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URBAN LIVING
“Vertical
Mixed-Use” proponents offer
residents a denser city
Cypress Real
Estate looks to buy tract
on South First to continue Austins VMU experiment.
By
Thom White
AUSTIN -- Vertical
Mixed-Use development is sweeping the city, an innovation
in urban planning which aims to make the states capital taller,
denser, and more crowded.
In South Austin, one target for vertical mixed-use
conversion is a 6.6 acre tract of undeveloped oak groves on South
First Street, now owned by the Oak
Meadow Baptist Church. At this time, because the property is
in the middle of a residential neighborhood, it is illegal for potential
land developers, Cypress
Real Estate Advisors, to build the apartment complex and shopping
center that they envision. But Cypress is now working with city
officials to change the zoning for this large swath of land before
they pay up for the prime real estate.
Steve
Metcalfe of the law firm Drenner
& Golden Stuart Wolff, gave a presentation to the Dawson
Neighborhood Planning Team (DNPT) on the proposed Oak
Meadows Project, and Adam
M. Gates, Vice President of acquisitions for Cypress Real Estate
Advisors, chimed in on occasion as well. The DNPT presides over
a strip of land bordered by Oltorf and Ben White on the north and
south, and South Congress and South First on the east and west,
and the group must give approval for any zoning change in that area.
According to Mr. Gates, one goal of the presentation
to neighbors was to diffuse any anxiety. Cypress Real
Estate is urging neighbors and the City Council to approve a zoning
change from SF-3 (which allows for only single-family
houses and duplexes) to GO-V (General Office / Vertical
Mixed Use), a zoning change that will allow for ground level retail
establishments that are necessary to their plan.
Assuming they can push through amenable zoning changes,
Cypress Real Estate plans to buy the property, demolish the Baptist
church, and put a shopping center in its place on the corner of
Post Road and South 1st Street. Current plans call for about 300
apartments in 3- to 4-story buildings along with a gigantic parking
structure. Architects plan to surround the garage with the apartment
buildings to prevent it from being too much of an eyesore.
This property is high-elevation for its area, and
so promises outstanding views of the Austin skyline for those that
can afford to live there. Cypress Real Estate plans to chop down
about four large oak trees to build the new parking garage and apartment
buildings. In the northwest corner of the tract, they plan a pocket
park by an oak grove, a set-aside green space
required by vertical mixed-use regulations.
Several neighbors commented that traffic on South
First is already backed up for block after block during the afternoon
rush hour, and wondered whether the development would only worsen
the problem. Another guy whose house is on Post Road had concerns
about having more problem traffic on his little street.
Cypress Real Estate Advisors has already bought
up 12.5 acres at the intersection of South Lamar and Manchaca to
experiment with their grand vertical-mixed use designs. Over an
18-month period, the company acquired six adjacent tracts of land
there (including auto body shops and another church) where they
plan to build 400 apartments along the street, and another 42 town
homes on the back side of the lot. Cypress Real Estate also owns
50 acres of apartments and other properties off East
Riverside near Town Lake that they plan to demolish and redevelop
in due time.
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