Where Is All of This Going?
Published:
Hays County has roughly 300,000 people today. How many will it have in 2040? In 2060?
Published:
Hays County has roughly 300,000 people today. How many will it have in 2040? In 2060?
Published:
If you drive south from Austin on I-35, you can feel the moment you cross into Hays County. Not because of a sign — though there is one — but because the landscape opens up. New subdivisions in various stages of completion. Warehouse pads with fresh concrete. A strip center waiting for tenants. The feeling of a place in motion — growing into something, and doing it quickly.
Published:
Hays County has roughly 300,000 people today. How many will it have in 2040? In 2060?
Published:
If you drive south from Austin on I-35, you can feel the moment you cross into Hays County. Not because of a sign — though there is one — but because the landscape opens up. New subdivisions in various stages of completion. Warehouse pads with fresh concrete. A strip center waiting for tenants. The feeling of a place in motion — growing into something, and doing it quickly.
Published:
Every March, cable news runs the same reel: ambulances on the beach, students on stretchers, a grim-faced anchor reading the latest death toll. The coverage makes spring break look like the most dangerous week on the American calendar. But is it?
Published:
There is an image of Scottie Scheffler that I cannot stop thinking about.
Published:
Hays County has roughly 300,000 people today. How many will it have in 2040? In 2060?
Published:
If you drive south from Austin on I-35, you can feel the moment you cross into Hays County. Not because of a sign — though there is one — but because the landscape opens up. New subdivisions in various stages of completion. Warehouse pads with fresh concrete. A strip center waiting for tenants. The feeling of a place in motion — growing into something, and doing it quickly.
Published:
Every March, cable news runs the same reel: ambulances on the beach, students on stretchers, a grim-faced anchor reading the latest death toll. The coverage makes spring break look like the most dangerous week on the American calendar. But is it?
Published:
There is an image of Scottie Scheffler that I cannot stop thinking about.
Published:
Every March, cable news runs the same reel: ambulances on the beach, students on stretchers, a grim-faced anchor reading the latest death toll. The coverage makes spring break look like the most dangerous week on the American calendar. But is it?