"Keep Austin Weird" has been a local
motto for years, featured on 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 independent businesses. The Rainey Street district is also home to the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center. Austin has been part of the
UNESCO Creative Cities Network under the category
Media Arts.
Old Austin "Old Austin" is an
adage often used by
nostalgic natives. The term "Old Austin" refers to a time when the city was smaller and more
bohemian with a considerably lower cost of living and better known for its lack of traffic,
hipsters, and
urban sprawl. It is often employed by longtime residents expressing displeasure at the rapidly changing culture, or when referencing nostalgia of Austin culture. The growth and popularity of Austin can be seen by the expansive development taking place in its downtown landscape. This growth can have a negative impact on longtime small businesses that cannot keep up with the expenses associated with
gentrification and the rising cost of real estate. A former Austin musician,
Dale Watson, described his move away from Austin, "I just really feel the city has sold itself. Just because you're going to get $45 million for a company to come to town – if it's not in the best interest of the town, I don't think they should do it. This city was never about money. It was about quality of life." Though much is changing rapidly in Austin, businesses such as Thundercloud Subs are thought by many to maintain classic Austin business cultural sentiments unique to the history of the city; as Diana Burgess stated, "I definitely appreciate that they haven't raised their prices a ton or made things super fancy. I think it speaks to that original Old Austin vibe. A lot of us that grew up here really appreciate that." Aaron Franklin, owner of
Franklin Barbecue, credited the Old Austin cultural mindset and community support with the success of his barbecue restaurant and the long lines that have supported his business since starting it out of a food trailer in 2009.
Annual cultural events on a weekend night The
O. Henry House Museum hosts the annual
O. Henry Pun-Off, a pun contest where the successful contestants exhibit wit akin to that of the author
William Sydney Porter. Other annual events include
Eeyore's Birthday Party,
Spamarama, Austin
Pride Festival & Parade in August, the Austin Reggae Festival in April, Kite Festival, Texas Craft Brewers Festival in September, Art City Austin in April, East Austin Studio Tour in November, and
Carnaval Brasileiro in February. Sixth Street features annual festivals such as the
Pecan Street Festival and Halloween night. The three-day
Austin City Limits Music Festival has been held in
Zilker Park every year since 2002. Every year around the end of March and the beginning of April, Austin is home to "Texas Relay Weekend." Austin's Zilker Park Tree is a Christmas display made of lights strung from the top of a
Moonlight tower in Zilker Park. The Zilker Tree is lit in December along with the "Trail of Lights," an Austin Christmas tradition. The Trail of Lights was canceled four times, first starting in 2001 and 2002 due to the September 11 Attacks, and again in 2010 and 2011 due to budget shortfalls, but the trail was turned back on for the 2012 holiday season. From 1962 to 1998, the
Austin Aqua Festival, or "Aqua Fest", took place on the shores of Town Lake (now known as
Lady Bird Lake). Originally conceived as a summer tourism draw, the multi-day event evolved from water-themed activities to a broader civic festival due to growth and community interest. Eventually attendance and financial solvency began to dwindle as larger music and summer festivals grew in prominence.
Cuisine and breweries Notable Austin cuisine includes
Texas barbecue and
Tex-Mex;
Franklin Barbecue in Austin's has sold out of
brisket every day since its establishment.
Breakfast tacos and
queso are popular food items in the city; Austin is sometimes called the "home of the breakfast taco."
Kolaches are a common pastry in Austin bakeries due to the large
Czech and
German immigrant population in Texas. The
Oasis Restaurant is the largest outdoor restaurant in Texas, which promotes itself as the "Sunset Capital of Texas" with its terraced views looking West over
Lake Travis.
Birdie's, a
counter-service restaurant and wine bar that opened in 2021, was
Food & Wine's 2023 Restaurant of the Year.
P. Terry's, an Austin-based fast food burger chain, has a loyal following among Austinites. Some other Austin-based chain restaurants include
Amy's Ice Creams,
Chuy's,
DoubleDave's Pizzaworks, and
Schlotzky's. The
Chili's at 45th and Lamar has been the subject of internet memes since 2011. Austin is also home to a large number of
food trucks, with 1,256 food trucks operating in 2016. Austin has a large
craft beer scene, with over 50
microbreweries in the metro area. Notable Austin-area breweries include
Jester King Brewery,
Live Oak Brewing Company, and
Real Ale Brewing Company.
Music with view of stages and Downtown Austin As Austin's official slogan is
The Live Music Capital of the World, the city has a vibrant live
music scene with more music venues per capita than any other U.S. city. The longest-running concert music program on American television,
Austin City Limits, is recorded at
ACL Live at The Moody Theater, located in the bottom floor of the
W Hotels in Austin.
Austin City Limits and
C3 Presents produce the
Austin City Limits Music Festival, an annual music and art festival held at
Zilker Park in Austin. Other music events include the Urban Music Festival,
Fun Fun Fun Fest,
Wobeon Music Festival, Chaos In Tejas, Seismic Music Festival at the Concourse Project, and
Old Settler's Music Festival.
Austin Lyric Opera performs multiple operas each year (including the 2007 opening of
Philip Glass's
Waiting for the Barbarians, written by University of Texas at Austin alumnus
J. M. Coetzee). In 2004 the city was first in ''
MovieMaker Magazine's'' annual top ten cities to live and make movies. Austin has been the location for a number of motion pictures, partly due to the influence of The
University of Texas at Austin Department of Radio-Television-Film. Films produced in Austin include
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974),
Songwriter (1984),
Man of the House,
Secondhand Lions,
Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2,
Nadine,
Waking Life,
Spy Kids,
The Faculty,
Dazed and Confused,
The Guards Themselves,
Wild Texas Wind,
Office Space,
The Life of David Gale,
Miss Congeniality,
Doubting Thomas,
Slacker,
Idiocracy,
Death Proof,
The New Guy,
Hope Floats,
The Alamo,
Blank Check,
The Wendall Baker Story,
School of Rock,
A Slipping-Down Life,
A Scanner Darkly,
Saturday Morning Massacre, and most recently, the
Coen brothers'
True Grit,
Grindhouse,
Machete,
How to Eat Fried Worms,
Bandslam and
Lazer Team. 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 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.
Season 4 of the
AMC show
Fear the Walking Dead was filmed in various locations around Austin in 2018. The film review websites
Spill.com and
Ain't It Cool News are based in Austin.
Rooster Teeth Productions, creator of popular web series such as
Red vs. Blue,
RWBY, and
Camp Camp was also located in Austin.
Theater on Congress Avenue in Downtown Austin Austin has a strong theater culture, with dozens of itinerant and resident companies producing a variety of work. A volunteer-run arts organization supporting creative expression and counter-culture community - Church of the Friendly Ghost (COTFG) helped many experimental programs get their start in Austin, TX. The city also has live performance theater venues such as the
Zachary Scott Theatre Center, Vortex Repertory Company, Salvage Vanguard Theater, Rude Mechanicals' the Off Center, Austin Playhouse, Scottish Rite Children's Theater,
Hyde Park Theatre, the Blue Theater, The Hideout Theatre, and
Esther's Follies. The
Victory Grill was a renowned venue on the
Chitlin' Circuit. Public art and performances in the parks and on bridges are popular. Austin hosts the Fuse Box Festival each April featuring theater artists. The
Paramount Theatre, opened in downtown Austin in 1915, contributes to Austin's theater and film culture, showing classic films throughout the summer and hosting regional premieres for films such as
Miss Congeniality. The
Zilker Park Summer Musical is a long-running outdoor musical. The
Long Center for the Performing Arts is a 2,300-seat theater built partly with materials reused from the old Lester E. Palmer Auditorium.
Ballet Austin is among the fifteen largest ballet academies in the country. Each year Ballet Austin's 20-member professional company performs ballets from a wide variety of choreographers, including their artistic director,
Stephen Mills. The city is also home to the
Ballet East Dance Company, a modern dance ensemble, and the
Tapestry Dance Company which performs a variety of dance genres. The Austin
improvisational theatre scene has several theaters: ColdTowne Theater, The Hideout Theater, and The Fallout Theater. Austin also hosts the Out of Bounds Comedy Festival, which draws comedic artists in all disciplines to Austin.
Libraries The
Austin Public Library is operated by the City of Austin and consists of the Central Library on
César Chávez Street, the
Austin History Center, 20 branches and the Recycled Reads bookstore and
upcycling facility. The APL library system also has mobile libraries – bookmobile buses and a human-powered trike and trailer called "unbound: sin fronteras." The Central Library, which is an anchor to the redevelopment of the former
Seaholm Power Plant site and the
Shoal Creek Walk, opened on October 28, 2017. The six-story Central Library contains a living
rooftop garden, reading porches, an indoor reading room,
bicycle parking station, large indoor and outdoor event spaces, a gift shop, an art gallery, café, and a "technology petting zoo" where visitors can play with next-generation gadgets like
3D printers. In 2018,
Time magazine named the Austin Central Library on its list of "World's Greatest Places."
Museums and other points of interest on the
University of Texas campus in Austin Museums in Austin include the
Texas Science and Natural History Museum, the
George Washington Carver Museum and Cultural Center,
Thinkery, the
Blanton Museum of Art (reopened in 2006), the
Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum across the street (which opened in 2000),
The Contemporary Austin, the
Elisabet Ney Museum, the
Women and Their Work gallery, and the galleries at the
Harry Ransom Center. The
Texas State Capitol itself is also a major tourist attraction. The
Driskill Hotel, built in 1886, once owned by
George W. Littlefield, and located at 6th and Brazos streets, was finished just before the construction of the Capitol building.
Sixth Street is a musical hub for the city. The Enchanted Forest, a multi-acre outdoor music, art, and performance art space in South Austin hosts events such as fire-dancing and circus-like-acts. Austin is also home to the
Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum, which houses documents and artifacts related to the Johnson administration, including LBJ's limousine and a re-creation of the
Oval Office. , overlooked by the historic Texas Military Academy building, the oldest standing educational building in Texas; the gallery has since been demolished.Locally produced art is featured at the
South Austin Museum of Popular Culture. The
Mexic-Arte Museum is a Mexican and Mexican-American art museum founded in 1983. Austin is also home to the O. Henry House Museum, which served as the residence of
O. Henry from 1893 to 1895. Farmers' markets are popular attractions, providing a variety of locally grown and often organic foods. Austin also has many odd statues and landmarks, such as the
Stevie Ray Vaughan Memorial, the
Willie Nelson statue, the Mangia dinosaur, the Loca Maria lady at Taco Xpress, the Hyde Park Gym's giant flexed arm, and
Daniel Johnston's
Hi, How are You? Jeremiah the Innocent frog mural. The
Ann W. Richards Congress Avenue Bridge houses the world's largest urban population of
Mexican free-tailed bats. Starting in March, up to 1.5 million bats take up residence inside the bridge's expansion and contraction zones as well as in long horizontal grooves running the length of the bridge's underside, an environment ideally suited for raising their young. Every evening around sunset, the bats emerge in search of insects, an exit visible on
weather radar. Watching the bat emergence is an event that is popular with locals and tourists, with more than 100,000 viewers per year. The bats migrate to Mexico each winter. The
Austin Zoo, located in
unincorporated western
Travis County, is a
rescue zoo that provides sanctuary to displaced animals from a variety of situations, including those involving neglect. The HOPE Outdoor Gallery was a public, three-story outdoor
street art project located on Baylor Street in the
Clarksville neighborhood. The gallery, which consisted of the foundations of a failed multifamily development, was a constantly-evolving canvas of
graffiti and
murals. Also known as "Castle Hill" or simply "Graffiti Park", the site on Baylor Street was closed to the public in early January 2019 but remained intact, behind a fence and with an armed guard, in mid-March 2019. The gallery will build a new art park at Carson Creek Ranch in Southeast Austin.
Sports , home of
Texas Longhorns football|220x220px stadium located in
Cedar Park, Texas of
Austin FC Many Austinites support the athletic programs of the University of Texas at Austin known as the
Texas Longhorns. During the 2005–2006 academic term, the
Longhorns football team was named the
NCAA Division I FBS National Football Champion, and the
Longhorns baseball team won the
College World Series. The football team plays its home games in the state's second-largest sports stadium,
Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium, seating over 101,000 fans. Baseball games are played at
UFCU Disch–Falk Field. Austin was the most populous city in the United States without a
major-league professional sports team, which changed in 2021 with
Austin FC's entry to MLS. Minor-league professional sports came to Austin in 1996, when the
Austin Ice Bats began playing at the Travis County Expo Center; they were later replaced by the
AHL Texas Stars. Austin has hosted a number of other professional teams, including the
Austin Spurs of the
NBA G League, the
Austin Aztex of the
United Soccer League, the
Austin Outlaws in
WFA football, and the
Austin Aces in
WTT tennis. Natural features like the bicycle-friendly
Texas Hill Country and generally mild
climate make Austin the home of several endurance and multi-sport races and communities. The Capitol 10,000 is the largest race in Texas, and approximately fifth largest in the United States. The
Austin Marathon has been run in the city every year since 1992. Additionally, the city is home to the largest 5 mile race in Texas, named the Turkey Trot as it is run annually on Thanksgiving. Started in 1991 by Thundercloud Subs, a local sandwich chain (who still sponsors the event), the event has grown to host over 20,000 runners. All proceeds are donated to Caritas of Austin, a local charity. The Austin-founded American Swimming Association hosts several swim races around town. Austin is also the hometown of several cycling groups and the disgraced 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 Lady Bird Lake,
Auditorium Shores, and
Downtown Austin. Austin is home to the
Circuit of the Americas (COTA), a grade 1
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile specification
motor racing facility which hosts the
Formula One United States Grand Prix. The State of Texas has pledged $25 million in public funds annually for 10 years to pay the sanctioning fees for the race. Built at an estimated cost of $250 to $300 million, the circuit opened in 2012 and is located just east of the
Austin Bergstrom International Airport. The circuit also hosts the
EchoPark Automotive Grand Prix NASCAR race in late March each year. The summer of 2014 marked the inaugural season for
World TeamTennis team
Austin Aces, formerly
Orange County Breakers of the southern California region. The Austin Aces played their matches at the
Cedar Park Center northwest of Austin, and featured former professionals
Andy Roddick and
Marion Bartoli, as well as current WTA tour player
Vera Zvonareva. The team left after the 2015 season. In 2017,
Precourt Sports Ventures announced a plan to move the
Columbus Crew SC soccer franchise from
Columbus, Ohio to Austin. Precourt negotiated an agreement with the City of Austin to build a $200 million privately funded stadium on public land at 10414 McKalla Place, following initial interest in Butler Shores Metropolitan Park and Roy G. Guerrero Colorado River Park. As part of an arrangement with the league, operational rights of Columbus Crew SC were sold in late 2018, and Austin FC was announced as Major League Soccer's 27th franchise on January 15, 2019, with the expansion team starting play in 2021. The
Austin Country Club is a private golf club located along the shores of the Colorado River, right next to the
Pennybacker Bridge. Founded in 1899, the club moved to its third and present site in 1984, which features a challenging layout designed by noted course architect
Pete Dye. Austin is set to host the
BLAST.TV Austin Major, the 22nd
Counter-Strike Major esports tournament, from June 9 to 22, 2025. ==Government==