Silicon Hills — Austins Tech-Boom, Innovation & die neue Wirtschaft
Austin's technology economy ('Silicon Hills' — the nickname for the Austin tech sector, referring to the Hill Country terrain of west Austin where many of the early tech campuses were built): Austin has emerged as the third-largest technology hub in the United States (after Silicon Valley and Seattle), with major corporate campuses (Tesla's Gigafactory Texas, Apple's $1 billion campus, Google, Oracle, Facebook, Amazon, and Samsung), a thriving startup ecosystem (Austin is consistently rated the top US city for startup activity by the Kauffman Foundation), and the South by Southwest Interactive festival (the annual technology conference that has been the primary platform for launching major technology companies (Twitter in 2007, Foursquare in 2009, Highlight in 2012)).
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Apple Austin Campus — North Domain
Apple's Austin campus (the company's largest outside Cupertino) employs 6,000+ people in the Domain district and serves as Apple's Americas operations hub, symbolizing the tech migration reshaping Austin's economy.
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University of Texas — UT Tower & Main Mall
The UT Tower and the South Mall's bronze statues of Texas heroes anchor a 50,000-student research university whose $670M annual R&D budget drives spinouts in semiconductors, biotech, and clean energy.
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Capital Factory — Austin's Startup Hub
Capital Factory on Congress Avenue is Austin's premier startup accelerator and the nerve center of an ecosystem that attracted Dell, Indeed, Oracle, and Tesla. Weekly pitch nights fill its communal workspace.
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South by Southwest (SXSW) Conference Venues
SXSW Interactive (March) spreads across the Austin Convention Center and a dozen hotels, hosting 40,000 tech attendees and 1,000+ startup pitches. The Flatstock poster show and Film Festival run simultaneously.
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Tesla Gigafactory Texas — East Austin
Tesla's Gigafactory Texas, opened 2022 on the eastern edge of Austin, produces the Cybertruck and employs 20,000 workers — the single largest economic development in Austin's history, visible from the Colorado River.
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Waller Creek Tech & Innovation District
The emerging Waller Creek innovation district links UT's J.J. Pickle Research Campus to downtown Austin via a planned green corridor lined with tech office campuses, research labs, and startup incubators.