CTbruin said:
Waco and McLennan County has experienced more growth in the last several years than in the last 8 decades.
The downtown development and river development is huge and ongoing. Population has increased including move-ins and yes.....Baylor grads staying around. I have three kids that graduated Baylor and they all stayed in McLennan County to work and raise their families.
The growth in the industrial district is substantial. I suggest you take a tour sometime.There are more jobs available than people to fill them.
Waco is providing incentive to attract all kinds of business or this would not be happening.
I agree on most of your points, and I have been through the industrial area and there is growth. I would be interested to know if people filling those jobs are residing in Waco?
Having family in Temple-Belton area, the housing developments are literally shooting up overnight. Myself, having just moved to Waco from Austin am struggling to find a place as the inventory is extremely low, and in most cases, not affordable. I think a lot of folks are going to be moving to Temple/Bell County and making the shorter commute simply because the housing is more plentiful and affordable and the schools are not too bad. With housing growth, the commercial development that Waco loves so much can go with it.
We have had discussions on here before about the Waco city leadership being difficult to work with in regard to housing developers - I cannot speak on knowing any truth to that, just what I have heard on here from others. I feel that there are opportunities for great housing developments out the loop towards highway 6 toward Robinson. I feel a large development like Fairfield (Cy-Fair) or Cinco Ranch in Katy (minus the country clubs) would do well here and bring more folks to want to live in the area.
Regardless, exciting times. I, like all of us, want Waco to do well and be prosperous. Unlike the other major cities in Texas, we have a lot of "blank slate" that we can build on.