March 10 2019 Issue
By SARAH DOOLITTLE, Four Points News
As the Four Points area continues to experience a retail construction boom, a number of new dining and beverage options are available for area residents, including Oz. Tap House, Galaxy Cafe, Sloan + Parker and Domino’s Pizza.
Oz. Tap House
At Oz. Tap House, which opened Feb. 1 in the Shops at Riverplace, owners Krista and Sean Kanter offer another kind of service: self-serve beer and wine on tap. Theirs is one of the first tap houses of its kind to open in Texas since the state changed laws allowing customers to pour their own alcohol.
The concept works thanks to technology: customers check in on arrival and provide a credit card, essentially opening a tab attached to an RFID card that charges customers by the ounce for whatever they serve themselves. “You only pay for what you pour,” explained Krista.
By LYNETTE HAALAND, Four Points News
Construction for Hill Country Bible Church’s 25,000-square-foot building is going smoothly on the hilltop near the main entrance of Steiner Ranch.
“We are on schedule for occupancy in the late summer,” said Josh Howard, HCBC Steiner campus pastor for more than four years.
The new $8 million project sits on the 30-acre site in the 4300 block of North Quinlan Park Road.
By LESLEE BASSMAN, Four Points News
As River Place will soon charge fees for trail users outside of its Limited District, the topic has divided some in two parts of the community: north and south.
River Place Limited District officials solidified plans to move forward with a fee charging schedule for the neighborhood’s nature trails during a Feb. 26 meeting of its board members. However, staffing and contractual issues may need to be straightened out before the projected March 2 opening date of the program, a detail that may push the project back a week, said Jennifer Mushtaler, board member.
The Limited District agreed Jan. 8 to charge $10 per person and $10 per animal for trail users on the weekends, beginning March 2. Established after the River Place Municipal Utility District was annexed by the city of Austin in December of 2017, the Limited District is responsible for coordinating solid waste disposal and maintaining the community’s parks and trails. The agency has the same geographic boundaries as its predecessor, the River Place MUD and Limited District residents are obligated to pay $0.75 per $100 valuation to fund the agency’s duties.
By LYNETTE HAALAND, Four Points News
Clearing is taking place at an 8-acre commercial site at Steiner Ranch Boulevard and N. Quinlan Park Road. A two-story, 34,000-square-foot retail building is expected to be complete in 2020 bringing offices, eateries and shops.
“Signs went up this week,” said Wes Babb, senior vice president with Weitzman and a resident of River Place. He will be handling marketing and leasing for the development project. “We just literally started marketing.”