Austin’s Planning Commission approved a zoning change at its meeting last night clearing the way for the redevelopment of a roughly 21-acre industrial site currently occupied by the Borden Dairy plant, located at 71 Strandtman Cove near Highway 183 in East Austin — set to become one of the largest mixed-use communities planned in the district.
Borden Dairy Plant Redevelopment Moves Forward in East Austin
An aerial view of the Borden Dairy Company site set for redevelopment, looking west towards downtown. Image: Google Maps

The proposal by Endeavor Real Estate Group would add 1,400 homes, 220 hotel rooms, more than 400,000 square feet of office space, and a whopping 106,000 square feet of retail to the dairy site near the Colorado River, as part of a new Planned Development Agreement modifying the site’s existing industrial zoning.

The rezoning request, which will now seek approval from City Council, passed 10-3 with Commissioners Azhar, Cox, and Mushtaler voting against. The item moved forward with a motion from Commissioner Anderson capping the maximum height of the project at 120 feet, with an impervious cover limit of 75 percent — the site’s current zoning allows a maximum of 80 percent. Commissioner Shaw added an amendment requesting a 60 foot setback from the southern property line, in response to concerns from area neighborhood groups that the development would impact the Colorado River Park Wildlife Sanctuary located between the Borden site and the river.

Borden Dairy Plant Redevelopment Moves Forward in East Austin1
A view of the current plant site at 71 Strandtman Cove. Image: Google Maps

As part of the development agreement, 10 percent of the project’s residential units or roughly 140 homes will be designated as affordable housing, though the precise rates of income restriction are still undefined and could target incomes at or below either 60 or 80 percent of the regional Median Family Income. As part of the agreement, the developers will also provide a donation to the anti-displacement nonprofit East Austin Conservancy, the amount of which will be based on the final MFI target of the project’s on-site affordable units — about $630,000 if the units are offered at 60 percent MFI and increasing to roughly $1,260,000 if the units are offered at 80 percent MFI.

Borden Dairy Plant Redevelopment Moves Forward in East Austin2
A concept site plan filed last year for the project, which shows one potential layout for a redevelopment of the 21.38-acre plant site. You’ll note that under the terms of the Planned Development Agreement for the property, the developers are allowed to provide more than 1,700 fewer parking spaces than would normally be required. Image: Lake Flato / Endeavor Real Estate Group

While the development is still in an early phase and hasn’t publicized any renderings so far, a concept site plan filed with the city last year using the likely placeholder title Borden East includes celebrated Texan studio Lake Flato as the architects of the project, which would become one of its largest single works yet. Previous large designs by the firm like the adaptive reuse of the former Pearl Brewery in San Antonio and Austin’s own Music Lane project have us very excited about this new district’s possibilities — we’d be thrilled to see every project in East Austin provide this plan’s benefits with such a respected institution for sustainable design behind the wheel.

Demand for dairy protein is running strong in the U.S. and around the world, and that provides opportunities — and challenges — for the U.S. dairy sector, according to CoBank’s outlook report for the year ahead.

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