What area of austin should i live




















WalletHub , Urban Land Institute , Apartment List , US News , MagnifyMoney , Expedia , Savills , Thrillist , PolicyGenius , Forbes , HuffPost , West Sixth Street Experience the Whole Foods Market flagship store, which features restaurants, a beer and wine bar, a food truck, and a rooftop that hosts live bands and events. Flip through records and catch in-store jam sessions at Waterloo Records. Or attend an author event at BookPeople. Dip fried oysters in creamy Green Goddess sauce, sided with a tequila-spiked Ranch Water, at Ranch Sample the legendary soup dumplings from Wu Chow.

Find hotels near West Sixth Street. Clarksville Historic District Check out the art galleries in the Clarksville Historic District, including works by regional artists at Wally Workman Gallery, master artworks by Chagall and Picasso at West Chelsea Contemporary art gallery, and paintings by local artists at Davis Gallery open by appointment. Or try the Italian-spiced rotisserie chicken at Swedish Hill , a combination cafe, bakery and deli that offers an all-day menu.

Find hotels near Clarksville. Tarrytown This affluent neighborhood is located between downtown Austin and Lake Austin. Explore the art museum and outdoor sculpture garden at the beautiful Contemporary Austin-Laguna Gloria, set on the Lake Austin waterfront.

Find hotels near Tarrytown. Westlake The Westlake area features natural wonders like the Wild Basin Wilderness Preserve, featuring a acre habitat for native flora and fauna and almost three miles of hiking trails. Catch a concert at One World Theatre, an intimate venue that attracts world-class musicians. Find hotels near Westlake. Downtown The heart of Austin beats in the Downtown area, home to live music venues, historic theaters, museums and trendy 2ND Street District boutiques.

North Austin North Austin offers something for everyone, with award-winning breweries and restaurants, mixed-use shopping developments and family-friendly entertainment. South Austin South Austin is a melding of old and new, with trendy restaurants and bars interspersed among long-time Austin originals.

Central Austin Eclectic Central Austin is located just north of the University of Texas at Austin campus, and is home to everything from country bars and record shops to cutting-edge restaurants and lounges.

West Austin Escape the urban sprawl in West Austin, which gives way to rolling hills, scenic drives and postcard-perfect lakes. All homes and condos for sale in Mueller are new, as this is a master-planned community built from the ground up, with the first homes being completed in Belterra is a family-friendly community , located just 7 miles from the small town of Dripping Springs and 17 miles from Downtown Austin. This 1,acre mast er-planned community was strategically built around gorgeous hill country landscape, intertwined with biking trails, parks, and creeks.

Belterra is brought to life with neighborhood events like live music concerts, food truck family gatherings, and poolside movie watch parties. Join in on community yoga classes to book clubs, and holiday events just steps from your front porch.

Belterra is a suburban hill country escape just minutes away from Downtown Austin culture. Westlake is widely known for its stunning luxury homes among the rolling landscape of the Texas Hill Country in West Austin.

Despite its surrounding natural hills just south of Lake Austin, the community is centrally located just minutes from Downtown Austin and close to many highways that make traveling anywhere in the city a breeze. Located in Southwest Austin along Mopac and Escarpment Blvd, Circle C Ranch features over 4, homes and offers luxury living in several distinct, secluded developments.

Residents have access to an abundance of community amenities, including hike and bike trails and the amazing Grey Rock Golf Club. This stunning community is surrounded by community pools, bike-friendly roads, local businesses, and giant, shady live oaks. Neighborhoods can be sensitive, organic entities, highly affected by the built and natural environments as well as by who lives there—and who leaves.

Transplants continue to move here in record numbers, home sales are off the charts, inventory is low, and the rental market is tight. At the same time, some longtime Austinites, overwhelmed by the transformation of their neighborhoods or just seeking a change, are on the move.

What follows is a whirlwind tour—just to get you started. Formerly beneath the flight path for the old Austin airport , North Loop has maintained a mix of its original working-class character and that of the bohemian cohort that moved there because the noise and close-up sightings of plane engines overhead made rents low.

The small commercial stretch—codified at some point as the North Loop IBIZ District —contains a number of surprisingly long-lived local vintage and record stores, coffeeshops, bars, restaurants, and such requisite oddities as the quirky convenience store, the anarchist bookshop, and the women-owned adult-toy shop. A bit more easygoing and less expensive than the equally tight-knit and neighborhood-proud Hyde Park to its south, North Loop has walkability and leafy streets in common.

Buyers will find small, traditional homes originally built in the s—some remodeled or replaced by usually appropriately scaled contemporaries. A mix of older and new multifamily complexes is scattered on the busier streets and corridors. Not great, but better than that of many newer central neighborhoods. Originally a hodgepodge of very small communities built between the s and s, it came together as a bona fide neighborhood in the s.



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