UV1 Lady Bird Lake

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UV1 Lady Bird Lake Feet Legend (Source:Austin City 2010) of (Source:Austin City 2011) of Proposed VioletTrail Crown Preserve Canyonlands Balcones (Source: FEMA Q3 Digital 2008) Q3 Digital FEMA (Source: Properties District Streams (Source:Austin City 2010) of Trails (Source: HillCountry Conservancy 2013) (Source:Austin City 2012) of Austin City Limits (Source: CAPCOG 2011) Residential Commercial Worship of Place Educational Utilities Undeveloped Land/Parks Conservation Space Open Lakes 100-yr Floodplains Markers Historical State (Source:Historical Texas Commission 2009) (Source: TxDOT 2012) (Source:Austin City 2013) of Existing Right Way of Right Existing Water Mains Water Bus Stop Service Route Local Flyer Route Route Express X Y ! ! X Y X Y X Y ! ! X Y X Y X Y Y X ! ! X Y X Y Y 250 X ! ! X Y X Y X Y ! ! X Y X Y Y X ! ! Y X 30 111 970 Y X " ) " ) " ) X Y ! ! # CONSTRAINTS X Y # X Y X Y Y X ! ! X Y X Y X Y (Source: Texas Historical Commission 2013) Commission Historical Texas (Source: 0 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 ! ! 2013) Team Study South MoPac 2013, TCAD 2010, Austin of City (Source: X Y X Y Y X Places of Historic Register -National ! ! Land Use Cultural Capital Metro 2014) Metro Capital (Source: Aerial Background - CAPCOG 2012 O' Henry Middle 6TH STREET ¯ School Johnson Branch 5TH STREET EXPOSITION BOULEVARD Randalls Austin High Tennis Center Lamar Beach at CESAR CHAVEZ STREET Lady Bird Lake )"111 )"171 )"970 )"111 )"171 )"970 Eilers LAKE AUSTIN BOULEVARD (Deep Eddy) )"111 The University of Texas )"171 Brackenridge )"970 Austin High School Field Laboratory Lady Bird Lake UV1 Lady Bird Lake )"111 )"111 )"171 )"171 )"970 )"970 Zilker Metro Park ROAD SPRINGS BARTON Eanes Creek Barton Zilker ")30 Nature Springs Pool Preserve Rollingwood Hatley Park Barton Creek Park Hills Baptist Church Eanes Creek ")30 ")30 ")30 BEE CAVES ROAD Barton Trader Joe's ")30 Creek )"111 Greenbelt )"171 )"970 )"111 )"171 )"970 Barton Hills Elementary Intel UV1 Barton Creek Hollow Creek Skunk Austin Barton Creek Square Mall Barton Creek Greenbelt MoPac Bicycle and ")30 Pedestrian Bridge Project (Phase II) VU360 Barton Creek ")30 ")30 Barton Creek Wilderness VU360 Park )"111 )"171 )"970 )"111 )"171 )"970 Barton Creek Barton Creek Wilderness Park MoPac Bicycle and Pedestrian Bridge Project (Phase I) Holy Cross Lutheran Church La Quinta Inn )"970 )"111 )"171 )"111 )"171 71 )"970 UV Gaines Creek Toney Burger Activity Greenbelt ¤£290 Center and Stadium Gaines Creek Greenbelt Sam's Club Spec's Best Buy Gaines Creek )"171 WAY PARK )"970 )"970 T ES W TH U O S Extended Stay America Hotel )"111 Sunset Valley )"111 Austin )"171 Walmart )"171 UV1 Tar ge t )"171 Garden Ridge Academy ¤£290 Home Depot BRODIE LANE UV71 First Evangelical Free Church )"111 Williamson Creek Williamson MONTEREY OAKS BOULEVARD Creek West Greenbelt )"111 Williamson Creek West Small Greenbelt Middle School Lowes Randalls Westcreek H.E.B. )"111 WILLIAM CANNON DRIVE )"111 Bannockburn Baptist Church Williamson Creek Whole Foods Covington Middle School Costco Life Time Fitness CONVICT HILL ROAD Abiding Love )"111 Lutheran Church St. Catherine of Siena Latta Branch Greenbelt Kimcheon Branch CONVICT HILL ROAD )"111 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints Hampton Library Branch at Oak Hill Boone Elementa Beckett Meadows Maple 1 Dick Nichols Run UV District Park Kimcheon Branch Dick Nichols District Park )"111 DAVIS LANE Blowing Sink Research Deer Park Management at Maple Area Run Preserve Sendera Mesa Neighborhood Park E N A L Sendera IS V A D Village of Western Oaks Walgreens S LA UG HT ER LA NE Sendera South E N A L R Circle TE H C Ranch G James Bowie U A Metro Park High School )"111 L S Alamo Drafthouse.
Recommended publications
  • Girl Scouts of Central Texas Explore Austin Patch Program
    Girl Scouts of Central Texas Explore Austin Patch Program Created by the Cadette and Senior Girl Scout attendees of Zilker Day Camp 2003, Session 4. This patch program is a great program to be completed in conjunction with the new Capital Metro Patch Program available at gsctx.org/badges. PATCHES ARE AVAILABLE FOR PURCHASE IN GSCTX SHOPS. Program Grade Level Requirements: • Daisy - Ambassador: explore a minimum of eight (8) places. Email [email protected] if you find any hidden gems that should be on this list and share your adventures here: gsctx.org/share EXPLORE 1. Austin Nature and Science Center, 2389 Stratford Dr., (512) 974-3888 2. *The Contemporary Austin – Laguna Gloria, 700 Congress Ave. (512) 453-5312 3. Austin City Limits – KLRU at 26th and Guadalupe 4. *Barton Springs Pool (512) 867-3080 5. BATS – Under Congress Street Bridge, at dusk from March through October. 6. *Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum, 1800 Congress Ave. (512) 936-8746 7. Texas State Cemetery, 909 Navasota St. (512) 463-0605 8. *Deep Eddy Pool, 401 Deep Eddy. (512) 472-8546 9. Dinosaur Tracks at Zilker Botanical Gardens, 2220 Barton Springs Dr. (512) 477-8672 10. Elisabet Ney Museum, 304 E. 44th St. (512) 974-1625 11. *French Legation Museum, 802 San Marcos St. (512) 472-8180 12. Governor’s Mansion, 1010 Colorado St. (512) 463-5518 13. *Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, 4801 La Crosse Ave. (512) 232-0100 14. LBJ Library 15. UT Campus 16. Mayfield Park, 3505 W. 35th St. (512) 974-6797 17. Moonlight Tower, W. 9th St.
    [Show full text]
  • MOODY THEATER 2020 Technical Information VENUE INFORMATION
    AUSTIN CITY LIMITS LIVE at the MOODY THEATER 2020 Technical Information VENUE INFORMATION AUSTIN CITY LIMITS LIVE BOX OFFICE-MAIN ENTRANCE 310 W. Willie Nelson Blvd Austin, TX 78701 P: (512) 225-7999 F: (512) 404-1399 acl-live.com ARTIST ENTRANCE / TRUCKS LOADING DOCK ADDRESS AUSTIN CITY LIMITS LIVE 311 West 3rd St Austin, TX 78701-3935 Dock Master: (512) 542-3654 Security: (512) 542-3611 W HOTEL AUSTIN- CONNECTED TO ACL LIVE For ACL-LIVE rate contact: Niko Masalas W Sales Executive [email protected] T 512-542-3646 / F 512.542.3625 200 Lavaca St Austin, TX 78701 Main: (512) 542-3600 Guest Fax: (512) 542- 3605 P: (512) 542-3656 F: (512) 542-3625 Visiting Production (512) 457-5560 F: (512) 457-5555 Dressing Rm 1 (512) 457-5591 Dressing Rm 2 (512) 457-5590 Dressing Rm 3 (512) 457-5593 Dressing Rm 4 (512) 457-5592 2020 Technical Information Deck : Page 2 VENUE CONTACTS Colleen Fischer, General Manager | Director Of Booking (512) 404-1302 | [email protected] Jack McFadden, Senior Talent Buyer (512) 404-1306 | [email protected] Gary Rushworth, Assistant General Manager/ Director of Operations (512) 404-1323 | [email protected] Shelby Voss Covington, Executive Assistant Colleen Fischer (512) 404-1307 | [email protected] Amy Copeland, Accounting Manager | Settlement (512) 479-3407 | [email protected] Samantha Garrett, Senior Staff Accountant | Settlement (512) 479-3433 | [email protected] Kaitlin Bouzek, Director of Marketing & Communications (512) 404-1308, | [email protected] Whitney LeMond, Media & Communications
    [Show full text]
  • Afi-Soa-2008-Report
    The Alley Flat Initiative Topics in Sustainable Development 2008 Report Editors Steven A. Moore Sergio Palleroni Legend LOT WITH ALLEY FLAT POTENTIAL* ALLEY NEIGHBORHOOD PLANNING AREA SECONDARY APARTMENT INFILL TOOL ADOPTION (BY NPA / SUBDISTRICT) NO YES MAJOR ROAD MINOR ROAD STREET LADY BIRD LAKE * ALL LOTS WITH ALLEY FLAT POTENTIAL SHOWN ON MAP ARE ZONED SF-3. csd Center for Sustainable Development i THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS CENTER FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT 1 UNIVERSITY STATION B7500; AUSTIN, TX DR. ELIZABETH MUELLER, DIRECTOR WORKING PAPER SERIES JULY 2008 ii CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS PREFACE EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. A BRIEF HISTORY OF ALLEY FLATS IN FOUR CITIES 2. CONDITIONS IN AUSTIN: LANDSCAPE OF OPPORTUNITY (ELIZABETH) 2.1 REVIEW OF LOTS WITH ALLEY FLAT POTENTIAL 2.2 REVIEW OF LOTS WITH POTENTIAL FOR SECONDARY UNITS IN GENERAL 2.3 BEGINNING WITH EAST AUSTIN BECAUSE… 3. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE AUSTIN’S ALLEY FLAT INITIATIVE 4. NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT 4.1 THREE CASES OF AUSTIN NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT 4.2 REGULATION 5. OWNERSHIP AND FINANCING STRUCTURES 5.1 OWNERSHIP STRUCTURES AND THEIR SUITABILITY 5.2 FUNDING SOURCES AND THEIR SUITABILITY 6. DISTRIBUTED INFRASTRUCTURE 6.1 WATER 6.2 ELECTRICITY 6.3 TECHNOLOGY ANALYSIS APPENDICES A. GIS METHODS B. LIST OF KEY STAKEHOLDERS AND PARTNERSHIPS C. OWNERSHIP AND FINANCING STRUCTURES iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This project was initially supported by a generous research grant from the Henry Luce Foundation and has subsequently been supported by the Austin Community Foundation, Perry Lorenz, and anonymous donors. Support for construction of the initial prototype has been received from Autodesk, Lincoln Properties, Wells Fargo Bank, Walter Elcock Family, HG TV, Suzi Sosa, Bercy‐Chen, Alexa Werner, Michael Casias, Meridian Energy, DXS‐Daikin, Z‐Works, Ecocreto, and Pat Flanary.
    [Show full text]
  • Top 5 Things You Must Do in Austin, Texas Austin, Texas, Is One of the Fastest-Growing Cities in America
    Top 5 Things You Must Do in Austin, Texas Austin, Texas, is one of the fastest-growing cities in America. With a population of over 1 million people and an average annual rainfall of 50 inches, Austin is known for its hot summers and mild winters. Home to some of the best music festivals like SXSW, ACL Festival, Fun Fun Fun Fest, Austin City Limits Music Festival, and more, it's no wonder that this city has been dubbed "The Live Music Capital of The World." With so many things to do, there's something for everyone. Here are the 5 top things you can't miss! 1. Visit The State Capital Austin's state capital is located in the heart of downtown. It's home to beautiful trees, a stunning fountain visible from most points around it, and is draped with banners that feature some of our state's best attributes, including the music capital of the world, the live music capital of The World & bluebonnet city. So be sure not to miss this stop! Plus, if you visit during the weekdays, you can even join a free guided tour to learn the history of the capitol building. 2. Visit Zilker Park Zilker Park was established more than 100 years ago as a public space for Austinites. Here you'll find an incredible outdoor amphitheater where concerts are held year-round, all free of charge thanks to sponsorship by Miller Lite, hike and bike trails throughout the forested area, and vernal pools where nature enthusiasts can get up close and personal with local flora and fauna.
    [Show full text]
  • Austin, Texas: Fiercely Independent Live Music Capital
    Embassy of the United States of America U.S. CITIES Austin, Texas: Fiercely Independent Live Music Capital AUSTIN ©Shutterstock.com ustin, the 11th-largest Then and Now “Father of Texas” and the repub- city in the United States, lic’s first secretary of state. The When Spanish missionaries has adopted the slogan city was a collection point for the A began settling in the area in the “The Live Music Capital of the famous Chisholm Trail, used to 18th century, the future site of World” because it’s home to many drive cattle from ranches in Texas Austin was variously inhabited musicians and live music venues. to Kansas railheads. By 1860, by the Tonkawa, Lipan Apache Each March, musicians, filmmak- Austin’s population had grown to and Comanche tribes. Settlers ers and social media entrepre- 3,494 citizens. from the United States began neurs converge on Austin for the arriving in the 1830s, while the Key dates include: South by Southwest (SXSW) festi- area was still part of Mexico. In val. Its countercultural ambiance • 1845 — The Republic of Texas 1836, the settlement was incorpo- contrasts with Austin’s identity becomes the U.S. state of Texas, rated into the Republic of Texas as the capital of a U.S. state better with Austin as its capital. after Texan colonists fought a known for rodeos, barbecue and war of independence against the • 1883 — The University of Texas, other hallmarks of traditional Mexican government. eventually an important center of culture. academic research now serving The new republic made the settle- more than 50,000 students each ment its capital, naming it Austin year, is founded.
    [Show full text]
  • Weird City: Sense of Place and Creative Resistance in Austin, Texas
    Weird City: Sense of Place and Creative Resistance in Austin, Texas BY Joshua Long 2008 Submitted to the graduate degree program in Geography and the Graduate Faculty of the University of Kansas in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Human Geography __________________________________ Dr. Garth Andrew Myers, Chairperson __________________________________ Dr. Jane Gibson __________________________________ Dr. Brent Metz __________________________________ Dr. J. Christopher Brown __________________________________ Dr. Shannon O’Lear Date Defended: June 5, 2008. The Dissertation Committee for Joshua Long certifies that this is the approved version of the following dissertation: Weird City: Sense of Place and Creative Resistance in Austin, Texas ___________________________________ Dr. Garth Andrew Myers, Chairperson Date Approved: June 10, 2008 ii Acknowledgments This page does not begin to represent the number of people who helped with this dissertation, but there are a few who must be recognized for their contributions. Red, this dissertation might have never materialized if you hadn’t answered a random email from a KU graduate student. Thank you for all your help and continuing advice. Eddie, you revealed pieces of Austin that I had only read about in books. Thank you. Betty, thank you for providing such a fair-minded perspective on city planning in Austin. It is easy to see why so many Austinites respect you. Richard, thank you for answering all my emails. Seriously, when do you sleep? Ricky, thanks for providing a great place to crash and for being a great guide. Mycha, thanks for all the insider info and for introducing me to RARE and Mean-Eyed Chris.
    [Show full text]
  • Austin Music Guide
    AUSTIN MUSIC GUIDE Austin celebrated its 25th anniversary as the Live Music Capital of the World® in 2016, however the city’s musical history dates further back. Austin surfaced as a music mecca in the 1960s and 1970s, when Willie Nelson went “on the road again,” Janis Joplin waited tables at Threadgill’s and Stevie Ray Vaughan played at Antone’s. Visitors and residents have long known that Austin is free-spirited destination in the thick of Texas, and the local music scene continues to grow and innovate amongst a long-standing tradition. Here are a few facts and figures that illustrate why Austin goes beyond clubs and performances to thrive as the Live Music Capital of the World®: • More than 250 Austin establishments showcase live music, from dedicated music venues to retail shops, restaurants to museums. Some iconic venues include: ACL Live, Emo’s, Stubb’s, Antone’s, the Mohawk, Saxon Pub, Continental Club, Elephant Room and Parish • Austin is home to some 2,000 musicians and recording artists, including such famed personalities as Willie Nelson, Asleep at the Wheel, Ghostland Observatory, Iron & Wine, Okkervil River and more. • The Austin Music Office, a division of Visit Austin, is dedicated to marketing and promoting the local music scene to visitors. The Music Office staff also services conventions by booking local artists for meetings and events, and connect artists and venues with convention industry professionals. • “Music in the Air” is the live music program at Austin-Bergstrom International Airport. Live music is played on five different stages throughout the terminal, welcoming visitors and sending off passengers in style.
    [Show full text]
  • Home with the Armadillo
    Mellard: Home with the Armadillo Home with the Armadillo: Public Memory and Performance in the 1970s Austin Music Scene Jason Dean Mellard 8 Produced by The Berkeley Electronic Press, 2010 1 Greezy Wheels performing at the Armadillo World Headquarters. Photo courtesy of the South Austin Popular Culture Center. Journal of Texas Music History, Vol. 10 [2010], Iss. 1, Art. 3 “I wanna go home with the Armadillo Good country music from Amarillo and Abilene The friendliest people and the prettiest women You’ve ever seen.” These lyrics from Gary P. Nunn’s “London Homesick Blues” adorn the wall above the exit from the Austin Bergstrom International Airport baggage claim. For years, they also played as the theme to the award-winning PBS series Austin City Limits. In short, they have served in more than one instance as an advertisement for the city’s sense of self, the face that Austin, Texas, presents to visitors and national audiences. The quoted words refer, if obliquely, to a moment in 9 the 1970s when the city first began fashioning itself as a key American site of musical production, one invested with a combination of talent and tradition and tolerance that would make of it the self-proclaimed “Live Music Capital of the World.”1 In many ways, the venue of the Armadillo World Headquarters served as ground zero for these developments, and it is often remembered as a primary site for the decade’s supposed melding of Anglo-Texan traditions and countercultural lifestyles.2 This strand of public memory reveres the Armadillo as a place in which
    [Show full text]
  • Mexican American Resource Guide: Sources of Information Relating to the Mexican American Community in Austin and Travis County
    MEXICAN AMERICAN RESOURCE GUIDE: SOURCES OF INFORMATION RELATING TO THE MEXICAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY IN AUSTIN AND TRAVIS COUNTY THE AUSTIN HISTORY CENTER, AUSTIN PUBLIC LIBRARY Updated by Amanda Jasso Mexican American Community Archivist September 2017 Austin History Center- Mexican American Resource Guide – September 2017 1 INTRODUCTION The purpose of the Austin History Center is to provide customers with information about the history and current events of Austin and Travis County by collecting, organizing, and preserving research materials and assisting in their use so that customers can learn from the community’s collective memory. The collections of the AHC contain valuable materials about Austin and Travis County’s Mexican American communities. The materials in the resource guide are arranged by collection unit of the Austin History Center. Within each collection unit, items are arranged in shelf-list order. This guide is one of a series of updates to the original 1977 version compiled by Austin History staff. It reflects the addition of materials to the Austin History Center based on the recommendations and donations of many generous individuals, support groups and Austin History Center staff. The Austin History Center card catalog supplements the Find It: Austin Public Library On-Line Library Catalog by providing analytical entries to information in periodicals and other materials in addition to listing individual items in the collection with entries under author, title, and subject. These tools lead to specific articles and other information in sources that would otherwise be very difficult to find. It must be noted that there are still significant gaps remaining in our collection in regards to the Mexican American community.
    [Show full text]
  • A Ustin , Texas
    PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS $26.95 austin, texas austin, Austin, Texas Austin,PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS Texas PUBLISHERS A Photographic Portrait Since its founding in 1839, Austin Peter Tsai A Photographic Portrait has seen quite a bit of transformation Peter Tsai is an internationally published over the years. What was once a tiny photographer who proudly calls Austin, frontier town is today a sophisticated Texas his home. Since moving to Austin urban area that has managed to main- in 2002, he has embraced the city’s natu- PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTStain its distinctive,PUBLISHERS offbeat character, ral beauty, its relaxed and open-minded and indeed, proudly celebrates it. attitude, vibrant nightlife, and creative The city of Austin was named for communities. In his Austin photos, he Stephen F. Austin, who helped to settle strives to capture the spirit of the city the state of Texas. Known as the “Live he loves by showcasing its unique and A P Music Capital of the World,” Austin har- eclectic attractions. H bors a diverse, well-educated, creative, Although a camera is never too far O PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS and industrious populace. Combined T away, when he is not behind the lens, OGR with a world-class public university, you can find Peter enjoying Austin with APH a thriving high-tech industry, and a his friends, exploring the globe, kicking laid-back, welcoming attitude, it’s no a soccer ball, or expanding his culinary IC POR wonder Austin’s growth continues un- palate. abated. To see more of Peter’s photography, visit T From the bracing artesian springs to R www.petertsaiphotography.com and fol- PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTSA PUBLISHERS PROPERTY OF TWINLIGHTS PUBLISHERS I the white limestone cliffs and sparkling low him on Twitter @supertsai.
    [Show full text]
  • Austin City Limits Spotlights Grammy Award-Winning ​Rosalía ​In Dazzling Hour Season 45 Finale Premieres February 8 On
    Austin City Limits Spotlights Grammy Award-winning Rosalía in ​ ​ Dazzling Hour Season 45 Finale Premieres February 8 on PBS Austin, TX—February 6, 2020—Austin City Limits (ACL) closes out Season 45 with a ​ spectacular full-hour performance showcasing celebrated Spanish singer-songwriter Rosalía in ​ her ACL debut. The globally praised Flamenco-fusion artist has taken the music world by storm, winning her first Grammy Award and five Latin Grammys while also garnering the first-ever Best New Artist Grammy nomination for a principally Spanish language artist. The season finale of ACL’s milestone Season 45, the broadcast premiere will launch Saturday, February 8 at ​ 9pm ET/8pm CT on PBS and vary by market. Check local PBS listings for times. The episode ​ ​ ​ ​ will be available to music fans everywhere, streaming online the next day beginning Sunday, ​ February 9 @10am ET at pbs.org/austincitylimits. Providing viewers a front-row seat to the ​ ​ ​ best in live performance for a remarkable 45 years, the program airs weekly on PBS stations nationwide. Viewers can visit acltv.com for news regarding future Season 46 tapings, episode ​ schedules and select live stream updates. The show's official hashtag is #acltv. ​ ​ Also, as a special bonus, ACL will offer a fan-favorite highlight from this season, a streaming-only webisode of The Raconteurs’ acclaimed appearance, back by popular demand ​ and amplified by previously unseen performances for a full, hour-long set, available on February 11 at pbs.org/austincitylimits. ​ ​ Catapulted to global stardom with chart-topping Spanish language hits, Rosalía lights up the ACL stage in an irresistible hour, filled with songs from her acclaimed 2020 Grammy-winning El ​ Mal Querer album, which also led the field of winners at this year’s Latin Grammy ​ Awards—including the first “Album of the Year” recognition in 13 years for a solo female artist.
    [Show full text]
  • Suggested Itinerary: Houston, Austin, San Antonio and Texas Hill Country
    Suggested Itinerary: Houston, Austin, San Antonio and Texas Hill Country Enjoy the superlative shopping and museums of Houston and the live music capital of Austin, then retreat to Texas Hill Country, where scenic drives deliver you to swimming holes and sunset hikes. In San Antonio, savour Latin American influences through the city’s historic sites, authentic shops and delicious Tex-Mex cuisine. Houston, Texas Suggested: 2-3 days Houston is a city of museums, but its ultimate exhibition may be Space Center Houston, where displays include a Saturn V rocket and a Mars research capsule you can climb into. Spend a day here to take advantage of astronaut talks and a tram tour of Johnson Space Center, home to Mission Control and monitoring of the International Space Station. Craving more excitement? Catch a Houston Rockets basketball game or shop at The Galleria. As Texas’ largest shopping center, and one of the largest in the USA, The Galleria features hundreds of department stores and speciality shops, 50 dining options and two hotels complemented by international banks and diversions such as play areas and an ice rink. Austin, Texas Suggested: 2-3 days Austin earns its reputation as a live music capital with some 250 venues. Slip into a retro bar such as The Continental Club for Rockabilly, Country and Swing shows, or arrange tickets to Austin City Limits Live at The Moody Theater, a slick venue that hosts concerts of all genres and the taping Austin City Limits, the USA’s longest- running televised music series. You may know Austin for its springtime South by Southwest Music Festival.
    [Show full text]