,100 to 2,800 square feet, Roberts says, and are priced from about $100,000 to upward of $180,000. The houses were built over a nearly 20-year time period, from 1983 to the present, which gives the community a varied look and feel. Block House Creek, which counts U.S. 183, a major Austin-area thoroughfare, as one of its borders, is far from remote. The neighborhood is becoming more centrally located everyday. Roberts remembers when residents had to go six miles to get to the nearest convenience store. These days, shopping of all kinds is only a stone's throw away from the community's entrance. Block House Creek Elementary, part of the exemplary Leander Independent School District, is on-site. The remaining schools that serve the community are Artie Henry Middle and Vista Ridge High schools. Zone: NW MLS Area: LN Zip Code(s): 78641 Zip Code 78641 Demographic Profile Population: 33,775 Avg HH 2.97 Size: Median HH $64,068 Income: Median 32.8 Age % Married: 69% % of HHs with 49% Children: % with College 26% Degree: % Owner Occupied 89% Housing Median House $131,015 Value Source: Claritas 2006 Tumlinson Park offers residents a So what else attracts newcomers to this pioneering master-planned community? Roberts range of activities, has no trouble making a list: "reasonable, affordable housing with awesome amenities, from community heavily treed parks, the greenbelt, the creeks, and the schools." Roberts predicts that, events to private with the opening of a planned extension to U.S. 183, even the traffic will improve. parties. It includes Roberts says Block House Creek has something a little more intangible to offer, as well. playscapes, skate "When I drive in, I feel safe," she says. "I feel home. I feel like it's a community." areas, courts for tennis or basketball, a baseball field, nature and jogging trails and a bike MX track. Tumlinson Pool features a slide and a splash structure. Comanche Park has four acres Schools Amenities Resources at the entrance to Block House Creek Block House Municple Utility Search articles mentioning Block House Creek Elementary District Web Site Barton Hills in the Austin Artie Henry Middle Vista Ridge High General Park and Recreational Information Tumlinson Park Walker House trails and a American-Statesman'swith archives. scenic view. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Tonkawa Park is a 14-acre park under planning for baseball fields. Cat Hollow By Karima Ashinhurst On a warm afternoon, it's not unusual to see a new mother walking down one of Cat Hollow's tree-lined sidewalks with her infant in a stroller. Or you may catch a glimpse of a grandfather and grandson crossing one of the community's wide streets. As Round Rock and Austin grow to meet it, the well-kept secret that is Cat Hollow is out of the bag. The star of this community has been rising for about a decade. Once a fairly secluded bedroom community on the outskirts of Round Rock, Cat Hollow counts RM 620, now a major Austin-area thoroughfare, as one of its boundaries. Great Oaks Drive and Liberty Walk complete the community's triangular shape. Jenny Santiano has been a Cat Hollow resident since 2000. Cat Hollow's proximity to Santiano and husband's tech jobs was definitely a draw, she recalls. The closeness of the Round Rock Medical Center and an H-E-B supermarket put necessities near by without detracting from the "suburban" and secluded feel the Santiano family appreciated. In the short time she has been a resident, Santiano has seen Cat Hollow become more and more centrally located. In addition to the grocery store and hospital, the area around Cat Hollow now features banks, restaurants, varied services and shops and much more. "When we got here, it was mostly cows," she recalls. "Already it's gone from cows to construction." Santiano has grown to love Cat Hollow, she says, and the friendliness of the residents is top on the list of things she adores. Making note of active neighborhood watch groups, play groups and block parties, Santiano describes Cat Hollow as a "very connected community. All the neighbors have really been very supportive of one another." Another Cat Hollow attraction is also what Ron Mason, a Realtor with JB Goodwin, considers the neighborhood's top draw - numerous recreation areas. Zone: NW MLS Area: RR Zip Code(s): 78681 Zip Code 78681 Demographic Profile Population: 40,189 Avg HH Size: 3.06 Median HH Income: $81,000 Median Age 33.2 % Married: 70% % of HHs with 52% Children: % with College 44% Degree: % Owner Occupied 84% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1993 was Built Source: Claritas 2006 Amenities include two community pools, three large parks, lit tennis and basketball courts, and easy access to IH35, Hwy 183 and Parmer Lane. "(Cat Hollow) has all the neighborhood amenities," Mason says. "Parks, pools, playgrounds, jogging trails - everything is there." Brushy Creek MUD, which provides water and waste water services to Cat Hollow, maintains eight parks, four greenbelts and several hikeand-bike trails within a few miles of the neighborhood. Mason notes that three parks, Cat Hollow Park and Pool, Community Park and Pepper Rock Park, and two greenbelts are within Cat Hollow boundaries. There also are several city- and county-maintained parks and outdoor activity areas nearby. There are around 1,200 homes in Cat Hollow, according to Mason. That number is bound to grow as Capital Pacific and Wilshire Homes continue to build in the development. Mason says the majority of the homes were built from 1994 to the present and range from 1,200 to 4,500 square feet. While there are homes in the $300,000-plus price range, Mason notes that the average home price falls somewhere between $150,000 to $250,000. "The price range has been a good middle range - not too low, not too high," he says. "It appeals to a lot of people." Cat Hollow is served by Round Rock Independent School District. Most elementary schoolers attend the award-winning Great Oaks Elementary School, but a sizeable percentage attends Brushy Creek Elementary, as well. Cedar Valley Middle and McNeil High schools round out the public schools that serve Cat Hollow. Gay Puckett, another Realtor at JB Goodwin, easily sums up Cat Hollows' appeal. "In a transient environment, it's awfully hard to put down roots," she says. "Cat Hollow makes it easy." Schools Round Rock Independent School District Brushy Creek Elementary Cedar Valley Middle School McNeil High School Resources Amenities Search articles Homeowner's Association mentioning Round Rock Parks and Cat Hollow in the Recreation Austin Cat Hollow Park & Pool AmericanLa Frontera Shopping Center Statesman's archives. Dell Diamond, Home of the Find area restaurants Round Rock Express on Austin360 Forest Creek By Karima Ashinhurst When Chris Couture, the current president of the Forest Creek Homeowner's Association, decided to move with his family to Forest Creek in 1997, he recalls that one of the things that attracted him to the neighborhood was its relative isolation. "There was only one Dell building at the time. The Wal-Mart had just been built," says Couture. "You used to be able to exit the freeway and go all the way to Forest Creek in seven minutes - only three stop signs, no lights." These days, Forest Creek isn't quite as remote as it used to be. Situated in Round Rock, west of County Road 122 and a few miles east of Interstate 35, Forest Creek is bounded by Gattis School Road to the south. U.S. 79 is north of the community by only a few minutes. The upscale community is close enough to Round Rock to be convenient, yet far enough away to maintain its own identity. A large part of Forest Creek's identity can be found in the Forest Creek Golf Club. The par 72, 7,147-yard golf course is the centerpiece of the community. Debbie Kelsey, a Realtor with Re/Max Round Rock, notes that the course has been "nationally recognized as one of the finest public golf courses in Texas." For the avid golfer, there are a total of three public courses within seven miles of the community. Another feature that helps define the community is the on-site school, Forest Creek Elementary, which maintains an exemplary rating. Along with the golf course, Couture believes that the elementary school is a big draw for newcomers. The school undoubtedly plays a major role in the abundance of families with young children. As a parent, Couture recalls that Forest Creek Elementary, and the favorable reputation of the Round Rock school district, were considerable factors in his decision. Ridgeview Middle School and Stoney Point High School are the other nearby schools that serve Forest Creek. As a growing community, Forest Creek is home to new construction as well as resale homes with a variety of price points. A number of builders are active in Forest Creek, including Toll Brothers, Clark Wilson and Ryland Homes. According to Kelsey, prices of closed sales in 2003 ranged from $143,500 to $575,000. Homes sold ranged from a twobedroom townhouse measuring 1,265 square feet to a sprawling six-bedroom, single-family home measuring 5,000 square feet. The tax rate for the area is 2.7233 percent. As Round Rock has grown, it has brought a wealth of recreation and shopping options to Zone: North MLS Area: RR Zip Code(s): 78664 Zip Code 78664 Demographic Profile Population: 67,908 Avg HH Size: 2.89 Median HH Income: $66,668 Median Age 30.8 % Married: 67% % of HHs with 48% Children: % with College 31% Degree: % Owner Occupied 70% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1997 was Built Source: Claritas 2006 Forest Creek Golf Course is a par 72, 7,147 yard golf course which has been nationally recognized as one of the finest public golf courses in Central Texas. Other amenities include a snack bar/cafe, a three-tiered practice range, putting green, and a short game area. the residents of Forest Creek. Kelsey calls the area surrounding Forest Creek a "shopper's paradise." The La Frontera shopping center is within shouting distance and offers numerous places to have a meal, spend a few dollars or spend some time. In addition to shopping and dining, Round Rock is home to the minor-league baseball team, the Round Rock Express, at the nearby Dell Diamond. Dell Computer and a host of high-tech employers are close by. As an established resident, Couture laments the traffic snarls that the rapid growth has caused, but he realizes that Forest Creek's location is a big part of its allure. "The fact that the neighborhood is away from the city center gives it a unique sense of togetherness," says Couture. "We are our own community." With its mature trees, numerous amenities and idyllic setting, Forest Creek makes a great place to call home. "Forest Creek is a great community to raise your family," says Kelsey. "It's quiet, friendly and, most of all, inviting." Schools Round Rock Independent School District Forest Creek Elementary Ridgeview Middle School Stony Point High School Resources Search articles Amenities mentioning Forest Creek Golf Forest Creek in the Austin Course American-Statesman's Round Rock archives. Express Find area restaurants on Austin360 Wells Branch By Karima Ashinhurst Special sections staff A large part of the appeal of the Wells Branch neighborhood is its excellent location. Situated in north Austin, halfway between MoPac and Interstate 35, Wells Branch is a vibrant community in its prime. Mike Baker, a residential real estate agent with the Allen-Lancaster team of Keller Williams, notes that in addition to its central location, a substantial component of the allure of Wells Branch is the "broad price range" of the homes. Baker notes that Wells Branch buyers can find a home in the "$90,000 range" no mean feat in Austin's hot real estate market. Starting in the $90s, homes in Wells Branch are priced up into the $250s. The varied prices reflect the age of homes in the community - from 1982, the year Wells Branch opened, until 2003 - and a size range of about 800 to 3,000 square feet. Zone: N MLS Area: N Zip Code(s): 78728 Zip Code 78728 Demographic Profile Population: 19,813 Avg HH Size: 2.22 Median HH Income: $58,640 Median Age 31.1 % Married: 50% % of HHs with 28% In addition to I35 to the west and MoPac to the east, Wells Branch also counts Grand Avenue Parkway to the north and Wells Branch Parkway to the south as its boundaries. This puts this established community an easy distance from the shopping, dining and recreational facilities of the La Frontera, Gateway and Arboretum shopping centers. Children: % with College Degree: % Owner Occupied Housing Median Yr Dwelling was Built 46% 38% 1995 Source: Claritas 2006 Wells Branch has much to offer its residents. In addition to be 10 minutes from Major north Austin employers, including many in the high-tech arena, are also downtown, this neighborhood within a comfortable distance. is close to the La Frontera, Gateway and Arboretum As Baker points out, depending on traffic, Wells Branch residents are "only shopping areas. The Wells about 10 minutes from downtown." The area in and around the sprawling, Branch Recreation center also 3,000-plus-home community has its own share of amusements, however, many offers a basketball court and of which are provided by the Wells Branch Municipal Utility District (MUD). exercise equipment. Two parks, Katherine Fleischer Park and North Mills Park are "One of the reasons for (Wells Branch's) success is the MUD," Baker says. located within the community. In addition to providing water and wastewater services, the MUD provides residents with numerous recreation opportunities, including a rec center, community center, parks pool and more. The Wells Branch Recreation Center features a full-size basketball court, a workout room with exercise machines and free weights, and multi-purpose rooms for fitness classes and meetings. Wells Branch is home to two swimming pools, the junior-Olympic sized Willow Bend pool and the Katherine Fleischer pool at the park of the same name. Also at Katherine Fleischer Park is the Homestead, an 1850s-era cabin complex available for tours and festivals in the community. North Mills Park is the second park in the community. In addition to the Wells Branch Community Garden, which gives residents a chance to exercise their green thumbs and enjoy the great outdoors, Baker mentions another opportunity to enjoy nature, the hike-and-bike trails. Several miles of trails, complete with Frisbee golf, wind through the community. Most of the kids in Wells Branch attend the schools of the Round Rock Independent School District, but a few attend Pflugerville ISD schools. The majority of children attend Wells Branch or Northwest elementary schools, Deerpark Middle and McNeil High schools. In addition to the utilities the MUD is responsible for, TXU Gas provides gas. TXU Energy and The City of Austin share in providing electricity. The tax rate is 2.956 percent. Wells Branch is a community with much to offer anyone looking for a warm, inviting place to call home. "When you drive through the neighborhood, it has appeal," says Baker. "It looks like someplace you'd want to live." Schools Wells Branch Elementary School Northwest Elementary School Deerpark Middle School McNeil High School Amenities Wells Branch Municipal Utility Distict Wells Branch Recreational Center La Frontera The Arboretum Parks Katherine Fleischer Park North Mills Park Pflugerville By Michele Chan Santos Pflugerville's housing market, which has risen and fallen with the fortunes of Dell Inc., is slowly recovering from the effects of the 2001 tech bust. More than 400 existing homes are on the market in the area, and more than 30 percent are vacant -- 10 percent is normal -- according to local real estate agents. The high inventory, plus competition from new home developments, has made it harder to sell a house. "Three years ago, the average number of days on the market for our team was 27. Now, it's 100," said Larry English, who owns ReMax Greater Austin, which gets 90 percent of its sales from the Pflugerville area. English said home construction in the area, which remains above 1,000 houses a year, is affecting existing home sales. He said builders are offering incentives that put existing home sellers at a disadvantage. Zone: N MLS Area: PF Zip Code(s): 78660 Zip Code 78660 Demographic Profile Population: 53,723 Avg HH Size: 3.17 "I would not say we have fully recovered until all the vacant houses have been Median HH Income: $71,723 Median Age 32.8 sold," English said. "The key here is jobs." % Married: 65% % of HHs with Still, there is hope that the market is past its worst days. 53% Children: % with College Low mortgage rates helped bring a new wave of home buyers into the Central 32% Degree: Texas market, and more than 900 existing homes in the Pflugerville area were % Owner Occupied sold in 2003, reaching levels last seen in 2000. 91% Housing And city leaders and real estate developers are hoping that Texas 130, the toll Median Yr Dwelling 1998 was Built highway under construction along the east sides of Travis and Williamson counties, will open new opportunities to attract new residents and, importantly, Source: Claritas 2006 new employers. The city's largest employer is the 16,500-student Pflugerville school district, As a member of the but many of those 1,500 jobs are outside the city limits. The city is 25 square Pflugerville Recreation Center miles; the school district covers 100, including parts of North Austin, Round you have access to the Rock, Manor, Taylor and Hutto. gymnasium, fitness room (Circuit Training, Free Weights, Cardio Equipment), In grocery stores, at the sidelines of soccer and baseball games, and at City game room (Ping Pong, Pool, Council meetings, people are talking about Texas 130 and Texas 45 North, which will connect Pflugerville and Cedar Park -- and the opportunities they Foosball, Air Hockey), and a track. will bring for retail and commercial development. Both roads are scheduled to open in 2007. "What has held Pflugerville back all these years is that we didn't have the big roads that Round Rock and Georgetown had," said John Pfluger, a broker and descendant of the city's founder. Boom and bust No town is a better example of the type of bedroom communities that sprouted up around Austin and Round Rock during the tech boom. Pflugerville's population more than tripled during the 1990s as builders quickly put up houses for the burgeoning number of employees of Dell and other nearby companies. In 1999 alone, work began on 1,695 houses. But when the tech boom lost steam, thousands of Dell employees were laid off, and many had to put their houses up for sale. Like other areas of Central Texas also hit by layoffs, the number of existing homes added to the listings in the Pflugerville area saw double-digit percentage point increases after the tech bust. In 2001, nearly 1,500 existing homes were put on the market. In 2002, 1,700 new listings were added. Last year, it rose to 1,987. But the number of sales slid from 930 in 2000 to 800 in 2002; they rebounded to 926 in 2003. In the region overall, sales did not slip. Low mortgage interest rates helped the Pflugerville market recover last year, in part by drawing first-time buyers such as Mark and Shannon Willy. The Willys and their children Callie, 5, and Mason, 1, moved to Pflugerville last September from an apartment in South Austin. Mark Willy is the store director of the Pflugerville Albertsons grocery. He said he loves the fact that he lives 10 minutes away from his job and no longer has to commute on Interstate 35 or MoPac Boulevard (Loop 1). Shannon Willy is a manager for Bank of America in Cedar Park. But the family chose to live in Pflugerville, citing the award-winning school system and family amenities. "When I took the store over, I just loved the community," Mark Willy said. "I thought this would be a great place to raise a family." The city offers "a sense of safety and security," he said. "There are lots of soccer fields and lots of activities for kids." The Willys bought a 2,000-square-foot house in the The Park at Blackhawk, a new subdivision on the north side of Pflugerville. Much of the new home construction over the past year has been around the area near the intersection of Pecan Street, Pflugerville's main drive, and FM 685. Work was started on more than 1,000 houses in the Pflugerville area in 2003, and more are on the way. The city has approved 14,000 lots as future home sites, and hundreds are already in various stages of planning and construction. And even farther east on Pecan Street, a new master-planned community is in the works. More change coming Last month, Tejas Viejo Land Co. announced that it had 1,600 acres near the intersection of Pecan Street and Texas 130 under contract. Wayne "Sandy" Rea, Tejas Viejo's president, said that Texas 130, which will stretch from Georgetown to Seguin, south of Austin, and companion toll-road project Texas 45 North, which will connect Pflugerville and Cedar Park, are the reasons why he and other developers are looking at Pflugerville in a new light. "In every city that I've been in, everything goes out to the freeways. The restaurants, the shopping, everything," Rea said. "This will totally and completely change Pflugerville." Pfluger, the broker, helped bring together 15 landowners to sell their properties to Tejas Viejo. The project could grow by another 400 acres. The mixed-use development also will bring commercial and retail space to a city that hasn't seen the same retail growth that has occurred in other parts of Central Texas, including in North Austin at the city's edge. At a recent City Council work session, city planners made a list of their top priorities for economic development. They include industrial and business park development and improving roads leading to Texas 130 and Texas 45 North. As the transportation and infrastructure gets better, retail opportunities will improve, city planners hope. Commercial development along the Texas 45 North and Texas 130 corridors "will give us the opportunity to have a well-balanced city instead of just living on rooftop taxes, property taxes," said David Buesing, Pflugerville's acting city manager and police chief. "We will, hopefully, have businesses out there generating sales taxes to give us a well-rounded and well-balanced budget." That prospect, plus the recovering economy, gives Buesing hope that his city is finally working its way out from under the recession. "It's been felt by a lot of people out here," he said. "Most of these people work in Round Rock or Dell or somewhere; they don't really work in Pflugerville. With (Texas) 130 coming, we will have the opportunity to have jobs here." Schools Pflugerville Independent School District Amenities City Home Page Pflugerville Parks Recreation Center Resources Resources Search articles mentioning Pflugerville in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 SOUTH CENTRAL Travis Heights By Evelyn Valdez Quaint houses with a lot of charm are what you will find in the community of Travis Heights. Although this neighborhood is rather aged, almost anyone can feel very much at home. The houses are well taken care of and many have been renovated to accommodate modern day needs. This established neighborhood is one of Austin's first dating back to the early 1890's when it was officially annexed by the city of Austin. If you are searching through Travis Heights for "For Sale" signs in the neighborhood, look very carefully and don't be fooled by the large "American for Peace" signs that look very similar and demonstrate the liberality of the residents. Travis Heights is known around Austin as having an eccentric and unconventional vibe. According to Carrie Bills, owner of Green Mango Real Estate and resident of Travis Heights, "the make-up of the community is very mixed and diverse". Zone: 1B MLS Area: C Zip Code(s): 78704 Zip Code 78704 (primary) Demographic Profile Population: 41,241 Avg HH Size: 2.00 Median HH Income: $40,887 Median Age 33.0 % Married: 35% % of HHs with 18% Children: This is not a cookie-cutter neighborhood by any % with College 42% means; the houses are very unlike each other Degree: and most have large backyards. Bills has been % Owner Occupied 30% in the real estate business for 25 years and Housing explains that the neighborhood is "mostly made Median Yr Dwelling 1972 up of two-bedroom and one-bath bungalows was Built being expanded but there are also a few mansions in the area as well". Extensive front Source: Claritas 2006 porches with different sounding wind chimes and swings hanging from huge trees are common descriptions of homes in South Congress provides great Travis Heights. shopping, night life and restaurants all within proximity This area is great for people who love the outdoors also; Big Stacy and Little to Travis Heights. Every first Stacy Park have a great hike-and-bike trail with a low level of difficulty that Thursday of the month shops residents can be seen jogging at in the early morning or walking their pets in open their doors until 10pm the afternoon. There is also Stacy Pool that stays open year-round and jungle which includes events and gym for the kids to play. "The residents here are really active and are not activities. hesitant to take initiative," says Bills. She describes an instance where families in the neighborhood organized a summer concert to help raise money for Stacy Pool. Families are not the only make up of Travis Heights; people with diverse backgrounds and interesting occupations such as artists, film makers, teachers, and business professionals reside here as well. When asked of what attracts people to buy a home in Travis Heights, Carrie Bills said, "the topography with hilly streets and an interesting layout brings people to this community". As you drive through the winding streets you will see many cobalt blue boxes for recycling on the curbs of a lot of homes. Speed bumps throughout the neighborhood can ensure that drivers with lead feet or noisy cars will not bother your slumber in Travis Heights. Close proximity to South Congress's great shopping, restaurants, downtown, and Interstate 35 make Travis Heights a very popular place to live. The actual borders of Travis Heights are Riverside Dr. on the north, Interstate 35 on the east, Oltorf on the South, and South Congress Ave. on the west. Be aware that a great location also comes with a price; homes in Travis Heights range from $200,000 to $1,000,000 with the average being at $275,000. Carrie Bills says that while other neighborhoods in Austin experienced a downfall in the real estate business last year, Travis Heights held its own quite well. Schools Austin Independent School District Travis Heights Elementary Fulmore Middle School Travis High School Amenities Resources Big Stacy Park Search articles mentioning Little Stacy Travis Heights in the Austin Park American-Statesman's First Thursday archives. South Find area restaurants on Congress Austin360 Barton Hills The character of old Austin is alive and well in Barton Hills where creative architecture, lush greenery and Hobbit-inspired rock gardens stand in sharp contrast to much of today's cookie-cutter housing. Located in Central Austin south of the colorful Restaurant Row on Barton Springs Road, the area known as Barton Hills is a charming collective of bordering neighborhoods where winding roads lead through majestic, treecovered hills and home sites. "It's an interesting terrain," says Ali Carter, an agent with Green Mango Real Estate. "There are a lot of mature trees and each street feels different because the area is so hilly." Homes come in all shapes and sizes (and eye-catching colors), and nearby Zilker Park, Barton Springs Pool and Town Lake offer plenty of Austin's laid-back respite. Zone: SC MLS Area: 7 Zip Code(s): 78704 Zip Code 78704 Demographic Profile Population: 41,241 Its natural beauty, enchanting charm and proximity to downtown, make Barton Avg HH Size: 2.00 Hills a great place to call home. "The proximity to the greenbelts is a huge Median HH Income: $40,887 draw," adds Carter. "I show quite a few homes to people drawn to the Median Age 33.0 elementary school there. Barton Hills Elementary is an exemplary school." % Married: 35% % of HHs with Established in the 1940s and 1950s with construction continuing through the 18% Children: 1970s to the late 1990s, Barton Hills is dotted with all kinds of homes. "There % with College are quite a few homes built in the late '70s and early '80s," Carter says. "There 42% Degree: are lots of ranch-style homes. The homes built in the '70s or '80s are typically three bedrooms, two baths although there are some that are four bedrooms, two % Owner Occupied 30% Housing baths. I would say they are in the range of 1,700 square feet, generally." Median Yr Dwelling 1972 was Built George Butler of Butler Properties says in most cases, homes cost anywhere from $200,000 to $500,000, although some can be found closer to $100,000. Source: Claritas 2006 Home size ranges from 1,600 to about 3,000 square feet. "In the last year, there were 22 sales and the homes sold from $110 per square foot to $219 per square foot," Carter says. "The turnover of homes isn't that great because families tend Zilker Park includes sand volleyball courts, a nine-hole to stay here for a long time." Disc Golf Course, 9 Soccer Fields, 1 Rugby Field, 2 MultiThe children of those families attend Barton Hills Elementary, O. Henry use Fields, miniature train ride, Middle School and Austin High School. Zilker Elementary School also is canoeing, natural spring pool, nearby. dog park, and more. Easy access to Lamar Boulevard, MoPac and Barton Springs Road offers Barton Hills Playground residents a wealth of shopping, dining and entertainment options. If character and old-Austin charm make you feel at home, visit the quiet and quirky community of Barton Hills. Schools Barton Hills Elementary school Kealing Magnet School Stephen F. Austin High School O. Henry Middle School features a basketball court, multi-purpose field, trail miles, playground, and picnic area. Umlauf Sculpture Garden Amenities Resources features outdoor art and statues Zilker Park Search articles with a trail. Barton Hills Neighborhood mentioning Association Barton Hills in the Austin Nature and Science Austin Nature and Science Austin Center is a non-profit Center American-Statesman's community center that Barton Springs Pool archives. Barton Hills Greenbelt Find area restaurants on provides nature exhibits and natural science education Zilker Botanical Gardens Austin360 resources for all ages. Zilker Botanical Gardens features many different gardens planted by different local designers. Barton Springs Pool features natural spring swimming area, sunbathing, concession, and lifeguards on duty. Battle Bend Springs By David Glessner Proximity to downtown is often billed as a selling point for Austin area neighborhoods, but only a drive in rush-hour traffic can measure the true accuracy of such a claim. Battle Bend Springs, a close-knit south Austin community established in the 1970s, is that rare slice of neighborhood quiet just minutes from Austin's vibrant downtown. Located on a tree-covered plot of land bordered by Interstate 35, South Congress Ave., Stassney Lane and St. Elmo, Battle Bend Springs is a secluded oasis of tranquility located just a few traffic lights from the sights and sounds of downtown Austin. "It's close-in and conveniently located," says Gerry Vanover, GRI, ABR with Coldwell Banker United Realtors. "It's got easy access to employers, downtown and area grocery stores. It's an older neighborhood so it's got mature trees." Joan Costello, CRS with Keller Williams Realty and a longtime resident of Battle Bend Springs said school teachers, retired military personnel and working class families with kids comprise a large portion of the community. "A lot of our buyers are the children and some grandchildren of the original owners," says Zone: South MLS Area: 10 Zip Code(s): 78745 Zip Code 78745 Demographic Profile Population: 53,096 Avg HH Size: 2.51 Median HH Income: $46,772 Median Age 34.0 % Married: 49% % of HHs with 30% Children: Costello. "It's like a small-town neighborhood." Many homes in Battle Bend Springs feature large back yards - some even back to stretches of greenbelt and Williamson Creek. Average square footage is 1,300. The neighborhood, which was once on the edge of the city limits and surrounded by cow pastures, is tended to by a 30-year-old neighborhood association. Neighborhood activities include holiday decoration awards, holiday basket delivery, greenbelt Easter egg hunt, semiannual neighborhood garage sales, newsletter distribution and various gatherings for special activities. "The neighbors here care for one another," Costello says. "They're friendly, caring people." As for it's location, Costello says, "it's especially good for people who work in San Marcos. It's a good location for anyone traveling south." % with College Degree: % Owner Occupied Housing Median Yr Dwelling was Built 25% 51% 1978 Source: Claritas 2006 Battle Bend Park includes multi-purpose fields, a basketball court, playground, and picnic and bar-b-que area. Williamson Creek Greenbelt Neighborhood activities include holiday decoration awards, holiday basket delivery, greenbelt Easter egg The southern boundary of Battle Bend is Battle hunt, semi-annual Bend Blvd, western boundary is Suburban Dr, neighborhood garage sales, northern boundary is Fort Mason, and east to IH35. The neighborhood, which newsletter distribution and offers two nearby parks and stretches of greenbelt, was established in the early various gatherings for special 1970s. Today, Battle Bend Springs is occupied by working class families and activities. is considered close to downtown. Schools Austin Independent School District Galindo Elementary Porter Junior High Travis High Amenities Battle Bend Park Williamson Creek Greenbelt Resources Search articles mentioning Battle Bend Springs in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Cherry Creek By David Glessner In a city that's plowing ahead in the name of progress, one southwest Austin community retains much of the colorful character and laid-back lifestyle that shapes the South Austin mystique. Cherry Creek features an expansive collection of well-kept one- and two-story homes, peaceful winding roads and a wealth of beautiful oak trees. Like a quiet contradiction, Cherry Creek sounds and feels removed from the busy and vibrant city, but is actually within close proximity of shopping, employment, entertainment and highway access. "It's close to everything," says Tonya Nieto of Coldwell Banker Realty. "For price per square footage, you can't beat it." Zone: South MLS Area: 10 Zip Code(s): 78745 Zip Code 78745 Demographic Profile Population: 53,096 Avg HH Size: 2.51 Median HH Income: $46,772 Median Age 34.0 % Married: 49% % of HHs with "They were primarily built through the '70s to 30% Children: the late '90s," says Marcella Keller, a Realtor % with College with ERA Broker Network, "but it's been an 25% Degree: ongoing development of residential houses. They're still doing some homebuilding in that % Owner Occupied 51% Housing area." Median Yr Dwelling 1978 was Built Prices range from about $130,000 to more than $200,000, according to Nieto. That pricing Source: Claritas 2006 coupled with location, character and nearby schools have made Cherry Creek a desirable community for more than 30 years. Silk Oak Park and Ellen Higgins Park include picnic An expansive community with numerous areas, playground, and subdivisions, Cherry Creek is accessed by such volleyball. major roadways as William Cannon, Manchaca, Stassney, and Brodie Lane, West Gate, MoPac Cunningham Playground, Silk and Interstate 35. The community also features Oak Park and Cherry Creek several bus routes. Park are all playgrounds for children. Nearby Garrison Park offers a peaceful family retreat and features picnic tables, barbecue Garrison Park includes grills, basketball court and children's playscape set among shade trees. baseball, softball and multi"The trees are also an attraction," Nieto says. "In most new neighborhoods they purpose fields, a basketball court, swimming pool, picnic tear them down, but here they're mature." and bar-b-que areas, and a trail. Nieto says Cherry Creek homes range from approximately 1,300 to more than 2,500 square feet. Many were built in the 1970s while others are less than 3-years-old. Dick Nichols District Park includes softball and multiAmenities purpose fields, basketball, Cherry Creek Park tennis and volleyball courts, Silk Oak Park Search articles mentioning Schools Austin Independent School Cunningham Cherry Creek in the Austin playground, picnic and bar-bque areas, swimming pool, and District Playground American-Statesman's trail. Cowan Elementary School Ellen Higgins Park archives. Covington Middle School Garrison Park Find area restaurants on Bowie High School Dick Nichols District Austin360 Park Karst Preserve Shady Hollow By Jackie Potts On a summer afternoon in Shady Hollow you can find children playing basketball in their nicely landscaped front yard or an elderly man taking his dogs for a walk. Debbie Peterson and her family have lived in South Austin since 1981. They decided to move into a neighborhood close to good schools, with large trees and a "small-town feel to it." They found all this in Shady Hollow. "I love Shady Hollow," said Peterson, treasurer of the long established Shady Hollow Homeowners Association board. "We've got great neighbors, a good swim team and lots of opportunities for people to get involved in activities throughout the year." Residents can stay involved in their neighborhood by reading their monthly issue of the Shady Hollow Highlights. The June 2004 six page newsletter includes short articles of volunteer projects preformed by Boy and Girl Scouts in the neighborhood, services that area residents provide the community, advertisements of nearby businesses, and upcoming events. Zone: South/Southwest MLS Area: SW Zip Code(s): 78749,78739, 78748 Zip Code 78748 (primary) Demographic Profile Population: 28,826 Avg HH Size: 2.74 Shady Hollow is in Southern Travis County and straddles Brodie Lane. El Dorado Trail marks the southern border, Squirrel Hollow is the northern border Median HH Income: $64,911 Median Age 34.2 and Doe Run marks the eastern border. The west side of the subdivision % Married: 63% borders on Lost Oasis Hollow. % of HHs with 42% Children: Alice Niven with JB Goodwin Realtors said % with College Shady Hollow is an established neighborhood 35% Degree: built in the early 1980s that remains popular % Owner Occupied because of its large front and back yards, huge 75% Housing shady trees and proximity to good schools and Median Yr Dwelling Austin's metropolitan area. 1989 was Built "It's a good, family neighborhood," said Niven, Source: Claritas 2006 who has sold homes in the neighborhood since 1986. "It sells well because of the schools - especially Bowie, which is a Blue Demographic profiles for other Ribbon School." Students in Shady Hollow attend the new Baranoff zip codes: Elementary School, Bailey Middle School and Bowie High School. 78749 Some of the older homes are on larger lots 78739 ranging from 125 feet by 175 feet to 205 feet by 202 feet. The rest of the homes are on lots The community center and about 60 feet by 125 feet. Prices on homes in pool are the focal point of the Shady Hollow can range from $170,000 to neighborhood. Many $370,000. youngsters are on the neighborhood swim team. The Most homes have three or four bedrooms, community center is also the although some have five bedrooms. Most have gathering point for events such two or three bathrooms. They mainly have his and hers walk-in closets, as the 4th of July parade, the skylights and baths with cultured marble. Kitchens have Formica or tile. Most Memorial Day celebration, homes have two living areas, although a few have as many as four living areas. Easter egg hunt, scouting and Shady Hollow is only expanding with new homes being built in the quiet Fall Fajita Fest. family neighborhood as well. Peterson said the community center and pool are the focal point of the neighborhood. Many youngsters are on the neighborhood swim team. The community center is also the gathering point for events such as the 4th of July parade, the Memorial Day celebration, Easter egg hunt, scouting and Fall Fajita Fest. "Neighbors are great," Peterson said. "They are willing to get involved in events and help you out. It really feels like a community." Peterson, who has children in Bowie and Bailey, said the nearby schools also help foster that sense of community. "When you go to open house at school, you see people you know who are your neighbors," she said. Peterson said neighbors are also good about attending neighborhood association meetings and learning about issues affecting Shady Hollow. The issues of rodent and vector control in the neighborhood are current issues of concern. Brodie Lane is the only major artery into Shady Hollow. Motorists can get to MoPac Boulevard or Interstate 35 via Slaughter Lane. Or they can drive farther north on Brodie to reach William Cannon Drive or U.S. 290/Texas 71. Resources Schools Search articles mentioning Austin Independent School Shady Hollow in the District Amenities Austin Baranoff Elementary Circle C Metropolitan American-Statesman's School Park archives. Bailey Middle School Find area restaurants on Bowie High School Austin360 Southeast Austin The wide swath of land that entails the 78744 ZIP code is characterized by a unique and diverse grouping of commercial real estate, residential neighborhoods, and stunning natural resources. Boundaries of the area commonly referred to as "Southeast Austin" are Ben White Boulevard to the north, IH 35 to the west, Colton Boulevard to the south, and U.S. Highway 183 to the east. Largely undeveloped, this area is home to Dove Springs, Wagon Crossing, Silverstone, Franklin Park, Yarrabee Bend, Zone: SC Williamson Creek, Peppertree Park, Onion Creek Plantation, Kensington Park MLS Area: 11 and Indian Hills. Though decidedly urban, this part of the city also contains a Zip Code(s): 78744 generous amount of open space, picturesque Onion Creek, and McKinney Falls State Park. The 744.4-acre park, just 13 miles from the capital, allows visitors the opportunity to camp, hike, mountain bike, picnic, fish, and observe Zip Code 78744 the preserved ruins of founder Thomas F. McKinney's homestead. On a Demographic Profile smaller scale, those living in the Kensington Park neighborhood enjoy springfed natural ponds that flow into Williamson Creek before reaching McKinney Population: 36,668 Falls. The area is also home to the Jimmy Clay & Roy Kizer Golf Courses Avg HH Size: 3.41 which are located adjacent to the state park and are part of the Williamson Median HH Income: $39,648 Creek community. Most shopping needs can be met in the western portion of Median Age 27.9 the area, along William Cannon and IH-35, very near the local multiplex % Married: 53% cinema, Cinemark Tinseltown 17. % of HHs with 45% Children: Like 78741, its neighbor to the north, 78744 was developed relatively late and % with College 13% is just now shedding its "fringe" status. Following the trend found in other Degree: parts of the city, single-family housing has been overlooked as a building % Owner Occupied 54% alternative. Instead, apartment homes and low-income housing projects have Housing been on the rise, especially since the City of Austin began offering intense Median Yr Dwelling 1985 subsidies on those types of structures. Historically, the Dove Springs area has was Built been characterized by its predominance of duplexes, 4-plexes, and apartment homes resulting in a landscape that is slow in changing. That's not to say Source: Claritas 2006 single-family homes can't be found. The average sale price of a home in the 78744 ZIP code is roughly $100,000, the highest being $145,000, the lowest Southeast Austin is home to $25,555. Half of the homes in the area were built in the 1970s, 30% in the '80s, stunning parks including 17% in the '90s, and only 1% in the 2000s. Homes are generally characterized Onion Creek and McKinney as 3-bedroom, 2-car garage units with 1 living area. Texas Gas Service is the Falls State Park. This park main provider of gas in the area, while the City of Austin takes care of includes the ruins of a cabin electricity, water, and wastewater services. Austin Energy, a department of the and homestead, camping, City of Austin, provides the electricity and manages the customer service hiking, mountain biking, center for City of Austin utilities that includes billing as well as starting and picnicking and fishing. stopping service. Swimming is also allowed in Onion Creek. This area also Both Austin and Del Valle School Districts serve the community by offering offers is residents multiple golf elementary education at Houston, Pleasant Hill, Widen, Langford, Rodriguez, courses as well as shopping Palm, Baty, Hillcrest, and Smith elementary schools. The middle schools and services along I-35 and include Mendez, Paredes, John P. Ojeda and Del Valle middle schools, while high school students attend Travis, Akins, and Del Valle high schools. Active neighborhood associations in the area include the Kensington Park Homeowners Association, the Franklin Park Neighborhood Association, the Dove Springs Neighborhood Association, the Peppertree Parkway Neighborhood Association, and the Silverstone Neighborhood Association. Schools Austin Independent School District Del Valle Independent School District Resources Search articles mentioning Amenities McKinney Falls State Southeast Austin in the Park Austin Jimmy Clay/Roy Kizer American-Statesman's Golf Course archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 William Cannon. NORTHEAST AUSTIN Harris Branch By Walter Brewer Harris Branch used to be a best-kept-secret sort of neighborhood, but Austin's growth has made it hard to miss. A prime location between U.S. 290 to the south and Parmer Lane to the north makes Harris Branch accessible to many fast-growing areas including Manor and Pflugerville. "All the big box stores at Parmer and I-35 are just 10 minutes away," says Larry Geller, a Realtor with JB Goodwin who lived in the neighborhood for 10 years before a recent move. "Dell, Samsung and Parmer Lane are right there. When I lived there in '92 there was nothing. Now it's at your fingertips." With all the growth, including a housing boom in nearby Manor, Geller says Harris Branch retains its neighborhood charm. "I lived on a cul-de-sac and I knew all my neighbors," Geller says. "I find it a very safe part of Austin. There are a number of people working for the Austin Police Department, the fire department and sheriff's office who own homes there. It's secluded and quiet. "Very few homes are leased out," he says. "Most homes are owner occupied. There's also a huge on-site day care. Many parents are double-income parents. Applied Materials is within Harris Branch and Samsung is in the Manor school district; with those two taxables, the schools really benefit." Children in kindergarten through fifth grade attend Bluebonnet Trail elementary in the community. Older children attend Manor Middle School and Manor High School. The high school is fairly new and Geller says it has a great theater arts department. Community facilities include a Junior Olympic-size swimming pool; fitness center; tennis and one-onone basketball courts. There are walking and jogging paths through the community and it's dotted with small lakes and large ponds. One of the ponds is at the entrance on U.S. 290. Many homes are built around the ponds or small lakes. Zone: NE MLS Area: NE Zip Code(s): 78754 Zip Code 78754 Demographic Profile Population: Avg HH Size: Median HH Income: Median Age % Married: % of HHs with Children: % with College Degree: % Owner Occupied Housing Median Yr Dwelling was Built 8,643 2.32 $57,522 35.3 62% 28% 33% 63% 1999 Source: Claritas 2006 Homeowners pay annual dues of $316 annually. That covers fees for the recreational facilities. Harris Branch offers a junior Olympic swimming pool, hiking and jogging trail, fitness center, lighted tennis courts and a regulation-size basketball court. Geller says Harris Branch is a master-planned community or a planned-unit development. That means it is designed to accommodate retail sites, single-family homes, apartments, schools, churches and libraries. "It's a city within a city," Geller says. Surrounding Harris Branch are Applied Materials' high-tech manufacturing facility is a number of lakes including: Town Center Lake, Bluebonnet within Harris Branch. Lake, and Lake Primrose. It consists of six different residential sections at this time. The first two sections are Lakewood north and south. The other four sections are Meadowview, Thistle Hill, Bellhaven and Speyside. Prices for existing homes range from the low $120s to the low $200s. Geller says it is very affordable. Sizes range from 1,530 square feet up to more than 4,000 square feet. Bluebonnet Electric Co-op provides electricity; The City of Austin provides water and sewerage for Harris Branch. Gas is provided by Texas Gas Service. An architecturally appealing City of Austin fire station is in the neighborhood. Emergency Medical Services has a station there as well. Tax rates per $100 valuation are: City of Austin $.4928; Travis County - $.4918; Manor ISD $1.7291; and Austin Community College - $.0771. "Harris Branch is great for families and empty nesters," Geller says. "It's a very nice place to live. Everyone leaves you alone, but they're all together in terms of community." Harris Branch is located north of HWY 290, south of Parmer Lane, east of Giles Lane, and west of Parmer Lane. Schools Manor ISD Austin Independent School District Bluebonnet Trail Elementary Manor Middle School Manor High School Travis High Resources Amenities Search articles mentioning Town Center Harris Branch in the Austin Lake American-Statesman's archives. Lake Primrose Find area restaurants on Bluebonnet Lake Austin360 EAST CENTRAL AUSTIN East Austin By David Glessner Austin's downtown skyline may garner a glut of glamorous postcard publicity, but the area east of Interstate 35 is quickly becoming a hotbed of revitalization and growth. From cosmopolitan chic to longstanding mom-and-pop corner shops, Austin's East Side is a melting pot of urban cultures, historical significance and economic development. It also is home to Huston-Tillotson College, the Texas State Cemetery and such landmark destination restaurants as Juan-in-aMillion, Joe's Bakery, Gene's, Hoover's and El Azteca. Not surprisingly, the 78702 and 78721 ZIP codes have seen an influx of development and revitalization as local singles, musicians, artists and young professionals turn their eyes toward East Austin's affordable housing and prime proximity to the downtown entertainment district, Towne Lake and Interstate 35. "Once I get a home listed, it will sell within a week," says Jesse Torres, a Realtor since 1964 and a native Austinite who grew up in the area before founding Torres Home Quest. "It's a hot area." And it's only getting hotter. While slick, new condos such as the Pedernales Lofts (priced from $96,000 to $200,000) have attracted a lot of attention, it is the decades-old homes that comprise the majority of the area's housing. Torres says many of the homes in the 78702 area are small in size and are in need of repair. However, these are precisely the qualities that are attracting the area's growing new population. "Most houses are two bedrooms and average 800 square feet," Torres says. "They sell for about $121 per square foot. A lot of the homes are 80-years-old. Most of them don't have garages or air-conditioning, and they may need foundation work." Homes in the 78721 ZIP code are newer and Zone: EC MLS Area: 5 Zip Code(s): 78702, 78721 Zip Code 78702, 78721 Demographic Profile Population: 33,200 Avg HH Size: 3.22 Median HH Income: $29,112 Median Age 30.8 % Married: 44% % of HHs with 34% Children: % with College 7% Degree: % Owner Occupied 58% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1967 was Built Source: Claritas 2006 East Austin is seeing a revitalization in the area. Not only are the housing prices attractive but this area also offers an abundance of parks as well as the French Legation, which hosts community events throughout the year. The George Washington Carver Museum is also located in the area and has the distinction of average about $80,000, Torres says. "They were built about 15 to 20 years ago," he says, noting that he predicts "tremendous growth and renovation" throughout the East Austin area. The 78702/78721 ZIP codes in East Austin are roughly bordered by Interstate 35 on the West; Martin Luther King Blvd. on the North; Ed Bluestein Blvd. on the East and Town Lake to the South. Schools Austin Independent School District Allan Elementary Brooke Elementary Campbell Elementary Govalle Elementary Metz Elementary Resources Norman Elementary Search articles mentioning Amenities Oak Springs Elementary Willow Creek/East Riverside French Legation Ortega Elementary in the Austin Carver Museum Sanchez Elementary American-Statesman's Rosewood Zaragoza Sims Elementary archives. Center Zavala Elementary Find area restaurants on Kealing Junior High Austin360 School Martin Junior High School Johnson High School Huston-Tillotson College Texas State School for the Deaf the being the first African American neighborhood museum in Texas. French Place By Donna Lin Best described as a mixture of the past, present and future, French Place is a hodgepodge of greenery, homes, businesses and people. Small, one-story houses intersperse larger, multiple-story dwellings along wide streets, shaded by a wide variety of trees, bushes and in some places, bamboo. Children play in their front yards under the morning sun, as parents stand by. Residents are outside watering their lawns, walking from place to place and greeting nearby neighbors. French Place is often mentioned in conjunction with the neighborhood Cherrywood. It is in actuality a subdivision of the neighborhood Cherrywood located in zip code 78722, and includes the pricier Wilshire Woods. Cherrywood is defined by Wilshire Boulevard on the north, Manor Road on the south, Airport Boulevard to the east and Interstate 35 to the west, and is located a few miles from the University of Texas and downtown Austin. French Place was originally owned by the Giles family in the 1940s. Once known as Giles Two, the area expanded slowly until the 1980s, a period of change and extreme growth in the neighborhood. Today, French Place houses a diverse group of residents, ranging in all ages and all backgrounds. Its central and convenient location, coupled with the environment residents have cultivated, make French Place one of the most attractive neighborhoods in central Austin for homebuyers of all types. Zone: East Central MLS Area: 3 Zip Code(s): 78722 Zip Code 78722 Demographic Profile Population: 5,484 Avg HH Size: 2.10 Median HH Income: $42,536 Median Age 34.4 % Married: 31% % of HHs with 15% Children: % with College 47% Degree: % Owner Occupied 45% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1955 was Built Source: Claritas 2006 French place provides residents with downtown Residents have quick access to neighborhood convenience and shopping, like restaurants, grocery stores and other retail services. Among a few neighborhood highlights the Hancock Center which features HEB, Old Navy, are the supermarket Fiesta, and the local eatery Freebirds, Sears, Wendy's, Hoover's. Jason's Deli and much more. French Place is generally known as one of Alamo Park features softball Austin's older neighborhoods, containing a and multi-purpose fields, great deal of "starter homes," mostly twobasketball, volleyball and bedroom, one-bathroom homes with 900 to 1,200 square feet of living space. multi-purpose courts, and a Prices for the homes range from $150,000 to $250,000. Realtor Tom Polk, of Stanberry & Associates, says he doesn't think there is any one type of picnic and playground area. purchaser. "It has to do with what French Place does for the purchaser. It has a really neat name, it's kind of a cool area to be in," he says. Patterson Park also serves the French Place area with softball Children in the neighborhood attend and multi-purpose fields, Maplewood Elementary, Kealing Junior High basketball and volleyball School and McCallum High School. Area parks courts, and a playground and include Alamo Parkland Recreation Center and picnic table area. Patterson Park. Utilities are provided by the City of Austin. Polk says the high demand of French Place residences is shown through the low availability of homes for sale. "It's not a big area. These homes are older and have character, and over the last years people have placed their own personal value in them," he says. "They remodeled them, kept them up, and when you put that together with a nice looking, vintage neighborhood, the extreme convenience of it, you have a winner." Schools Austin Independent School District Maplewood Elementary Kealing Junior High School McCallum High School Amenities Alamo Park Patterson Park Hancock Center Shopping Resources Search articles mentioning French Place in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 NORTHWEST Canyon Creek By Walter Brewer Gene and Dorie Dillard sell a lot of homes in Canyon Creek. Their interest in the neighborhood goes beyond their business as a husband-and-wife team with Coldwell Banker United Realtors -they also live in Canyon Creek. "We've been here 10 years," says Gene Dillard. "We've watched the community grow from 350 homes to almost 1,200 homes." Canyon Creek is in Northwest Travis County off RM 620 and Boulder Lane David Weekley Homes and Standard Pacific are still building new homes in the neighborhood. The Dillards say all phases of the Canyon Creek community will be complete in about a year. About four years ago Beshara Shaleesh bought a new Standard Pacific home in Canyon Creek. His is a four-bedroom home with a game room in about 3,500 square feet. Zone: NW MLS Area: CL Zip Code(s): 78726 Zip Code 78726 Demographic Profile Population: 10,336 Avg HH Size: 2.97 There are a lot of things he enjoys about the neighborhood. "It has very quiet Median HH Income: $102,794 Median Age 37.7 streets and the streets are wide," he says. "The lots in the section where I am % Married: 77% are big and there are a lot of trees." % of HHs with 50% Children: The natural setting is enhanced by the community's proximity to the Balcones % with College Canyonland Preserve. The preserve serves as the eastern boundary wrapping it 67% Degree: from southwest side up to the northeast side. The neighborhood is accessed from RM 620, which is its primary boundary on the west side. Anderson Mill % Owner Occupied 78% Housing Road is to the north of the neighborhood. Median Yr Dwelling 2001 was Built "It's a gorgeous neighborhood," Dillard says. "It's got great topography. It's not flat and the Source: Claritas 2006 trees are preserved. The focus is on quality of life." Canyon Creeks has great amenities such as two parks, a Shaleesh has a 7-year-old daughter and he huge swimming pool, a new appreciates the family-friendly nature of the elementary school, US community. Exemplary schools. It is close to shopping, lakes, rivers, "The people are awesome," he says. "Most homeowners are families." beaches, and Austin high technology employment Canyon Creek's location makes it ideal for employees of companies such as centers. 3M, which is right around the corner on RM 2222 and Dell, which is accessible from RM 620. Trailhead Park amenities include a "We have a lot of people from Motorola and soccer/football/baseball field, a Dell," Dillard says. "We have state employees, large children's playscape, a covered pavillion with a sheriff's deputies, school teachers and doctors. These are nuclear families with two adults with bathroom, numerous barbeques with grills, a half-court two to two and half children. More than 50 basketball court, two sand percent of them are college educated. It's a volleyball courts, and the young community with an average age nature trail leading down to a somewhere between 35 and 50." wilderness area alongside a year-round flowing creek. Canyon Creek sits in the 78726 zip code. According to 2003 research by Claritas, the population for that zip code is 6,806 people, the median age is 35.7, median household income is $107,815 and children live in 47 percent of Canyon Creek Park, owned by the Homeowner's Association, the households. has a junior Olympic Dillard says prices for homes in the neighborhood range from $215,000 to swimming pool with a separate baby splash pool and waterfall, more than $500. a covered pavillion with showers and bathrooms, a tennis court, full-court Schools Resources basketball court, sand Round Rock Independent Amenities Search articles volleyball court, and children's School District Canyon Creek Site mentioning playscape. Leander Independent Canyon Creek Canyon Creek in the School District Homeowners Association Austin Canyon Creek Elementary Balcones Canyonlands American-Statesman's Grisham Middle School Nature Preserve archives. Canyon Vista Middle Trailhead Park Find area restaurants School Canyon Creek Park on Austin360 Westwood High School Liberty Hill By Walter Brewer Driving from the Congress Avenue Bridge to the edge of Liberty Hill takes about 40 minutes on a holiday. That's 33 miles and a world away from downtown Austin. Sitting a few miles from the western edge of Williamson County, Liberty Hill has gained plenty of attention from Central Texas residents seeking a smalltown atmosphere in the increasingly urban Austin area. Liberty Hill is a small town with a long history. People have been living in the town for well over 100 years. However, the town was only incorporated a few years ago. Today there is a mayor and city council. "Most of the people we sell homes to today like the fact that this is a small town," says Shane White, broker/owner of Re/Max Town & Country. "The school district is a huge selling point. The test scores are consistently good and the class sizes are relatively small." Numerous small businesses are clustered along the Liberty Hill stretch of Texas 29. This is some of the town's more valuable real estate. "We've seen prices of property on anything with 29 frontage go up in last couple of years," White says. While there are plenty of businesses on the highway, there aren't many big name retailers. White attributes this to the fact that Liberty Hill's sewer system is still a few years away from creation. He says many franchises won't open stores unless a septic system is available. Despite a busy presence on the four-lane Texas 29, the town's quiet-side lies just off the shoulder of the highway. The center of the old town of Liberty Hill features quaint buildings made of native stone some of which are probably a hundred years old. A railroad track runs through Liberty Hill. These tracks carry the Austin Steam Train Association's sightseeing train. There's a trackside restaurant near downtown that had a good breakfast crowd on a recent morning. Zone: NW MLS Area: LH Zip Code(s): 78642 Zip Code 78642 Demographic Profile Population: 6,071 Avg HH Size: 3.04 Median HH Income: $62,860 Median Age 35.1 % Married: 69% % of HHs with 43% Children: % with College 19% Degree: % Owner Occupied 87% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1990 was Built Source: Claritas 2006 Foundation Park is near the Liberty Hill Junior High School and features baseball fields, walking, jogging tracks and a playscape. There are basketball courts and White says many of the people moving to Liberty Hill today want a home that soccer fields near Sundance sits on an acre or more. The Sundance Estates and Sundance Ranch Ranch. neighborhoods feature homes with brick or stone exteriors and traditional For outdoor enthusiasts, the designs on large lots. Reytex Homes, Mercedes Homes and several custom builders build new homes in the neighborhoods. The Sundance neighborhoods Highland Lakes are nearby. Marble Falls is 25 to 30 are on the north side of Texas 29 while the older part of Liberty Hill is on the minutes away and Burnet is south side of Texas 29. This part of town is surrounded by small homes of 10 to 20 miles away. Lake varying ages and designs. Georgetown is less than 15 Because homes in Liberty Hill can range from small and manufactured to spacious and sitebuilt, the range is great. "Some of the smaller houses and manufactured houses start at $50,000 or $60,000 and go up to $100,000," White says. "If it's site-built, prices start around $100,000 and go up to $500,000. The majority of homes sold are between $150,000 and $250,000." White says the majority of homes that are sold in Liberty Hill range from 1,700 square feet to 2,700 square feet. Foundation Park is near the Liberty Hill Junior High School and features baseball fields, walking, jogging tracks and a playscape. There are basketball courts and soccer fields near Sundance Ranch. None of the subdivisions have community pools. Liberty Hill has a public library. For outdoor enthusiasts, the Highland Lakes are nearby. Marble Falls is 25 to 30 minutes away and Burnet is 10 to 20 miles away. Lake Georgetown is less than 15 minutes away. Area students attend Liberty Hill Elementary, Liberty Hill Intermediate, Liberty Hill Middle School and Liberty Hill High School. Garbage collection is handled by independent contractors. Information is available at www.ci.liberty-hill.tx.us/. A volunteer fire department assists with emergency services in Liberty Hill. It is part of the Williamson County Emergency Service District #4. Electricity is provided by Pedernales Electric Cooperative. Water service for residents inside the city is handled by Liberty Hill Water Supply and outside the city limits it is handled by Chisolm Trail Water Supply. Schools Liberty Hill Independent Amenities Resources Foundation Park Search articles mentioning minutes away. School District Liberty Hill Elementary Liberty Hill Intermediate School Liberty Hill Middle School Liberty Hill High School Sundance Ranch Duhram Park & Pool Crestview in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Marble Falls Ann Guidry The very name evokes iconographic images of the Texas Hill Country. Founded in 1887 by General Adam R. Johnson, Marble Falls is named for a twenty-foot fall over marble ledges high above the Colorado River. Of its many assets, the town's location stands out as its biggest draw. Residents enjoy the serenity of the Hill Country in a small town setting (the current population stands at 6,480), and the advantages inherent to having two large cities nearby. (Austin is a short forty-seven miles to the east, San Antonio lies 85 miles to the south.) Further, Marble Falls is rooted in the heart of the Highland Lakes, the largest chain of lakes in Texas. Miles of waterways and area rock formations didn't just suggest the name, they continue to define the very nature and character of the place. Zone: NW MLS Area: LN Zip Code(s): 78654 Zip Code 78642 Demographic Profile Population: 20,957 Avg HH Size: 2.49 Median HH Income: $44,711 According to the Marble Falls Chamber of Commerce, "it was here that the Median Age 42.2 famed pink granite of the State Capitol Building was quarried, a donation from % Married: 67% progressive area citizens in exchange for a rail connection with Austin." Today, % of HHs with the rock of the region continues to fascinate. Enchanted Rock State Park (where 28% Children: you can climb the second-largest granite dome in the United States), and % with College Longhorn Cavern State Park, as rich in geological formations as the Texas 22% Degree: folklore associated with them, are both just a short drive away, while Granite % Owner Occupied Mountain looms over the western edge of town. 77% Housing Median Yr Dwelling Lake-lover? You'll feel right at home here. 1985 was Built Centrally located amongst the Highland Lakes of Buchanan, Inks, LBJ, Marble Falls, Travis and Source: Claritas 2006 Austin, just about every conceivable water sport can be enjoyed without having to head out of town. Golfer? There are seven all-year courses Foundation Park is near the within a twenty-mile radius, including "fifty-four Liberty Hill Junior High holes of Robert Trent Jones' finest work at School and features baseball Horseshoe Bay." Tennis facilities, swimming fields, walking, jogging pools and horseback trails only begin to round out the picture. There's the Marble tracks and a playscape. Falls Rodeo Association, the Hill Country Community Theater, several area There are basketball courts vineyards, including Fall Creek, Flat Creek and Lost Creek, a first-run theater, and soccer fields near restaurants that include the "world-famous" Bluebonnet Café, and an historic Sundance Ranch. downtown shopping district along Main Street featuring more restaurants, For outdoor enthusiasts, the antique and gift shops. Highland Lakes are nearby. Marble Falls is 25 to 30 Marble Falls students are educated within the family of public schools run by the minutes away and Burnet is 10 to 20 miles away. Lake Marble Falls Independent School District. Easy to remember, the schools are Georgetown is less than 15 Marble Falls Primary School, Marble Falls Elementary, Marble Falls Middle minutes away. School, and Marble Falls High School. Private schools include Faith Academy of Marble Falls and St. Peter's Lutheran School. Higher education is taught at Texas Tech University Hill Country, Highland Lakes. The City of Marble Falls provides water and wastewater services to the Marble Falls community. Residential and commercial customers also receive curbside garbage pickup services that the City of Marble Falls contracts out to BFI Waste. Utility accounts cover all City services and are presented to customers in one convenient bill. Home prices range from the $70s to the $100s, unless you're looking for lakeside living for which you'll have to pay extra. For example, residences in the gated community of Meadowlakes on Lake Marble Falls begin at $110,000 but can go as high as $700,000 for waterfront sites, while luxury homes in Horseshoe Bay along Lake LBJ start at $200,000. Home styles range from 1920s-built cottages and ranch houses to contemporary dwellings built from the '70s up to present day. According to Suann Adkins, longtime Marble Falls real estate agent, "New areas are popping up everywhere." No wonder, considering that the rapidly growing metropolitan areas of San Antonio and Austin continue to expand in the direction of Marble Falls. According to recent economic and growth reports, within a 10-mile radius, the area's population is expected to jump from its current 24,426 residents to 29,454 in 2010. "We've got a Home Depot, a Hampton Inn, a Chili's. For a small town in the Hill Country, we have a lot of amenities associated with larger cities, but in a more relaxed atmosphere," Adkins says. Schools Marble Falls Independent School District Marble Falls Elementary Marble Falls Middle School Marble Falls High School Amenities Enchanted Rock Resources State Park Search articles mentioning Longhorn Cavern Crestview in the Austin State Park American-Statesman's archives. Horseshoe Bay Find area restaurants on Blue Bonnet Café Austin360 Marble Falls Rodeo Association The Hills of Lakeway Set only a short mile from the shores of Lake Travis under the bluest of Texas skies, The Hills of Lakeway offers its residents the best that life has to offer. With amenities that include a country club, golf, tennis, hiking trails, a fitness center and more, it's no wonder that this community is considered a real value for those who appreciate living in the Texas Hill Country. "This particular community is a great choice for anyone who enjoys an active lifestyle, and likes to get out in the great outdoors," says Doug Land, broker and owner of Capital City Sotheby's International Realty. "The area is astoundingly beautiful, so much so that it actually encourages people to get out and have fun. Life here is very much focused on the outdoors, and so many people play golf or tennis, because it's literally right in their back yard." Land says residents here have their choice of shooting a game of hoops at the basketball courts, or packing a picnic lunch and taking the family to the pavilion area, where there are picnic tables and a playground for the kids. Tennis enthusiasts will love the 18 outdoor courts and the two indoor courts that let them play all year round. They may also opt to enjoy the fitness center and swimming pool located just outside the gated area. Zip Code(s): 78738 Friendly, laid-back and easy are some of the words that describe the residents here in this close-knit, gated community where families mix with "emptyZip Code 78738 nesters." Children in the community attend schools in Lake Travis ISD, with its Demographic Profile many recognized and exemplary schools as designated by the Texas Education Agency. The recent boom in development in Lakeway has resulted in 95 percent Population: 7,233 of the subdivision being built out, with a handful of lots still available. Bounded Avg HH Size: 2.85 on the north by Lakeway Blvd., on the east by Lohmann's Crossing, and to the Median HH Income:$127,496 west by Serene Hills Drive, the southern border of The Hills of Lakeway leads Median Age 41.6 into its sister subdivision, Flintrock Falls. % Married: 78% % of HHs with 42% Home prices for this 25-year-old community run about $275,000 to more than Children: $1 million for a single family home, while Land says there is a small section of % with College 64% condominiums that range from $150,000 to $300,000. Pedernales Electric and Degree: City of Austin Electric are the electrical utility companies for the area, and % Owner Occupied 93% residents pay a property tax rate of 2.76 percent. Housing Median Yr Perhaps the biggest draw to living in The Hills of Lakeway is The Hills Country Dwelling was Built 1999 Club and Lakeway Golf Club. The Lakeway course offers an 18-hole course, in addition to a golf shop, driving range and practice putting green, as well as golf Source: Claritas 2006 instruction and clinics headed by PGA professionals. But golf isn't all that life in The Hills of Lakeway has to offer. In many ways, The Hills Country Club serves as the heart of the community. "There are several neighborhood functions that everyone comes out to," Land explains. "Many of them are centered around The Hills Country Club. They have regular activities such as a Friday Night Barbecue, a Beer and Bingo Night, and all sorts of kids functions, in addition to big celebrations, like Fourth of July. There are kids' movies in the dining room of the clubhouse, bridge groups, exercise groups and all kinds of ways for people to plug in, get involved and get active." Resources Amenities Search articles mentioning The Hills Country Club Schools Hills of Lakeway in the Lake Travis The Village Park and Nature Trail Austin ISD City of Lakeway Parks and American-Statesman's Recreation archives. Flintrock Falls Located in the tranquil beauty of the Texas Hill Country, Flintrock Falls is a gated Lakeway community offering a fantastic lifestyle. Quiet and peaceful, and away from the hustle and bustle of urban living, the Flintrock Falls lifestyle lends itself well to its outdoor-loving residents, with its own golf course, tennis courts, country club and close proximity to a marina on Lake Travis. "The living here is perfect for outdoor enthusiasts," says Doug Land, broker and owner of Capital City Sotheby's International Realty. "In addition to the golf course, there are 16 tennis courts available at the World of Tennis Sports Complex, as well as easy access to Lake Travis for boating. Many move here from Houston or Dallas for the comfort, ease and beauty of the area. They love the laidback lifestyle here, and the low crime rate. And it's a nice balance of retirees and families living here." As a a part of the City of Lakeway, residents of Flintrock Falls enjoy access to the public parks, lake access, community skatepark and swimming pool. Bounded on the east by Flintrock Trace, to the west by Serene Hills and to the south by Flintrock Road, Flintrock Falls shares its northern border with its neighboring community, The Hills of Lakeway, and can be found just off Highway 620 and Lohman's Spur. Children attend Lake Travis ISD schools, and residents pay a property tax rate of 2.9 percent. Utility services are provided by City of Austin Electric and Sharp Propane. Zip Code(s): 78738 Zip Code 78738 Demographic Profile "This is a newer subdivision that just opened in 2000," says Land, "and it's only about half-way built out at this point. There are approximately 330 lots in the Population: 7,233 subdivision, and these homes are very upscale, with garden homes in the Avg HH Size: 2.85 $400,000 to $500,000 range, and single family homes going for anywhere from Median HH Income:$127,496 $500,000 to $1.5 million. More than half of the homes in Flintrock Falls front Median Age 41.6 the golf course, and all of the homes offer incredible hill country and golf course % Married: 78% views." % of HHs with 42% Children: There is more to life than just golf in Flintrock Falls, but it does seem that life in % with College 64% this Lakeway community revolves around the fabulous Flintrock Falls golf Degree: course designed by Jack Nicklaus and his son Jack Nicklaus II. The course takes % Owner Occupied 93% advantage of the natural beauty of the Texas Hill Country, with its mature live Housing oak and cedar trees, curling around Hurst Creek (which provides a natural water Median Yr 1999 hazard), and offers a spectacular waterfall at the number 2 hole. Dwelling was Built To really get the family golf enthusiast's heart to beat faster, just mention that the Flintrock Falls course is located next to The Hills of Lakeway golf course, also designed by Nicklaus in 1980. Both courses together have a total of 36 holes, and in turn provide one of the best training and practice facilities in the country. The quality and close proximity of the two courses were two reasons they were selected as the home of The Academy of Golf Dynamics, a nationally known school dedicated to helping golfers improve their golf game. Land says club membership allows residents of Flintrock Falls full access to both courses. They also have the option to have their membership status upgraded to include the Live Oak Golf Course and the Yaupon course at Source: Claritas 2006 Lakeway Resort. "It's a great deal," says Land. "Residents have the option to quadruple the number of courses they can play." Schools Lake Travis ISD Amenities City of Lakeway Parks and Recreation The Hills Country Club Resources Flintrock Falls community Website Search articles mentioning Flintrock Falls in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. WEST River Place By Ann Guidry River Place on Lake Austin, one of the few areas left in the city in which homebuyers can purchase lots with direct access to Lake Austin, is one of the city's most naturally beautiful master-planned communities. The rough boundaries of this waterfront/country club community include FM 2222 to the north, the Balcones Canyon Lands Preserve to the west and Westminster/Glen Lake to the east. In other words, the development can be reached by heading west on FM 2222 and taking a left (before you reach Highway 620), into the main entrance on River Place Boulevard. Zone: N MLS Area: RN Zip Code(s): 78730 Zip Code 78730 Demographic Profile Just a twenty-minute drive from downtown Austin, River Place appeals to both urban dwellers and nature lovers alike. Of the 1,440 acres owned by the Population: 6,617 homeowners association, half is dedicated to preserved land never to be Avg HH Size: 2.51 developed. The natural beauty of the unspoiled land, bass fishing, swimming Median HH Income: $143,044 and boating, a marina with private slips for non-waterfront residents, rare Median Age 38.1 preserve home sites situated along the hills overlooking Lake Austin, a park % Married: 72% with youth soccer fields, tennis courts, fifty acres of nature trails and a fishing % of HHs with 32% pond, century-old pecan trees, close proximity to River Place Country Club Children: featuring Tom Kite Golf Course, nearby shopping, and a supportive, active % with College 71% neighborhood association make River Place an estate community that seems to Degree: have it all. % Owner Occupied 73% Housing Construction began in 1990 when a Houston development team bought the Median Yr Dwelling 1997 acreage from the government. Fourteen years later, River Place is comprised of was Built 1,200 to 1,250 single-family homes including 100 to120 lots that have yet to be developed. Prices run from $330,000 to well over $1,000,000 with Source: Claritas 2006 mandatory membership to the homeowners association, River Place Residential Community Association, Inc. Resa Watson, association manager, Woodlands Park includes 3 noted that the population of the area runs the gamut from "newly-marrieds to youth soccer fields, 2 tennis empty-nesters. The community includes a diverse group of active people who courts, hike and bike trails, are drawn to the wide spread of price ranges and home and lot sizes that River picnic areas, and a fishing Place offers." Illustrating Watson's description of River Place as a "nice pond. community made up of concerned people who eagerly participate in the schools and the neighborhood", events hosted by the association and the River World-class golf, shopping, Place Municipal Utility District include an annual Easter egg hunt ("about a entertainment and dining all thousand people showed up this year," she says), Fourth of July parade and located just minutes away from barbeque, and a fall hoedown. each home site On-premise boating, fishing and skiing In addition to the residential aspect of the Just nearly 2 miles away from community, River Place includes an office River Place Country Club park. River Place Pointe, a business/technology featuring (Tom Kite Golf office campus, takes up 47.9 of the 1,440 acres Course, swimming, tennis, and houses seven buildings right next door to fitness and dining facilities). River Place Country Club. Further, an upscale shopping center is scheduled for construction at the River Place entrance sometime next year. Utilities are partly served by the City of Austin, partly by the River Place MUD. The Municipal Utility District handles the water and wastewater services for newer homes as well as two expansive parks and the nature trail, while the City of Austin takes care of the rest. Austin Energy supplies River Place with its electricity. The development is under the Leander Independent School District so children attend either Laura Bush or Steiner Ranch Elementary Schools, Cedar Park Middle School or Cedar Park High School. Schools Resources Leander Independent Search articles School District mentioning Amenities Laura Welch Bush River Place on Lake River Place in the Elementary Austin Homepage Austin Steiner Ranch River Place Country Club American-Statesman's Elementary Woodlands Park archives. Cedar Park Middle Find area restaurants on School Austin360 Cedar Park High School Bee Cave Out of the mouths of babes can come the most creative and life-changing ideas - just ask the Gifford family. The Giffords were traveling back to Dallas through Austin after a family trip to the Gulf coast when their then eleven-yearold daughter made the comment that if the family were to move anywhere, why not move to Austin? "My wife and I were both Dallas born and bred, and had gone to school at the University of Texas here and had loved living here at that time. Our daughter made that comment, and we just looked at each other. We had just put our house up for sale in Dallas. A month later after that, we were here and we've never looked back," says family patriarch Jeff Gifford. Gifford, now a real estate agent with the Keller Williams Southwest Market Center realty office, settled his family in the Bee Cave's Camelot subdivision, where they've lived happily ever since. Zone: SW MLS Area: 8W Zip Code(s): 78738 Zip Code 78738 Demographic Profile Population: Avg HH Size: 7,233 2.85 "The main reason we moved to Bee Cave was Median HH Income: $127,496 because of the excellent reputation of the Eanes Median Age 41.6 Independent School District, and then we % Married: 78% lucked into this funky old neighborhood that's % of HHs with 42% very affordable," said Gifford. "Here in Bee Children: Cave you can find homes that start at around % with College 64% $200,000 and up. Many of the homeowners in Degree: our area are the original owners, and as time % Owner Occupied 93% goes on younger people are moving in and Housing fixing up the homes here." Median Yr Dwelling 1999 was Built Gifford finds living in Bee Cave offers the best of country living with city amenities. "It's like living in the country. Our home sits on two acres and we Source: Claritas 2006 have wonderful hill country views - yet we're close in and only minutes away from shopping and downtown Austin. We're only five minutes away from the Bee Cave, positioned close to boat launch by the 360 Bridge, and only 25 minutes away from Pace Bend the boat launch at the 360 Park or Mansfield Dam." Bridge and only 25 minutes away from Pace Bend Park, Bee Cave is bound on the north by Lake Austin, on the east by Loop 360, on also provides its residents the the west by the Village of Bee Caves, and on the south by the Barton Creek proximity to all the Lake Tributary, Barton Creek Blvd. and Lost Creek Blvd. Utilities are provided by Austin has to offer from waterthe City of Austin and Pedernales Electric Cooperative. skiing and boating to swimming. In addition to Camelot, the Bee Cave community includes a wide variety of older neighborhoods such as Rob Roy, Lost Creek, Cuernavaca, Austin Lake Hills, Barton Creek West and newer ones such as The Uplands, Lake Pointe and The Homestead. In addition to the Eanes Independent School District, the area is served by the Lake Travis Independent School District, which also boasts an excellent scholastic reputation with outstanding academic accomplishments and fine facilities. Gifford says the mix of old and new neighborhoods makes for an equally interesting mix of people in Bee Cave, and his family has a wide variety of friends and acquaintances from many different backgrounds. "The perception of other Austinites is that a lot of people who live here are snobs, but that's not true," says Gifford. "Our feeling is that one of the things we love about Bee Cave is that it really does cross so many different social boundaries - like other places, there are people here who have a lot of money and people here who have none. Schools Eanes Independent School District Amenities Austin Independent School Lake District Austin Lake Travis Independent School District Resources Search articles mentioning Bee Cave in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Lake Pointe By Walter Brewer Almost overnight, Lake Pointe went from a fledgling neighborhood with a few houses in the hills between Austin and Bee Cave to an established community complete with schools, parks and pools. Established in 1995, there are no new lots available in Lake Pointe, only existing homes. A great Hill Country location has made Lake Pointe popular with home buyers and successful for home builders. The terrain is rolling and beautiful. It's near Lake Austin and Lake Travis, yet it's not too far from Austin (about a 20 to 25 minute drive to downtown.). With the growing availability of shopping and entertainment in the area, including a planned Galleria mall complex, that proximity will be less important. Zone: W MLS Area: LS Zip Code(s): 78733 Zip Code 78733 Demographic Profile "The Galleria will be right up close to there and that will have a lot of shopping and entertainment," says Bill Sill, a Realtor who works in the area. Population: 8,486 "That will add to the value of Lake Pointe as well as the other subdivisions that Avg HH Size: 3.13 are growing around the Lake Pointe area." Median HH Income: $117,195 Median Age 37.6 Sill adds that those subdivisions have a "higher price point than Lake Pointe % Married: 69% and that helps raise the value of Lake Pointe properties." % of HHs with 56% Children: % with College The three sections of Lake Pointe are Lake Pointe, Vista Pointe and The 69% Degree: Pointe. The homes in Lake Pointe range from $215,000 to $425,000; the homes in Vista Pointe range from $650,000 to $850,000; homes in The Pointe % Owner Occupied 89% Housing are priced at $1 million or more. The Pointe is closest to Lake Austin, Vista Median Yr Dwelling Pointe is on a hillside with excellent views of the Hill Country and lake. 1991 was Built There are approximately 750 homes in Lake Pointe. Source: Claritas 2006 Lake Pointe offers the appeal of an established neighborhood coupled with the contemporary home styles that blend traditional, contemporary and classic Hill Selma Huges Park offers shady picnic areas with views of Country. Lake Austin and includes The typical home offers between 1,700 and 4,000 square feet of living space in fishing, sunbathing, swimming and picnicking. a two-story design with four bedrooms, two or three baths and a two-car garage. Cul de sac streets are common. This makes the area particularly suited Mary Quinlan Park includes for families with young children. boating, fishing, nature study and picnicking. This small Chip Gist, director of golf at Circle C, likes the family-friendly atmosphere in park offers miles of rolling Lake Pointe. hills and hundreds of feet of shoreline access. Lake Pointe is all about family to me," Gist says. "We've got two young kids 8 years old and 6 years old. We live there because it's like a throwback. Our kids can go to great schools in the community. They can play outside without us having to watch them. The people that we've met through the kids and while we've been there make us feel at home. We wouldn't trade it for the world." Children attend Lake Travis Independent School District schools. Sill says the school district is one of the best in Central Texas and is rated exemplary. The boundaries of the neighborhood are Resaca Blvd. on the east, Bee Caves Road on the South, Bayton/Sonoma on the West, and Lake Austin/open land to the North. Water and wastewater is provided by the Lower Colorado River Authority. Austin Energy provides electricity. Resources Search articles Amenities mentioning Selma Hughes Park Lake Pointe in the Schools Lake Austin Lake Travis Independent Austin Mary Quinlan Park School District American-Statesman's Lake Point Homeowner's archives. Association Find area restaurants on Austin360 Steiner Ranch Nestled in the Texas Hill Country, Steiner Ranch is distinctive among Austin luxury home communities for its striking natural beauty. Known as the "Land Between the Lakes," Steiner Ranch offers a wide range of amenities guaranteed to keep its residents busy and happy. "You can look at other neighborhoods in Austin," says Stovall, "but you won't find anything like Steiner that offers as much as we do. The rolling hills, the lakes, the water-this is what Austin is all about." Situated between two of the most popular recreational lakes in the area, Steiner Ranch attracts active people who appreciate a natural environment. Nature enthusiasts will love the more than 12 miles of nature trails, and 819 acres of nature preserve and pocket parks within the community itself. It is this dedication to nature that helped Steiner Ranch cinch a Commercial Real Estate Award as "Best Master-Planned Community" in the greater Austin area from the Austin Business Journal in 2004. Zone: NW MLS Area: CL Zip Code(s): 78726 Zip Code 78726 Demographic Profile Population: 10,336 Avg HH Size: 2.97 Median HH Income: $102,794 Median Age 37.7 "When you buy a home at Steiner Ranch, you're getting much more than just a % Married: 77% house-you're getting a lifestyle," says Charles Stovall of Newmark Homes, a % of HHs with Steiner Ranch homebuilder. "You have a natural setting with over 12 miles of 50% Children: hike and bike trails, and six neighborhood parks with playscapes, picnic areas, and outdoor grills, and we're surrounded by the % with College 67% 27,000 acres of the Balcones Canyonland Degree: Conservation Preserve." % Owner Occupied 78% Housing Amenities include two community centers, a private Lake Club on Lake Austin, three Source: Claritas 2006 basketball courts, six tennis courts, and fulltime on-site activities. Several of the newest Steiner Ranch, situated neighborhoods under development are located between two of the most within the gates of The University of Texas Golf Club, the official home of popular lakes in the area and The University of Texas Golf Teams. Roy Bechtol designed the 7,154-yard, surrounded by nature trails, 18-hole golf course, which provides a beautiful backdrop and exquisite views parks and preserves is the for these homes. perfect neighborhood for nature enthusiasts. Steiner Steiner Ranch is in the acclaimed Leander school district, with two elementary Ranch amenities also include schools, Steiner Ranch Elementary and Laura Welch Bush Elementary, and a two community centers and the new middle school, Canyon Ridge Middle School, within the community University of Texas Golf Club. itself. High school students attend Leander High School. Steiner Ranch is accessible from RR 620, and new homes start from the $190,000's and go to over $2 million, with the median price in the mid$350,000's. Besides Newmark, other homebuilders include Morrison, Plantation, David Weekley, Toll Brothers, Drees, Partners in Building, Taylor Woodrow and Mercedes. Pedernales Electric Co-Operative provides electrical service to the area, and water and wastewater services are by the City of Austin. Southwestern Bell services Steiner Ranch with state-of-the-art fiber optics to handle the high-tech demands of the area. Schools Resources Leander ISD Search articles Amenities Steiner Ranch mentioning University of Texas Golf Club Elementary Steiner Ranch in the Lake Austin Laura Welch Bush Austin Lake Travis Elementary American-Statesman's Balcones Canyonland Canyon Ridge archives. Conservation Preserve Middle School Find area restaurants on Leander High School Austin360 West Lake Hills "The reason why we moved here was that it felt like we were living in the country, but we were only five minutes from downtown," says realtor and Westlake resident Cheri Price of Choban & Associates, Realtors. "West Lake Hills has such a nice quiet feeling that it's almost like living in the country, even though it's pretty much in the middle of town." Living close in to Austin has many advantages, especially when looking at increasing drive time as Austin's population continues to increase. But for those who want the joys of rural living, buying a home close to downtown and the university area means buying a home in West Lake Hills. "I think people here appreciate the natural beauty, the native landscaping, and the very well maintained traditional landscaping in the area," says Price. "With all of the deer in the area, the native landscaping works best, because it makes use of the kinds of plants that the deer don't want to eat." Zone: W MLS Area: 8E Zip Code(s): 78746 Zip Code 78746 Demographic Profile The city of West Lake Hills is comprised of four square miles, and is located Population: 28,032 west of Austin approximately between 3300 Bee Cave Road and east of Loop Avg HH Size: 2.60 360 on Bee Cave, with a population of more than 3,000 and approximately Median HH Income: $100,267 1,000 homes and 200 businesses. Utilities are provided by the city of Austin. Median Age 39.2 % Married: 65% In addition to its close proximity to Austin, % of HHs with 39% another reason many families are attracted to Children: living in West Lake Hills is that it is part of the % with College 76% outstanding Eanes Independent School System, Degree: which has received the rating of "exemplary" % Owner Occupied 67% by the Texas Education Agency. Currently, Housing there are six elementary schools, Hill Country Median Yr Dwelling 1985 Middle School and West Ridge Middle School, was Built and Westlake High School. Source: Claritas 2006 "There's a very strong feeling of community here, and support is particularly strong for the schools and its students. There are annual arts functions hosted West Lake Hills offers the by Eanes ISD that we turn out for, and we've been to some of the plays that are benefit of living in the country put on by Westlake High School," Price says. but also being close to downtown and many But a more compelling reason to live in West amenities. The school district Lake Hills than the school district is the people, is another reason to live in according to Price. "The thing I like best is that West Lake Hills since the there's a great cross-section of age groups and Eanes Independent School nationalities," says Price. "It's never been a lot System received a rating of of people living here, and while some feel that "exemplary" by the Texas this area appeals only to a certain economic Education Agency. group, and it is an expensive place to live, I don't think that's true. The cultural diversity and the different age groups are one of the strongest things about this community. You can take a walk in the evening and see your neighbors - there's always people walking and jogging in the area." Price says that homebuyers can find bigger lots in West Lake Hills compared with other similar neighborhoods, and that $350,000 is the average homebuyers can expect to spend to purchase a home. "Most of the homes that were built in the Seventies have gone through some updating, and it's a really nice neighborhood to live in. There are homes that are less expensive, and certainly there are homes that are much more expensive, but for an entry level into this neighborhood, it's $350,000," says Price. "The market has been softer lately, and there is more property on the market now than in recent years, so this is a very good time to consider buying a home in West Lake Hills." Another advantage to purchasing a home in West Lake Hill's is the city's restriction on new home subdivision development, which specifies a minimum lot size for any new home construction of one acre. "There are no such restrictions for older, developed lots," says Price. "But this is the requirement for new home development, so it provides a lot of land area per home on the average, and keeps the area looking natural and beautiful." Schools Eanes Independent School System Barton Creek Elementary Bridge Point Elementary Cedar Creek Elementary Eanes Elementary Amenities West Lake Hills Resources Search articles mentioning Bryker Woods in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Forest Trail Elementary Valley View Elementary Hill Country Middle School West Ridge Middle School Westlake High School SOUTH Onion Creek By Evelyn Valdez Tall pecan, cypress, and live oak trees welcome you to the Onion Creek community which was built in 1974. If you can imagine swinging from a hammock, sipping tea, and overlooking a beautifully landscaped golf course from your backyard, this may be the neighborhood for you! On a typical day people can be seen walking or jogging on the sidewalks through the neighborhood while the wind rustles through the well developed trees. Before moving to Onion Creek in 1999, John McNabb who is President of the Homeowner's Association, searched for 6 months with his wife for a new neighborhood to retire in. John says that he was attracted to the country club atmosphere and the intrinsic value of the properties. The residents are engaged, active, and social at Onion Creek. Zone: South MLS Area: SC Zip Code(s): 78747 Zip Code 78747 Demographic Profile Onion Creek Club is nestled in the Onion Creek neighborhood and is the center of activity for many residents. Membership to the club provides access to a Population: 7,643 junior Olympic sized pool, tennis courts, a fitness center, and 27-hole golf Avg HH Size: 2.63 course. The club also boasts of its myriad of activities for members of all ages. Median HH Income: $65,121 Median Age 41.4 % Married: 68% % of HHs with 27% Children: % with College 40% Degree: % Owner Occupied 90% Housing Median Yr Dwelling 1989 was Built Onion Creek Club Golf Course Shiela Mustin, with Mustin and Porter Co., specializes in Golf Course Communities and says that 65% of residents are retirees which Onion Creek greatly caters to. "There are bridge games going on all day at the Club and buses come in to provide tours to the symphony or ballet in Austin". Although, it is apparent that families with growing children reside here as well. On a sunny summer day, the pool is filled with kids splashing in the water. When not on summer vacation, Onion Creek's children attend Menchaca Elementary, Paredes Middle, and Akins High School. Source: Claritas 2006 McKinney Falls State Park has many amenities to offer. It has screened shelters with bunk beds, 84 campsites with water and electricity, walk-in water sites, picnic site, hiking and mountain biking, youth group camping area, a group camp, Sheila describes homes in Onion Creek as having common characteristics dining hall (capacity 80), while not being duplicated in style. For amphitheater that seats 50 example, all homes are over 2,000 square feet, people, and much more. have 2 car garages, 25 foot setbacks, and 75%100% are brick homes but all have very distinct Springfield Park includes floor plans. fishing and picnic areas. According to Sheila, homes in Onion Creek on average cost $225,000 up to $700,000. Streets Onion Creek Club, a member only club, has a golf course, surrounding this area are Wild Dunes on the north side, Pinehurst on the south end, IH-35 and River Plantation make up the fitness center, tennis courts, west and eastern sides. swimming pool, fine dinning, and more. Homeowners receive gas utilities from Southern Union Gas, electricity and water from the City of Austin, although waste water is handled through the Onion Creek Waste Water Corporation. Amenities for cable are available with Time Warner and telephone services are offered with Southwestern Bell. The Onion Creek Home Owners Association also provides 24-hour private security, street lighting, trash pick-up, and landscape maintenance. Area churches are St. Albans Episcopal, Manchaca United Methodist, and Manchaca Southern Baptist. Running errands and grocery shopping is conveniently located in several shopping centers at William Cannon traveling just a few minutes north of Onion If you would like to see this wonderful community, simply drive south on IH -35 and exit number 225 toward Onion Creek Parkway, make a left after exiting the freeway and you will arrive at Onion Creek's main entrance. This is a perfect place to live for retired folks and expanding families who enjoy peace, quiet, and a good round of golf. If you wish to live "like being in a resort", as Sheila adds, you can do so at Onion Creek. Onion Creek is bound by River Dunes on its north side, Pinehurst on its Southside, and with I-35 and River Plantation as the western and eastern boundaries respectively. Amenities Onion Creek Sports Schools Resources Austin Independent School Complex Search articles mentioning District Onion Creek District Onion Creek in the Austin Menchaca Elementary Park American-Statesman's School McKinney Falls State archives. Paredes Middle School Park Find area restaurants on Akins High School Springfield Park Austin360 Onion Creek Club San Marcos By Jackie Potts Halfway between San Antonio and Austin is a place where youthful energy and the charm of yesteryear coexist in a scenic snapshot of the Texas Hill Country. Welcome to San Marcos, the Gateway to the Texas Hill Country and home to Texas State University (formerly Southwest Texas State University) and the magnificent San Marcos River. Here, visitors and residents enjoy a wealth of recreational opportunities, academic pursuits and historical architecture and landmarks. Even with its urban growth, the city remains rich with downtown allure. "Downtown has shopping, eating, medical facilities and, with its proximity to the university, it has an active nightlife," says Kelly Franks, manager of the Main Street revitalization program. "It's very popular for its loft apartments. I think there are 71 residences in the downtown area. People can walk to campus or walk to the grocery store." MLS Area: HS Zip Code(s): 78666 Zip Code 78666 While downtown continues to thrive, so does new-home construction in the Demographic Profile surrounding areas. Ted Berg, a regional sales manager for KB Home says San Marcos' lack of big-city congestion is a major draw. "It's not too big, but it has Population: 63,286 everything a big town can offer" he says, noting that its appeal will likely lead Median Housing $102,020 to continued growth. Berg also says three- and four-bedroom homes ranging in Value price from the $100s to the $140s will continue being built by his company and Avg HH Size: 2.48 others. "It's a sweet little town with a neat university, lots of cultural stuff and Median HH Income: $36,104 two great rivers," says Henry Skinner-Larsen, sales counselor with Pulte Median Age 25.8 Homes, which is building in the Mockingbird Hill community. "This place is a % Married: 40% gem waiting to be discovered," he says. % of HHs with 25% Children: A gem that was long ago discovered and to this % with College 28% day remains treasured is the beautiful San Degree: Marcos River. Besides its evident splendor, the % Owner Occupied 43% river also is home to a handful of endangered Housing species and historical lore. "The San Marcos River is an historical river," Franks says. Source: Claritas 2006 "Different tribes of Indians considered it a sacred place. Our river has always been part of Halfway between Austin and San Antonio, San Marcos our folklore." offers a rich downtown As are the historical buildings and cemeteries experience, the beautiful San that are being revitalized for the so they can be Marcos River and an array of shopping opportunities with appreciated by current and future generations. the outlet mall located nearby. "People want to see a building from the 1800s and what it looks like," Franks says. "We've got Housing opportunities vary from downtown lofts to new buildings with iron fronts, pressed tin, square communities. nails and other things you just don't see anymore. Maintaining the integrity of these buildings is important to us. We like to say that the great accomplishments from our past are the inspiration for our future." Holly Mullins, senior planner for the City of San Marcos, says the city has four locally designated historical districts and is in the process of designating two more. "(The designation) ensures that any changes to the buildings would not destroy their historical character," she says. "One developer in particular has rehabilitated two (downtown) buildings. There are a surprisingly large number of residences in the downtown area. In the last couple of years, they've brought an increase in the number of downtown businesses." There also is an increase in new housing being offered in the outlying areas, says SkinnerLarsen. "Normally, to find these kinds of homes at these prices ($100, 000-$150,000), you have to go out to the middle of nowhere," he says. "Here, we've got nice houses, shopping, a 14screen movie theater, the outlet mall .... once this places catches on, it's going to take off. A person can find an 1,800-square-foot, three-tofour-bedroom home with all kinds of upgrades in the $130s." Dr. Gwen K. Smith, a native of San Marcos and longtime member of numerous civic groups, says the city's wide range of opportunities will feed continued population growth. Change is inevitable, she says, noting that the increase in population is the biggest change she's see in more than 50 years as a San Marcos resident. "Population growth happens everywhere, but we try to keep a small-town atmosphere," she says. Schools San Marcos Unified School District San Marcos Consolidated Independent School District Resources Amenities Search articles San Marcos River mentioning Tanger Factory Allandale in the Austin Outlet Mall American-Statesman's Prime Outlet Mall archives. City of San Find area restaurants Marcos on Austin360 Kyle Accessibility and affordability are the two major qualities that make Kyle attractive to those new to the Central Texas area. Easy access to I-35 and employers and businesses in Austin, San Marcos and San Antonio, as well as the lower housing costs has helped provide a "one-two punch" to make Kyle one of the fastest growing communities in Hays County. Kyle's small town charm has tremendous appeal for those who long for small town life, but desire close proximity to shopping, businesses and schools found in larger cities says Jerry Hendrix, the director of communications with the City of Kyle. "Our main appeal is for young families. Parents are excited about living within the Hays Consolidated School District and having the opportunity to secure quality education for their children," says Hendrix. "We're a little friendlier here, so if you're worried about getting lost in the big city, Kyle is the place to be. Although we are experiencing tremendous growth and development, there's still a small town feeling to our community that people love." ZONE: South ZIP: 78640 Zip Code 78640 Demographic Profile Courtesy of City of Kyle. Hendrix says that Kyle's appeal doesn't stop with young families. "We see a lot of retirees moving here," he says. "We're more affordable than the larger cities for older folks on fixed incomes, and our laidback atmosphere is very appealing to them as well as people who are just starting a family or buying a home for the first time. We have something for just about every demographic here. Our location is ideal - we're close to San Marcos and San Antonio, and only a half hour away from Austin." The numbers bear out Hendrix's assertion that Kyle is growing by leaps and bounds. Hendrix says the estimated population is 27,500 for 2007, compared to only 5,000 in 2001. "We're adding about 80 to 100 new utility accounts each month," he says. Kyle's electricity provider is Pedernales Electric Cooperative, while solid waste collection is supplied by Texas Disposal Systems. The City of Kyle provides water to its residents through a number of resources. Population: 29,265 Avg HH Size: 3.31 Median HH $60,865 Income: Median Age 30.6 % Married: 65% % of HHs with 51% Children: % with College 16% Degree: % Owner Occupied 83% Housing Median Yr 2000 Dwelling was Built Source: Claritas 2006 Courtesy of City of Kyle. In addition to its population explosion, Kyle has also been experiencing significant commercial and retail growth. "We have a booming population, and the infrastructure in place to serve them," says Hendrix. "We are also working to bring in more retail and commercial businesses and move away from the 'bedroom community' reputation we have as we become a full-service city. "We also have an H-E-B Plus store that opened in June, and we have announced that the Seton Family of Hospitals and SCC Development will construct a major mixed use project featuring a hospital, professional office buildings and retail. We have been driving specific efforts to develop Kyle's infrastructures, such as our roads and city water system, and we're now starting to step into large-scale commercial-type development. Our goal is not to be a bedroom community. We want to be a thriving, independent community where people can live, play and work within our city," Hendrix explains. Courtesy of City of Kyle. Kyle recently struck a unique deal with Response-Service-Initiative (RSI), Inc. to bring two of the manufacturing company's divisions to Kyle. Under the agreement, RSI will bring as many as 200 jobs into Kyle over the next five years. In turn, the Kyle will reimburse RSI, Inc. for their land purchase based on the number of jobs created and retained. The reimbursement is doubled if the person holding the job lives in Kyle. RSI's products support military, aerospace, oil, homeland security, and medical markets. No matter how large Kyle becomes over the years, Hendrix believes Kyle will always maintain a close connection to its small town roots. Hendrix points to Kyle's many celebrations and community-wide activities throughout the year that are enjoyed by both long-time residents and newcomers alike. Courtesy of City of Kyle. "In April we have the Kyle Easter Egg-stravaganza every April with free games, train rides and music, as well as the Kyle Volksmarch, when we encourage people to come walk along our scenic trails," says Hendrix. "Every summer we have our 'Movies In The Park' series that runs from May through August, and in October we have our Fair On The Square and Kyle Birthday Celebration as well as our Halloween Carnival and Haunted House. And, of course, we have our annual Santa Visit, City Tree Lighting and School Choir Concerts on the first Wednesday after Thanksgiving." Bastrop Surrounded by beautiful pine trees and scenic vistas, Bastrop is best known as Central Texas' own emerald jewel, and rightfully earning it the name "Home of the Lost Pines." Located just 30 miles east of Austin in Bastrop County and nestled along the banks of the Colorado River, Bastrop offers a variety of choices for those looking to make a home in a small-town setting. In fact, going by the numbers and looking at the current growth trends, it doesn't look as though Bastrop's newfound popularity will end anytime soon. With a current population of a little more than 7,000 inside the city limits and nearly 70,000 within the county, Bastrop is second only to Williamson County in percentage growth and positioned for even more as people find its natural beauty, good schools and affordability offer a cost-effective option to living in Austin. "Business-wise, many people think we are where Round Rock was 15 years ago," says Joe Newman, President and CEO of the Bastrop Economic Development Corporation. "We're a good-sized community now, and we think we're poised for quite a bit more growth. We have a lot of big shopping centers looking at us, and we don't mind having more of the Big Box retailers locate here - we'll roll out the red carpet for them. We're just waiting for a Dell Computer to show up and put their headquarters here," he laughs. "We've got a lot of good things going for us," Newman continues. "When the Austin Bergstrom International Airport opened, it fueled a lot of our growth. We're only 22 miles from the airport, and with four 18-hole golf courses, we have a lot of pilots and airport personnel who have figured out they can live a laidback lifestyle in the piney woods, enjoy a game out on the links, and then get to the airport quickly and easily." Pilots aren't the only ones who have figured out that the living is good in Bastrop. "We've got a mix of everything and everyone," says Newman. "We've got artists and musicians, good ol' boys, hippies and professionals, LCRA workers and UT professors - we even have a former Texas Chief Supreme Court Justice living here." ZONE: South ZIP: 78602 Housing options in Bastrop are just as diverse as its population. Those who prefer old fashioned Zip Code 78602 country living with a home on some acreage for a "get away from it all" feeling will find Bastrop's Demographic Profile historic charm irresistible, while whose who prefer convenience and affordable housing choices are drawn in by Bastrop's housing development boom and its easy accessibility to Austin. Retail Population: 23,863 stores ranging from the cute little boutiques in Bastrop's historic downtown to the Super WalAvg HH Size: 2.62 Mart and H-E-B provide convenient shopping for residents. School-age children attend classes Median HH Income: $54,818 in academically recognized schools in the Bastrop Independent School District, one of the Median Age 35.5 largest school districts in Texas. A recent $23.4 million school bond issue passed in 2005 that % Married: 61% will allow for the renovation and expansion of Bastrop High School. % of HHs with 35% Children: With all of the new construction there is an underlying pride in the settlement founded by % with College 21% Stephen F. Austin and named in honor of his friend, the Baron de Bastrop. The historic Degree: downtown area boasts of 135 historic homes on the national registry, and is home to the Bastrop % Owner Occupied 78% Opera House, originally built in 1889 and now home to theatre productions, children's theater Housing shows and Bastrop's annual Yesterfest Pioneer Heritage Festival. Median Yr Dwelling 1990 was Built Newman says that one of Bastrop's goals is to attract new businesses to the area. "About a third of the people in Bastrop go to Austin for work. Our goal is to attract more companies to move Source: Claritas 2006 here so that people don't have to make the drive," he says. "We find that communities really thrive and that people are just generally better citizens when they have more time to spend with their children and families, to get involved with schools and P.T.A and local activities, and to do that well that means having more jobs closer to home." Bastrop was successful in persuading Hyatt Regency to build the Hyatt Regency Lost Pines Resort and Spa near its city limits. Newman says it took six years to negotiate, plan and build the $135 million luxury resort that now offers visitors three swimming pools, canoeing, kayaking, horseback riding, championship golf, meeting facilities and, of course, a world-class spa. "We have several ideas on how to entice companies here, such as offering free land as an incentive, and we have a zero percent loan deal. We are very interested in bio-tech or high-tech companies - we already have four bio-tech companies here and we would like to expand on that. And, of course, we'd love to have a Dell here too," he chuckles. SOUTHWEST Circle C By Karima Ashinhurst When asked what continues to attract buyers to the master-planned community of Circle C Ranch after nearly 20 years of existence, Keller Williams Realtor Kevin Scanlan narrows it down to three things: location, affordability and community. With an idyllic southwest Austin location, between the Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center and the Circle C Golf Course, Circle C Ranch offers its residents Hill Country beauty and commuter convenience. "It's about 20 minutes from downtown," says Scanlan. "It's fairly convenient for folks who work there." Circle C also counts Davis Lane to the north and FM 1826 to the west among its boundaries. Zone: SW MLS Area: SW Zip Code(s): 78739 Zip Code 78739 Demographic Profile Population: 11,823 Avg HH Size: 3.29 Prices in Circle C, which Scanlan says range from the $180s to the low $500s, Median HH Income: $117,584 Median Age 36.9 entice a diverse group of buyers to this established community and encourage % Married: 75% them to stay. Many buyers have moved up and moved down in home style as % of HHs with their needs have changed. 59% Children: % with College "Because of the wide price range, you see everything from first-time home 65% Degree: buyers to larger families," Scanlan says, noting that Circle C is home to many % Owner Occupied empty nesters, retirees and single buyers, as well. 97% Housing The median price for homes in Circle C hovers in the $250s, with a price-per- Median Yr Dwelling 1996 was Built square-foot range of about $75 to $145 feet, Scanlan adds. Homes measure anywhere from 1,500 to 4,500 square feet and four bedrooms with 2.5 baths is Source: Claritas 2006 the norm. In addition, new homes are being built by a number of builders, including Newmark, D.R. Horton, Streetman and more. A safe, family-friendly In addition to the wildflower center and the golf course, Circle C fosters a sense neighborhood, Circle C has of community with its numerous amenities. The Circle C Swim Center is home many amenities including the to the only heated, outdoor, Olympic-sized pool in Central Texas, says Scanlan. Lady Bird Wildflower Center, With its park-like grounds and well-equipped facilities, the swim center is the the Circle C Golf Course and site of a number of major swim meets and offers residents a great place to relax. Swim Center and the Veloway. There are also a wide range of The Veloway, a three-mile track for bicycling and rollerblading, will be extended an additional three miles in the near homes in this one community future. The Circle C Child Care Center and and is home to many empty Slaughter Creek Park are additional community nesters, retirees and single amenities that help make Circle C a wellbuyers. regarded community. "Circle C has never really been about a countryclub atmosphere, but it does have all the same amenities," Scanlan adds. Children in Circle C attend the on-site elementary school Kiker Elementary, as well as Bailey Middle and Bowie High schools. The tax rate is approximately 2.675 percent. So what does the future hold for Circle C Ranch? Scanlan believes the community trend is moving toward higher-end homes. He notes that one of the newest neighborhoods, The Hielscher, features home prices that start in the $400s. A new section of golf course homes is scheduled to open in the near future, and Scanlan believes they will be priced in the $600s to $700s. "You'll really have a nice, wide range of homes in one community," he notes of the addition of homes in the upper-end of the price scale. Though Circle C has grown in scale and popularity since it was founded in 1988, fortunately for home buyers, some things haven't changed. "The concept of Circle C has remained a constant: a well-maintained, safe, family-friendly neighborhood," Scanlan says. Schools Kiker Elementary Bailey Middle School Bowie High School Amenities Circle C Ranch Lady Bird Wildflower Center Circle C Golf Course Circle C Swim Center Veloway Slaughter Creek Park Resources Search articles mentioning Circle C in the Austin American-Statesman's archives. Find area restaurants on Austin360 Shady Hollow By Jackie Potts On a summer afternoon in Shady Hollow you can find children playing basketball in their nicely landscaped front yard or an elderly man taking his dogs for a walk. Debbie Peterson and her family have lived in South Austin since 1981. They decided to move into a neighborhood close to good schools, with large trees and a "small-town feel to it." They found all this in Shady Hollow. "I love Shady Hollow," said Peterson, treasurer of the long established Shady Hollow Homeowners Association board. "We've got great neighbors, a good swim team and lots of opportunities for people to get involved in activities throughout the year." Residents can stay involved in their neighborhood by reading their monthly issue of the Shady Hollow Highlights. The June 2004 six page newsletter includes short articles of volunteer projects preformed by Boy and Girl Scouts in the neighborhood, services that area residents provide the community, advertisements of nearby businesses, and upcoming events. Zone: South/Southwest MLS Area: SW Zip Code(s): 78749,78739, 78748 Zip Code 78748 (primary) Demographic Profile Population: 28,826 Avg HH Size: 2.74 Shady Hollow is in Southern Travis County and straddles Brodie Lane. El Dorado Trail marks the southern border, Squirrel Hollow is the northern border Median HH Income: $64,911 Median Age 34.2 and Doe Run marks the eastern border. The west side of the subdivision borders % Married: 63% on Lost Oasis Hollow. % of HHs with 42% Children: Alice Niven with JB Goodwin Realtors said % with College Shady Hollow is an established neighborhood 35% Degree: built in the early 1980s that remains popular % Owner Occupied because of its large front and back yards, huge 75% Housing shady trees and proximity to good schools and Median Yr Dwelling Austin's metropolitan area. 1989 was Built "It's a good, family neighborhood," said Niven, Source: Claritas 2006 who has sold homes in the neighborhood since 1986. "It sells well because of the schools - especially Bowie, which is a Blue Ribbon School." Students in Shady Hollow attend the new Baranoff Elementary Demographic profiles for other zip codes: School, Bailey Middle School and Bowie High 78749 School. 78739 Some of the older homes are on larger lots ranging from 125 feet by 175 feet to 205 feet by The community center and 202 feet. The rest of the homes are on lots about pool are the focal point of the neighborhood. Many 60 feet by 125 feet. Prices on homes in Shady youngsters are on the Hollow can range from $170,000 to $370,000. neighborhood swim team. The community center is also the Most homes have three or four bedrooms, although some have five bedrooms. Most have gathering point for events such as the 4th of July parade, the two or three bathrooms. They mainly have his and hers walk-in closets, Memorial Day celebration, skylights and baths with cultured marble. Kitchens have Formica or tile. Most homes have two living areas, although a few have as many as four living areas. Easter egg hunt, scouting and Shady Hollow is only expanding with new homes being built in the quiet family neighborhood as well. Peterson said the community center and pool are the focal point of the neighborhood. Many youngsters are on the neighborhood swim team. The community center is also the gathering point for events such as the 4th of July parade, the Memorial Day celebration, Easter egg hunt, scouting and Fall Fajita Fest. "Neighbors are great," Peterson said. "They are willing to get involved in events and help you out. It really feels like a community." Peterson, who has children in Bowie and Bailey, said the nearby schools also help foster that sense of community. "When you go to open house at school, you see people you know who are your neighbors," she said. Peterson said neighbors are also good about attending neighborhood association meetings and learning about issues affecting Shady Hollow. The issues of rodent and vector control in the neighborhood are current issues of concern. Brodie Lane is the only major artery into Shady Hollow. Motorists can get to MoPac Boulevard or Interstate 35 via Slaughter Lane. Or they can drive farther north on Brodie to reach William Cannon Drive or U.S. 290/Texas 71. Resources Schools Search articles mentioning Austin Independent School Shady Hollow in the District Amenities Austin Baranoff Elementary Circle C Metropolitan American-Statesman's School Park archives. Bailey Middle School Find area restaurants on Bowie High School Austin360 Fall Fajita Fest. Wimberley With its location in the heart of the fabled Texas Hill Country, Wimberley is an obvious choice for those who want to make paradise their home. Designated by Travel Holiday Magazine as one of "America's Ten Best Small Towns," Wimberley's deep roots hearken back to a time when life moved at a slower pace and neighbors knew neighbors - a place where old-fashioned "Texas Friendly" is a lifestyle. "Wimberley is an oasis," says Jim Henderson of Jim Henderson Real Estate. "We manage to maintain a quaintness that everyone loves." Located in Hays County just off RM 12, Wimberley is within easy access of San Marcos and is only a short 50-minute commute from downtown Austin. With a population that tops out at more than 4,000, the beauty and peaceful lifestyle here is viewed by all as the area's main attraction. "Here we still have small town living," says Henderson. "People in other places forget what it is to have clean air and clean water. Our sky at night is filled with stars, and some people don't have that anymore in the big cities where they live. "A lot of people choose Wimberley as their home, and they feel safe here," explains Henderson. "People from all over Texas hear about us, come here, and fall in love. They may decide to purchase a second home or buy a retirement home here." But while Wimberley is popular with the empty-nester set, don't forget its appeal with families says Henderson's wife, Jean, who has lived in Wimberley since 1971. "We have excellent schools here, and Wimberley is a great place to raise a family. Wimberley ISD is a AAA school district and we have won multiple state championships in football and volleyball competitions." Zone: SW MLS Area: 8W Zip Code(s): 78676 Zip Code 78676 Demographic Profile The Hendersons say that just because life here might be slower, there's no reason to assume the living here is dull. During the summer, residents can take advantage of the many local swimming holes such as Blue Hole. "Wimberley is situated at the confluence of the Blanco River Population: 11,261 and Cypress Creek, so there's a lot of water to enjoy, and the most valuable property here is Avg HH Size: 2.45 waterfront property," says Henderson. "Outdoor enthusiasts find the place lively with native Median HH Income: $64,737 Texas wildlife such as white-tailed deer, songbirds and the more than occasional armadillo." Median Age 47.5 % Married: 67% % of HHs with Wimberley is home to a thriving arts community, from musicians and visual artists to artisans 29% Children: working in pottery, metal arts and more who find Wimberley's beautiful setting the perfect % with College inspiration to fire their creativity. The Wimberley Valley Art League is a collection of nationally 40% Degree: and internationally known artists representing a number of artistic genres. % Owner Occupied 82% Housing Wimberley hosts several music festivals throughout the year, including the Annual Wimberley Median Yr Dwelling Gospel Music Festival in the fall and the Annual Wimberley Winter Jazz Festival every February. 1987 was Built And residents know to look forward to the last Saturday of April, when the town's own Cypress Creek Café sponsors its annual Crawfish Festival. Source: Cl Those who love the performing arts will love the EmilyAnn Theatre, an outdoor venue hosting events year round, and known for its annual summer event, Shakespeare Under the Stars. The EmilyAnn Theatre also hosts the Spring Fling Butterfly Festival which includes butterfly releases, butterfly art, live music and more. Another fun summer pastime celebrating Wimberley's unique take on life is the Corral Theatre, an "outdoor walk-in" theatre at Rocky River Ranch, where moviegoers can see first-run movies from Memorial Day to Labor Day while sitting in the comfort of lawn chairs under the stars. "It's totally open like the old drive-in theaters," says Henderson, "and it's really a lot of fun. We like to say that you can see the stars under the stars. It's just one of the many things we do here that creates a special, magical atmosphere that you just can't find anywhere else."