Austin is just simply not like the rest of Texas. From the quirky cast of characters that populate Sixth Street to the largest urban colony of Mexican Freetail bats that live under the Congress Avenue bridge, four-star restaurants to down-home barbecue joints, corporate CEOs to struggling musicians, Texas' capital city stands apart from the rest.
Facts about Austin
- Nicknamed the Live Music Capitol of the World, Austin is home to many artists of all disciplines and has a growing comedy scene anchored by venues like The Hideout Theatre, ColdTowne Theater, Esther's Follies, The Velveeta Room, and Capitol City Comedy Club.
- 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 emerge at dusk to hunt insects and small children.
- Austin grew in population by a whopping 32.8% between 1990 and 2000. (Thanks, internet.)
- Austin is the 16th largest city in the US and expected to reach 1 million in population by 2015.
- On August 1, 1966, in the city's most traumatic event, Charles Whitman terrorized Austin by killing 16 people, his wife and mother in the early hours, 3 in the Main Building on the UT Campus and 11 with a high-powered rifle from atop the UT Tower. Whitman was killed by APD officer Houston McCoy with two fatal shotgun blasts.
- Austin averages 300 days of sunshine per year.
- Bizjournals ranked Austin the "3rd Smartest City in the Country."
- Austin was ranked "7th Sweatiest City in the Country" by the science magnates at old spice.
- Texas is home to Dell and Compaq Computers. Central Texas is often referred to as the "Silicon Valley of the South" because of this riveting fact. Austin is also home to the progressive, organicentric grocer, Whole Foods Market.
- Austin is also the hometown of several cycling groups and the outrageously famous Lance Armstrong.
- Barbed wire was invented in Austin by John Grenninger in 1857 in an effort to keep the fleet-of-foot from grabbing any more of his watermelons.
- Congress Avenue was once the widest street in the world, about three times wider than it is now. East Avenue was also once touted as the widest street in Texas, laid out to be 200 feet wide, in contrast to the old Congress Avenue's 120 feet.
- Pappy Lee O'Daniel invited every last Texan to attend an inaugural dinner at the Governor's Mansion in honor of his re-election in 1941. 20,000 people showed up making it one of the largest dinner parties in history. The guests devoured 19,000 lbs of barbecue, 1,000 lbs. of potato salad, and 1100 lbs. of pickles and onions.