• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Downtown Austin Blog

downtown Austin's real estate and neighborhood blog

You are here: Home / Archives for Jude Galligan

Jude Galligan

Downtown Austin LEED Buildings

Jude Galligan | January 20, 2010 |

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59tABEZTazo]

Established by the U.S. Green Building Council and verified by the Green Building Certification Institute, LEED is the nation’s preeminent program for the design, construction and operation of high performance green buildings.  LEED is shorthand for Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design.

Legacy On The Lake is a downtown Austin apartment building designed by EDI Architecture that has been awarded LEED® Certification.  They are the first residential multi-family building to do so.

How did they do it?  30% reduction of water use, 10% recycled material use, 43% of building materials sourced locally, 77% of construction waste recycled, use of low VOC interior finish materials, and 90% of interior spaces having access to daylight and views.

Several other items contributed to their LEED rating including:  electric vehicle charging stations, bicycle storage and changing rooms, and water efficient landscaping.  According to EDI, “Legacy on the Lake achieved LEED Certification despite having a tight construction budget.  Total upcharge to achieve certification was about 1 percent of the total construction hard costs.”

The LEED 2009 rating system is based on 100 possible base points plus an additional 6 points for Innovation in Design and 4 points for Regional Priority. There are four categories of rating:

* Certified – 40-49 points
* Silver – 50-59 points
* Gold – 60-79 points
* Platinum – 80 points and above

Other downtown buildings that have achieved a LEED rating:
1) Whole Foods (LEED Certified)
2) Austin City Hall (LEED Gold)

Of note, Gables Park Plaza is a candidate for LEED certification, the Austin W Hotel and Residences (aka. Block 21 Residences) is expected to be LEED Silver Austin’s first LEED Platinum building.  Also, the under-construction Federal Courthouse is being built to achieve a LEED Silver rating.

Share

Filed Under: austin apartments, Downtown Austin lofts, condos, apartments Tagged With: Austin LEED, legacy on the lake

Congrats To Emily – She Had A Boy!

Jude Galligan | January 18, 2010 |

Hooray for downtown Austin families! While walking on the trail yesterday, we discovered this banner hanging from the Legacy apartments We don’t know Emily, but we couldn’t resist helping her family with the announcement!

Filed Under: austin apartments, miscellaneous Tagged With: austin apartments, legacy on the lake

Plenty Of Parking In Downtown Austin

Jude Galligan | January 17, 2010 |

[googlemaps http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&msa=0&msid=103511658775998588975.0004412becaf3414ba22e&ll=30.266533,-97.743144&spn=0.010615,0.017115&output=embed&w=600&h=350]

Thanks to Chris Schorre at the Downtown Commission for this.

“Generally, prices are around $5-7 M-W and around $8-10 Thursday, Friday and weekends. NOTE: Parking is free on downtown streets after 5:30PM daily and on weekends so you can ignore those Pay to Park signs during those times.”

Filed Under: austin transit, downtown austin

SPECIAL OFFER FOR DAB READERS: THE Book About Urbanism In Austin

Jude Galligan | January 15, 2010 |

The Congress for the New Urbanism, CNU, is on the front lines of saving the planet from suburban sprawl.  At the 2008 CNU annual conference, hosted in Austin, attending members received an amazing book titled Emergent Urbanism: Evolution in Urban Form, Texas.  Simply put, this is one of the best books about Austin, Texas.

The book is a publication of the University of Texas at Austin School of Architecture, Placemaking Studio, and Black + Vernooy.  Inside you will find 150 pages of incredible stories about, and history of, urbanism in Austin.  Contributors include Sinclair Black, former Austin Mayor Will Wynn, Katherine Gregor, Larry Warshaw, Cid Galindo, Senator Kirk Watson, amongst others.

One of my favorite articles is by Kent Butler and Frederick Steiner, The Green Heart of Texas.  They provide us with a history of the Edwards Plateau and geological uniqueness of Central Texas’s Balcones Fault Zone that separates the Hill Country from the Blackland Prairie.

This is a must have book for anyone that is interested in pedestrian friendly sustainable growth in Austin, Texas.  It would make a great gift for friend, family, or client.

The book can be purchased on Amazon for $30.00.  OR, drumroll … … … I’m excited to announce that Downtown Austin Blog has been given 15 30 50 100 books to disseminate to DAB readers for $9.99 + shipping!

Proceeds go directly to CNU Austin (Central Texas).  Use the button below to order yours now!

Filed Under: Austin photos, images, downtown austin, urban planning Tagged With: cnu

Density Bonus Program Stalls

Jude Galligan | January 15, 2010 |

For better or for worse, ROMA’s density bonus recommendations aren’t likely to be adopted anytime soon.  The Planning Commission believes that not all party’s concerns have been addressed and they are requesting a four-month review period.  My experience with the density bonus recommendations is that ROMA and the City’s Planning and Development Review Department went above and beyond what was necessary to gather input.  They’ve held town halls and sought out stake holder input, ad nauseam.  Did it feel like a seminar?  Yes, at times, because these are complicated issues with a learning curve.  As someone that’s opined at these input gathering sessions, I always felt my opinion/concerns/questions were being listened to.  Anyone that hasn’t weighed in on this yet cannot credibly claim they’ve not had the opportunity to do so.  Difficult decisions will need to be made that will not always assuage the concerns of all parties.

I’m still ambivalent on the density bonus.  But it’s easy to be frustrated with City Council and the Planning Commission because there has been a year of planning and citizen input on the recommendations put forth.  What does that say about the process of stakeholder input?  Maybe an additional four month review is warranted, but the notion that ROMA and the City’s Planning and Development Review Department have not made every effort possible to seek input is patently false, and leaves me to be skeptical that this is nothing more than junk-politics at work.

For two perspectives on the issue of warehouse district protection – a highlight of ROMA’s density bonus recommendation – check out this contribution by Mike McGill and Roger Cauvin.

Statesman link

Filed Under: city council, development, downtown austin, urban planning

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Go to page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 72
  • Go to page 73
  • Go to page 74
  • Go to page 75
  • Go to page 76
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Go to page 148
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Archives

Tags

2nd street 360 condos 904 west Austin austin apartments austin auction austin bicycle austin bike share Austin City Council austin coffee austin condo auction austin condos austin history austin hotels austin lofts austin news austin parks austin transit austonian bel air auction bike share buildings condos development downtown austin downtown austin apartments downtown austin condos downtown austin retail entertainment district historic austin legacy on the lake life Parking rainey street Real Estate retail sabine condos seaholm sold spring condos SXSW waller creek warehouse district w hotel w hotel austin
LEGAL NOTICE: Texas Real Estate Commission Consumer Protection Notice. • Information About Brokerage Services. • Copyright © Jude Galligan. All rights reserved. Site Map