While definitely on the high end as rents go in these parts, there are plenty of homes to be found in this week’s range, and not all are what you’d call "luxury" residences.
The city's 10 most geotagged places might not necessarily be our top picks in terms of must-see places or ways to experience the subtler sides of our city's landscape, but they are definitely proof that Austin is still a music city.
We've been enjoying and learning tons from the events of Austin's inaugural Design Week, and we hope you have, too. To that end, we've mapped all the events for the remainder of the week.
The data crunchers at NeighborhoodX have been hard at work again, this time compiling a list of the most expensive two-bedroom condos currently on the Austin market. Curbed Austin has mapped the findings, in order from most to least expensive.
This week's Curbed Comparison takes us far north and south, as well as in the middle—Holly, Clarksville, and North Loop—to find apartments, houses, and duplexes at our chosen price point.
Austin's natural beauty is one reason the city was built here to begin with; it's also a reason people continue to move here, usually bringing personal transport with them. So it's not surprising that our smallest parks are traffic islands.
It's Micro Week at Curbed, and we're peeking into some small places and the people who love them. This bungalow certainly qualifies, although its price is out of compliance with the affordability most view as a necessary component of micro living.
In this week's Curbed Comparisons, we take a whirl around the city, finding houses, apartments, and even garden homes in Montopolis, Downtown, Clarksville, South Lamar, and Crestview at our price point. Your square footage may vary.
This home on one of the neighborhood's most notable streets is classically Clarksville in every way: Shambling but solid, perched on a hill that overlooks North Lamar and lovely in a quirky, unpretentious manner.
Built in 1947, it was remodeled in 2008 and in the process picked up some of the best trends of its time. It also has a separate garage apartment and is close to all cool things on West Sixth, North Lamar, and West Lynn. Not to mention downtown.
A sweet home on a hill in the historic Clarksville neighborhood just west of downtown that has been on the market since April, a well-maintained 1951 house recently had its asking price dropped $75,000—from $775,000 to $699,000.
Finding a home in the historic Clarksville neighborhood seems like winning the lottery. The historic and storied area is both hip-adjacent and retains a strip of established, small-scale, local shops on West Sixth Street.
For this week's Curbed Comparisons, a column that explores what one can rent for a set amount in various Austin neighborhoods, we decided to have some fun with a price point of $5,000. That's apparently no object in some parts of town.
Renovations kept a lot of the older architectural details of this 1933 home intact, especially on the exterior, and the interiors were redone in a contemporary style that references the neighborhood's prestige and keeps its understated glamour alive.
A house and detached cottage totalling 2,374 square feet on an approximately 8,700-square-foot lot in one of the city's most popular central neighborhood have received full, stylish remodels and were ready for their close-ups today.
You can still get a fair amount of space and a good location in Austin for $3,500. Who knew? This week, we take a tour through Mueller, Clarksville, Travis Heights, Downtown, and North Austin.
FIve of the most expensive homes purchased in Austin last week have some interesting things in common. None of them is a complete new build, for one thing.