EPISODE · Mar 24, 2026 · 1H 12M
Austin 001: The Stories Austin Tells Itself
from Build Order · host Lauren and Jen
Austin embodies one of America’s favorite narratives: a successful contradiction.A blueberry in the tomato soup of Texas. A laid-back city with outsized cultural ambition. A government town brimming with students and artists. A place that markets distinctiveness even as it grows to look more and more like other cities in the United States.In our first episode, we look past the clichés to the data — from domestic out-migration and international arrivals to the gap between Austin’s self-image and the people actually reshaping the city. Along the way, we ask why certain myths persist, what gets flattened by the standard boomtown narrative, and what Austin’s recent demographic shifts reveal about what the city is becoming.If you like our content, give us a follow! You can also read our essay series on our Build Order Substack.0:00 Intro — Did Austin really change overnight?0:43 The “Don’t California My Texas” myth (what’s true vs false)3:05 Austin was booming long before COVID4:34 The surprising data: international migration vs domestic7:08 Who’s actually moving to Austin (and who’s leaving)9:00 The H-1B question — will policy slow Austin’s growth?12:14 The new Austin resident: younger, richer, renting13:09 The “perception lag” — why change felt sudden16:00 Why people move to Austin (and always have)17:34 Remote work didn’t start in 2020 — the data says otherwise20:01 Is Austin becoming extractive instead of sticky?23:00 The comedown: jobs, tech layoffs, and normalization29:38 The rent correction — what happened after the boom32:00 Overbuilding Austin: cranes, offices, and vacancies35:04 Austin’s real risk: too much tech concentration39:01 The big takeaway — this isn’t new, it’s a cycle42:07 What kind of growth should Austin want?43:02 The 5 D’s: a framework for sustainable growth44:16 Diversification — Austin’s biggest weakness48:01 Build atoms, not just bits — Austin’s industrial edge50:00 UT and the talent engine powering Austin57:58 Can Austin compete with Silicon Valley for software?1:02:13 Density vs sprawl — what kind of city is Austin becoming?1:05:48 Culture risk — is Austin losing what made it weird?1:10:08 Final takeaways — what surprised us most1:11:18 Closing — what compounds (and what fades)Correction: In this episode, we mischaracterized a data series from a City of Austin report that showed long-run remote work in Travis County going back to 2002. We subsequently learned that the measure included cross-county commuting patterns, not just work-from-home. The larger point still stands: Austin’s appeal did not begin with Covid. The pandemic-era influx of remote workers reflects how Austin is a place people have been opting into for some time. We hope you enjoy the episode.
What this episode covers
Austin embodies one of America’s favorite narratives: a successful contradiction.A blueberry in the tomato soup of Texas. A laid-back city with outsized cultural ambition. A government town brimming with students and artists. A place that markets distinctiveness even as it grows to look more and more like other cities in the United States.In our first episode, we look past the clichés to the data — from domestic out-migration and international arrivals to the gap between Austin’s self-image and the people actually reshaping the city. Along the way, we ask why certain myths persist, what gets flattened by the standard boomtown narrative, and what Austin’s recent demographic shifts reveal about what the city is becoming.If you like our content, give us a follow! You can also read our essay series on our Build Order Substack.0:00 Intro — Did Austin really change overnight?0:43 The “Don’t California My Texas” myth (what’s true vs false)3:05 Austin was booming long before COVID4:34 The surprising data: international migration vs domestic7:08 Who’s actually moving to Austin (and who’s leaving)9:00 The H-1B question — will policy slow Austin’s growth?12:14 The new Austin resident: younger, richer, renting13:09 The “perception lag” — why change felt sudden16:00 Why people move to Austin (and always have)17:34 Remote work didn’t start in 2020 — the data says otherwise20:01 Is Austin becoming extractive instead of sticky?23:00 The comedown: jobs, tech layoffs, and normalization29:38 The rent correction — what happened after the boom32:00 Overbuilding Austin: cranes, offices, and vacancies35:04 Austin’s real risk: too much tech concentration39:01 The big takeaway — this isn’t new, it’s a cycle42:07 What kind of growth should Austin want?43:02 The 5 D’s: a framework for sustainable growth44:16 Diversification — Austin’s biggest weakness48:01 Build atoms, not just bits — Austin’s industrial edge50:00 UT and the talent engine powering Austin57:58 Can Austin compete with Silicon Valley for software?1:02:13 Density vs sprawl — what kind of city is Austin becoming?1:05:48 Culture risk — is Austin losing what made it weird?1:10:08 Final takeaways — what surprised us most1:11:18 Closing — what compounds (and what fades)Correction: In this episode, we mischaracterized a data series from a City of Austin report that showed long-run remote work in Travis County going back to 2002. We subsequently learned that the measure included cross-county commuting patterns, not just work-from-home. The larger point still stands: Austin’s appeal did not begin with Covid. The pandemic-era influx of remote workers reflects how Austin is a place people have been opting into for some time. We hope you enjoy the episode.
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Austin 001: The Stories Austin Tells Itself
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