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Austin, TX Apartment Guide
The city of Austin serves as the
state capital for Texas. Austin is also the county
seat of Travis County. Situated in the middle of
Central Texas, Austin is the fourth-largest city
in the state of Texas and the sixteenth largest in
the United States. The 2005 United States Census
estimated Austin’s population at 690,252. The
entire metropolitan area is known as Austin-Round
Rock and the city of Austin is the core cultural
and economic center with a population of 1.4
million.
The first known living settlement of what is now
Austin came about in 1835 at a by the name of
Waterloo in 1837. In 1839, Mirabeau B. Lamar
renamed the city in recognition of Stephen F.
Austin. Th cities original name is privileged by
local businesses such as Waterloo Ice House and
Waterloo Records. The city of Austin is located
near the Colorado River and on the Balcones Fault,
which throughout much of Austin traverses roughly
the same route as the MoPac expressway.
Residents of Austin are known as Austinites and
include a mix of university professors, students,
politicians, lobbyists, state employees and
high-tech workers. The city is home to enough
large sites of major technology corporations to
have earned the nickname, "Silicon Hills".
Austin's official slogan is The Live Music Capital
of the World and many try to follow one of its
unofficial mottos of "Keep Austin Weird".
History
Early settlers
For hundreds of years before the arrival of
European settlers, the area near present-day
Austin was occupied by a combination of Tonkawa,
Comanche, and Lipan Apache Indians, who fished and
hunted the length of the creeks, as well as
present-day Barton Springs.
Anglo American settlers
Stephen F. Austin. The original documented
permanent settlement of current day Austin
occurred in 1835. Anglo American settlers began
arriving in the region, while Texas was still part
of Mexico. They founded the town of Waterloo in
1837, down the banks of the Colorado River.
According to local myths, Stephen F. Austin, the
"father of Texas", negotiated a peace treaty with
the local Indians at the place of the present day
Treaty Oak after quite a few settlers were killed
in raids. According to local legend, Austin also
negotiated a border treaty with the Indians that
laid out the fledgling town's limits.
Republic of Texas
Waterloo was selected to become the capital of the
new Republic of Texas in 1839 and was purchased by
The Republic for that reason. Mirabeau B. Lamar
renamed the city in honor of Stephen F. Austin.
The city's unique name is honored by local
businesses such as Waterloo Ice House and Waterloo
Records.
A network plan for the new capital's streets was
surveyed by Judge Edwin Waller (after whom Waller
Creek was named). The network survives nearly
intact in present-day downtown Austin. The
north-south streets of the network were named for
the rivers of Texas, following an east-west series
from Sabine Street to Rio Grande Street (Red River
Street being "out of order" to the west of Sabine
Street). The exclusion was the central
thoroughfare Congress Avenue, which leads from the
distant south side of town over the river to the
foot of the knoll where the new Texas State
Capitol was to be constructed and it marks the
point where downtown streets turn from east to
west and vice versa. The original north-south grid
was bookended by West Avenue and East Avenue
(currently Interstate 35).
The east-west streets of the network followed a
series uphill from the river and were named after
plants native to the region, with Pecan Street as
the main east-west thoroughfare. The east-west
streets were later renamed in a numbered sequence,
with Pecan Street becoming Sixth Street. The
original tree-named streets live in nostalgic
names, counting Pecan Street, which is the name of
a locally-produced beer.
In October 1839, the whole government of the
Republic of Texas arrived by oxcart from Houston.
By the next January, the inhabitants of the town
was 839.
Also in 1839, the Congress of the Republic of
Texas set away 40 acres (160,000 m²) of land close
to downtown Austin for a "university of the first
class". This land became the main campus of The
University of Texas at Austin in 1883.
In 1842, Austin nearly lost its status as capital
city during the Texas Archive War. President Sam
Houston had tried to move the seat of government
from Austin to Houston, and then to
Washington-on-the-Brazos. In the quiet of night on
December 29, 1842, a assembly of men was sent to
take the archives of Texas from Austin to
Washington-on-the-Brazos. Angelina Eberly fired
cannon on the men, who made their escape, only to
be captured by another group of men who returned
the archives back to Austin.
1845 to 1899
After Texas was admitted to the Union in 1845, two
failed statewide elections were held that
attempted to shift the capital elsewhere.
From 1861 to 1865, Texas was a division of the
Confederacy.
St. Edward's University (at that instant St.
Edward's Academy) was founded in 1878 by Rev.
Edward Sorin, Superior General of the Congregation
of Holy Cross, in South Austin farm earth.
In September 1881, the city schools admitted their
primary public school curriculum. That same year,
Tillotson Collegiate and Normal Institute, the
precursor of Huston-Tillotson University, opened
to the community.
In 1882 building began on The University of Texas
at Austin university grounds with the situation of
the cornerstone of the Main Building. The
University formally opened in 1883. From 1884 to
1885, an axe murderer, the Servant Girl
Annihilator, plagued Austin.
Texas State Capitol.The Texas State Capitol was
finished in 1888 on the site specified in the 1839
plan. At the time it was tagged as the "seventh
largest building in the world."
In 1891, the area of Hyde Park was developed north
of the The University of Texas as a streetcar
suburb.
In 1893, the Great Granite Dam on the Colorado
River was constructed, stabilizing the river's
surge and providing hydroelectric energy.
1900 to 1969
In 1900, a great rainstorm caused Colorado river
waters to crest 11 feet above the granite and
limestone dam, washing parts of the dam 60 feet
downstream, sending a wall of water into downtown
Austin, destroying homes and killing 47 persons.
Two more failed attempts would be made to
reconstruct the dam until Tom Miller Dam was
completed slightly up river in the 1940s.
In 1910, the city opened the solid Congress Avenue
Bridge across the Colorado River, fostering
development along South Congress Avenue. The
Littlefield Building at 6th and Congress downtown
also opened that same year.
In 1911, the city lengthened the streetcar line
into South Austin, allowing for development of
Travis Heights in 1913.
In the 1930s, the Lower Colorado River Authority
replaced the Great Granite Dam by building a
series of seven dams and reservoirs that now
define the Colorado river's course through Austin.
Lyndon Baines Johnson, then a member of the House
of Representatives, played an instrumental role in
authorizing funding for the dams.
On August 1, 1966, in the city's most shocking
event, Charles Whitman terrorized Austin by
killing 16 people -- his wife and mother in the
morning, and 3 inside and 11 from the UT Tower
with a high-powered rifle. Whitman was killed by
APD officer Houston McCoy with multiple fatal
shotgun blasts.
1970 to 1989
In the 1970s, Austin became a safe haven for a
group of Country and Western musicians and
songwriters seeking to flee the music industry's
corporate domination of Nashville. The best-known
performer in this group was Willie Nelson, who
became an icon for what became the city's
"alternate music industry." The Armadillo World
Headquarters gained a nationwide reputation during
the 1970s as a site for these anti-establishment
musicians as well as mainstream acts. In the
subsequent years, Austin gained a reputation as a
place where struggling musicians could open their
careers in informal live venues in front of
receptive audiences. This finally led to the
city's motto, "Live music capital of the world."
During the 1970s and 1980s, the city experienced a
marvelous boom in development that temporarily
halted with the Savings and Loan crisis in the
late 1980s. The enlargement led to an ongoing
series of fierce political battles that pitted
preservationists against developers. In particular
the conservation of Barton Springs, and by
extension the Edwards Aquifer, became an issue
which defined the themes of the larger battles.
1990 to present
Downtown high-rises, viewed from the west.In the
1990s, the boom resumed with the arrival and
growth of a large technology industry. At first,
the technology industry was centered around
larger, established companies such as IBM, but in
the late 1990s, Austin gained the additional
reputation of being a center of the dot-com boom
and subsequent dot-com bust. Austin is also
recognized for game development, filmmaking, and
popular music.
In 2000, Austin became the center of an strong
media focus as the headquarters of presidential
candidate and Texas Governor George W. Bush.
Interestingly, the headquarters of his main
opponent, Al Gore, were in Nashville, thus
re-creating the old country music opposition
between the two cities.
As Austin became known as a location for artistic
individuals, corporate retail branches also moved
into town and displaced many 'home-grown'
businesses. To many long-time Austinites, this
loss of landmark retail establishments has left a
void in the city's culture. In response, "Keep
Austin Weird" became a popular rallying cry and
many Austinites have reacted with rehabilitated
support of local businesses.
Geography
Austin is located at 30°18′01″N, 97°44′50″W
(30.300474, -97.747247)GR1. According to the 2000
census, the city has a total area of 669.3 km²
(258.4 mi²). 651.4 km² (251.5 mi²) of it is land
and 17.9 km² (6.9 mi²) of it (2.67%) is water.
Austin is located on the Colorado River, with
three man-made (artificial) lakes wholly within
the city limits: Town Lake, Lake Austin, and Lake
Walter E. Long. Moreover, the foot of Lake Travis,
as well as Mansfield Dam, is located within the
city's limits. Town Lake, Lake Austin, and Lake
Travis are all on the Colorado River. The city is
also located on the Balcones Fault, which, in much
of Austin, runs roughly the same route as the
MoPac Expressway. The eastern division of the city
is flat, whereas the western part and western
suburbs consist of picturesque rolling hills on
the edge of the Texas Hill Country. Because the
hills to the west are above all limestone rock
with a thin covering of topsoil, the city is
subjected to frequent flash flooding from the
excessive runoff caused by thunderstorms. To help
control this runoff and to generate hydroelectric
power, the Lower Colorado River Authority operates
a series of dams that shape the Texas Highland
Lakes. The lakes also offer venues for boating,
swimming, and other forms of recreation within
numerous parks located on the lake shores.
A popular point of prominence in Austin is Mount
Bonnell. The highest point in Austin proper at
about 780 feet above sea level, it is a natural
limestone formation overlooking Lake Austin on the
Colorado River, approximately 200 feet below its
summit.
The soils of Austin range from shallow gravelly
clay loams over limestone in the western outskirts
to deep fine sandy loams, silty clay loams, silty
clays or clays in the city's eastern part. Some of
the clays have pronounced shrink-swell properties
and are difficult to work under most moisture
conditions. Many of Austin's soils, especially the
clay-rich types, are slightly to moderately
alkaline and have free calcium carbonate.
[edit]
Climate
Austin has a humid subtropical climate,
characterised by hot summers and mild winters.[4]
On average, Austin receives 33.6 inches (853.4 mm)
of rain per year, with most of the precipitation
coming in the spring, and a secondary maximum in
the fall.[5]
Summer in Austin is hot and typically humid, with
average temperatures above 90 degrees Fahrenheit
(32 degrees Celsius) from June until September.
Temperatures above 100°F (38°C) are not uncommon,
and the highest recorded temperature at Camp Mabry
was 112°F in 2000.[6] For the entire year there is
an average of 111 days above 90°F (32°C) and 198
days above 80°F (27°C). [4]
Winter in Austin is mild and dry relative to the
rest of the year. For the entire year Austin
averages 88 days where the temperature drops below
45°F (7°C) and only 19 days where the temperature
drops below freezing. Snowfall is rare in Austin,
but once every year or two Austin is typically hit
with an ice storm, freezing over roads and
shutting down much of the city for typically about
a day. [4]
Averages are from the 30 year average from
1971–2000 at Camp Mabry, and records are from Camp
Mabry and from previous climate sites, spanning
from 1897 to present.[5] [6]
[edit]
Government and politics
See also: List of current and former capital
cities in the United States
[edit]
Law and government
Downtown Austin and the State Capitol as seen from
the Congress Avenue Bridge over Town Lake.Austin
is administered by a city council of seven
members, each of them elected by the entire city,
and by an elected mayor under the weak
mayor-council government system of municipal
governance. Council and mayoral elections are
non-partisan (although most Austin mayors and
council members are Democrats), with a runoff in
case there is no 50% majority winner. Austin
remains an anomaly among large Texas cities in
that the council is not elected by districts,
though there has been a strong effort to change
the election system to one of single districts.
See also: Sister cities of Austin
[edit]
Politics
The main political actors within Austin city
politics are interest groups such as the
pro-environmental Save Our Springs Alliance, the
Austin Police Association, Austin Toll Party and
the Austin Business Council.
The political controversy that dominated the 1990s
was the conflict between environmentalists, strong
in the city center, and advocates of urban growth,
who tend to live in the outlying areas. The city
council has in the past tried to mitigate the
controversy by advocating smart growth, but growth
and environmental protection are still the main
hot-button issues in city politics. Today
conservatives in Austin argue that the city's
various highway traffic problems are rooted in the
denial of past highway/infrastructure development
by political action committees who do not support
highway expansion.
Austin is well known as a center for liberal
politics in a generally conservative state,
leading some Texas conservatives to deride the
city as "The People's Republic of Austin."
Austin's suburbs, especially to the west and
north, and several satellite municipalities,
however, tend toward political conservatism.
As a result of the major party realignment that
began in the 1970's, central Austin became a
stronghold of the Democratic Party while the
suburbs tend to vote Republican. One consequence
of this is that in the most recent redistricting
plan, formulated by U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay and
enacted by the Republican-majority legislature,
the central city has been split among multiple,
sprawling districts. Opponents characterized the
resulting districting layout as being overly
partisan gerrymandering, and the plan was
challenged on this basis in court by Democratic
and minority activists; of note, the U.S. Supreme
Court has never struck down a redistricting plan
for being excessively partisan. The plan was
subsequently upheld by a three-judge federal panel
in late 2003, and on June 28, 2006, the matter was
largely settled when the United States Supreme
Court in a 7-2 decision upheld the entire
congressional redistricting plan with the
exception of a Hispanic-majority district in
southwest Texas. This may later affect Austin's
districting, as U.S. Rep. Lloyd Doggett's district
was found not to be sufficiently compact to
compensate for the reduced minority influence in
the southwest district.[1]
Overall, the city leans Democratic; in the 2004
presidential election, Senator John Kerry won a
substantial majority of the votes in Travis County
as illustrated in this pictorial of votes
by-county. Of Austin's six state legislative
districts, three are strongly Democratic, one
leans Republican, and two are swing districts
presently held by Democrats. However, two of its
three congressional districts are presently held
by Republicans; this is largely due to the 2003
redistricting, which left Austin with no
congressional seat of its own. Travis County was
also the only county in Texas to reject Texas
Constitutional Amendment Proposition 2 —
effectively outlawing gay marriage and status
equal or similar to it — and did so by a wide
margin (40% for, 60% against).
The combination of economic conservatism with
social liberalism has also made Austin an active
area for the Libertarian Party. Although the
Libertarians remain a third party, the party is
very active in the Austin area, and one of the
past Libertarian presidential candidates, Michael
Badnarik, comes from Austin. Michael Badnarik is
currently making a run to represent part of Austin
in the U.S. Congress in the House of
Representatives, District 10. Republican
congressman Ron Paul, a libertarian, is from the
Texas Gulf Coast and used to represent neighboring
counties surrounding Travis County.
Two of the candidates for President in the 2004
race call Austin home. Michael Badnarik, mentioned
above as the Libertarian Party candidate, and
David Cobb of the Green Party both have lived in
Austin. During the run up to the election in
November a Presidential debate was held at the
University of Texas student union involving the
two minor party candidates. While the Commission
on Presidential Debates only invites Democrats and
Republicans to participate in televised debates,
the debate at UT was open to all Presidential
candidates.
[edit]
Economy
Thousands of graduates each year from the
engineering and computer science programs at The
University of Texas at Austin provide a steady
source of young, talented and driven employees
that help to fuel Austin's technology sector. The
metro Austin area also has much lower housing
costs than, for example, Silicon Valley. As a
result of the relatively high concentration of
high tech companies in the region, Austin was
strongly affected by the dot-com boom in the late
1990s and subsequent bust, although recovery is
proceeding rapidly.
Austin's biggest employers include the State of
Texas, The University of Texas, the SETON
Healthcare Network, Dell, IBM and Freescale
Semiconductor (spun off from Motorola in 2004).
Other high-tech companies in Austin include Apple
Computer, Vignette, AMD, Applied Materials, Intel,
Motive Inc, Cirrus Logic, Samsung, National
Instruments, United Devices and Sun Microsystems.
The proliferation of technology companies has led
to the region's nickname, "the Silicon Hills,"
(Austin was originally "Silicon Gulch", but it
seems that San Jose, California already has that
distinction) and has spurred rapid development
that has greatly expanded the city to the north
and south.
Other globally well known companies, such as
Hoover's, Inc., a business research and publishing
company, are headquartered in the city.
In addition to global companies, Austin features a
strong network of independent, locally-owned firms
and organzations, the Austin Independent Business
Alliance. The success of these businesses reflects
the high level of commitment by the citizens of
Austin to preserving the unique spirit of the
city, and has been tied to the "Keep Austin Weird"
campaign.
Demographics
City of Austin
Population by decade
1950 132,459
1960 186,545
1970 251,808
1980 345,496
1990 465,622
2000 656,562
As of the censusGR2 of 2000, there were 656,562
people, 265,649 households, and 141,590 families
residing in the city. The population density was
1,007.9/km² (2,610.4/mi²). There were 276,842
housing units at an average density of 425.0/km²
(1,100.7/mi²). The racial makeup of the city was
65.36% White, 10.05% Black or African American,
0.59% Native American, 4.72% Asian, 0.07% Pacific
Islander, 16.23% from other races, and 2.99% from
two or more races. 30.55% of the population were
Hispanic American or Latino of any race.
There were 265,649 households out of which 26.8%
had children under the age of 18 living with them,
38.1% were married couples living together, 10.8%
had a female householder with no husband present,
and 46.7% were non-families. 32.8% of all
households were made up of individuals and 4.6%
had someone living alone who was 65 years of age
or older. The average household size was 2.40 and
the average family size was 3.14.
In the city the population was spread out with
22.5% under the age of 18, 16.6% from 18 to 24,
37.1% from 25 to 44, 17.1% from 45 to 64, and 6.7%
who were 65 years of age or older. The median age
was 30 years. For every 100 females there were
105.8 males. For every 100 females age 18 and
over, there were 105.7 males.
The median income for a household in the city was
$42,689, and the median income for a family was
$54,091. Males had a median income of $35,545 vs.
$30,046 for females. The per capita income for the
city was $24,163. About 9.1% of families and 14.4%
of the population were below the poverty line,
including 16.5% of those under age 18 and 8.7% of
those age 65 or over. From the year 2000 to 2005,
the median house price in Austin grew 34%.
[edit]
Culture
The sights of Austin's nightlife on 6th
Street.Austin's official slogan is The Live Music
Capital of the World. Austin has a vibrant live
music scene boasting more music venues per capita
than any other U.S. city. Austin's music revolves
around the many nightclubs on 6th Street and an
annual film/music/multimedia festival known as
South by Southwest. The longest-running concert
music program on American television, Austin City
Limits, is videotaped on the University of Texas
at Austin campus. Austin City Limits and Capital
Sports & Entertainment run the Austin City Limits
Music Festival, an annual music and art festival
held at Zilker Park in Austin. Other annual events
include Eeyore's Birthday Party in April and
Carnaval in February.
Austinites take great pride in being eccentric and
celebrate the differences between themselves and
other U.S. cities. "Keep Austin Weird" has become
a local motto in recent years, featured on
innumerable bumper stickers and t-shirts. This
motto has not only been used in promoting Austin's
eccentricity and diversity, but is also meant to
bolster support of local and independent
businesses.
In May 2006 the Recording Industry Association of
America labeled Austin a "Piracy City", having
large numbers of music thieves engaged in criminal
copyright activities. Declaring it one of twelve
American cities, '...all "hot spots" of music
theft, with significant piracy problems from the
manufacturer level all the way down to the point
of retail sale.'
Nationally known Austinites include Willie Nelson,
Lance Armstrong, and Michael Dell. Other well
known Austinites can be found in the List of
Austinites.
[edit]
Media
Austin City Limits Music Festival with view of
stages and Austin skyline.Austin has been the
location for a number of motion pictures, partly
due to the influence of The University of Texas at
Austin's outstanding Department of
Radio-Television-Film. Films produced in Austin
include Man of the House, Secondhand Lions, Waking
Life, Spy Kids, Dazed and Confused, Office Space,
The Life of David Gale, Miss Congeniality,
Doubting Thomas and Slacker. In order to draw
future film projects to the area, the Austin Film
Society has converted several airplane hangars
from the former Mueller Airport into the
filmmaking center, Austin Studios. Projects that
have used facilities at Austin Studios include
music videos by The Flaming Lips, and feature
films such as 25th Hour and Sin City. Austin also
hosted the MTV series, The Real World: Austin in
2005.
Austin hosts the annual Austin Film Festival, as
well as South by Southwest, which draw films of
many different types from all over the world. In
2004 the city was first in Moviemaker Magazine's
annual top ten cities to live and make movies.
Austin also hosts the annual Austin City Limits
Music Festival, which attracts musical artists
from around the world. The 2005 festival included
Oasis, Coldplay, and Franz Ferdinand.
Austin also has a strong theater culture, with
dozens of itinerant and resident companies
producing a wide variety of work. From Esther's
Follies on E. 6th street to Zachary Scott on S.
Lamar, live entertainment can be found around the
city.
[edit]
Sports
Austin is, as of 2006, the largest U.S. city by
population not to have a team in one of the big
four professional leagues (NHL, NBA, NFL, MLB).
Among the professional sports teams in Austin are
the Austin Ice Bats of the Central Hockey League,
the Austin Wranglers of the Arena Football League,
and the Austin Toros of the NBDL. The Round Rock
Express, affiliated with the Houston Astros, are
located in nearby Round Rock, Texas and play
Triple-A baseball in the Pacific Coast League.
Austin is also home to the University of Texas
Longhorns who recently won the 2005 College World
Series (baseball) and 2005 National Championship
in Football in the Rose Bowl (football).
In addition to team sports, the combined draws of
the bicycle-friendly Texas Hill Country that
begins in Northwest Austin, the centrally-located
Town Lake Hike and Bike Trail, and local pools
like Barton Springs make Austin the home of
several endurance and multisport races and
communities. The venerable Capitol 10,000 is the
largest 10 K race in Texas, and approximately
fifth largest in the nation. The Austin-founded
American Swimming Association hosts the Capitol 2K
and other closed-course, open water, and cable
swim races around town. Austin is also the
hometown of the several cycling groups and the
champion cyclist Lance Armstrong. Combining these
three disciplines is a growing crop of triathlons,
including the Capital of Texas Triathlon held
every Memorial Day on and around Town Lake,
Auditorium Shores, and downtown Austin, even
crossing 6th Street on several legs of the race.
[edit]
Architectural landmarks
A moonlight tower.Buildings that comprise Austin's
skyline are modest in height and somewhat spread
out. The latter characteristic is due to a
restriction that preserves the view of the Texas
Capitol building from various locations around
Austin. Austin's current tallest building, the
Frost Bank Tower, opened in 2004 and stands at 515
feet.
The Congress Avenue Bridge houses the world's
largest urban population of Mexican Free-tailed
Bats. Starting in late February, up to 1.5 million
bats take up residence inside the bridge's
expansion and contraction zones, an environment
ideally suited for raising their young. Every
evening around sunset, the bats emerge in search
of insects. The event is popular with locals and
tourists, with more than 100,000 people watching
it every year. The bats migrate to Mexico each
winter.
The iconic Pennybacker Bridge, also known as the
"360 Bridge," crosses Lake Austin to connect north
and south Loop 360.
At night, parts of Austin are lit with "artificial
moonlight." Several moonlight towers, built in the
late 19th century and recognized as historic
landmarks, illuminate the central part of the
city. The towers were prominently featured in the
film Dazed and Confused. The "Zilker Tree" is a
Christmas "tree" made of large lights strung from
the top of the Moonlight Tower that stands in
Zilker Park. The Zilker Tree is lit in early
December along with the "Trail of Lights," an
Austin Christmas tradition.
[edit]
Transportation
Interchange of Interstate 35 and State Highway
45.Austin is served by these major highways:
Interstate 35; U.S. Highways 183 and 290; Texas
State Highways 45, 71, 130, Loop 1/MoPac, and Loop
360.
Capital Metropolitan Transportation Authority
(Capital Metro) provides public transportation to
the city, primarily by bus. Capital Metro is
building a commuter rail system that is scheduled
for completion in 2008. The system will be built
on pre-existing freight rail lines and will serve
Downtown Austin, East Austin, Northwest Austin and
Leander in its first phase. An Amtrak Texas Eagle
station is located west of Downtown. Segments of
the Amtrak route between Austin and San Antonio
are being evaluated for a future passenger rail
corridor as an alternative to the traffic
congestion of Interstate-35.
Austin's airport is Austin-Bergstrom International
Airport, located 5 miles (8 km) southeast of the
city.
[edit]
Education
The University of Texas at Austin.Austin is home
to The University of Texas at Austin, one of the
largest universities in the country and is the
flagship institution of The University of Texas
System—the largest state system of higher
education in Texas. Other institutions of higher
learning include Austin Community College,
Concordia University, Huston-Tillotson University
and St. Edward's University.
Most of the city is covered by the Austin
Independent School District. Parts of Austin are
served by other districts, including Round Rock
Independent School District, Pflugerville
Independent School District, Leander Independent
School District, Del Valle Independent School
District, and Eanes Independent School District.
Researchers at Central Connecticut State
University ranked Austin the 16th most literate
city in America for 2005.[2]
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