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What Is Alamo Drafthouse Going To Do With An Austin School Property In Hyde Park?

Alamo Drafthouse paid $10.6 million for property in Hyde Park that includes the Baker Center.

Austin Independent School District’s board of trustees voted this week to sell property in the Hyde Park neighborhood to Alamo Drafthouse for $10.6 million.

The Baker Center is in a former school building, which the district uses for administrative purposes. But what will it be going forward?

Alamo Drafthouse didn’t want to comment for this story, and the contract isn’t finalized yet, so we can't see the deal. But over the last few months, Alamo met with people in the neighborhood to discuss plans.

“My understanding is that a large portion of it would be their corporate headquarters and the headquarters for all their subsidiaries,” said Reid Long, the president of the Hyde Park Neighborhood Association.

Long met with Alamo’s architect about potential plans. Based on these conversations, he said he expects the school building to be preserved.

“The format of the main building that is currently there would be retained," he said. "Some of the interior would be remodeled."

In its bid for the property, Alamo said it would build some housing on the land; it committed to making a quarter of that affordable. Long said the details about the housing aren’t clear yet. 

Teresa Griffin, a member of the neighborhood group Friends of Hyde Park, said her organization wants to see the space used for affordable, smaller housing.

“Some of the other proposals [submitted to AISD] were to fill [the property] with big houses that would go for a-million-plus dollars," Griffin said. "That’s not really what we’re looking for. The more people we can fit on the site, the better.”

When deciding to sell its land, the district said it wouldn't just choose proposals that offered the most money; it would also look at proposals that contributed to the community. Griffin said she and her Hyde Park neighbors trust Alamo will do that.

She said Alamo Drafthouse seemed like it would be "a solid member of the community."

"I think there's more trust in that organization than in some of the developer organizations that made proposals,” she said.

For the affordable housing on the property, Alamo said it would give preference to AISD families and staff members. 

Claire McInerny is a former education reporter for KUT.
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