First National Bank of Central Texas is about to break ground next to Gringos.
Just what we needed - another bank.Orlando Ayala Cant Read said:
First National Bank of Central Texas is about to break ground next to Gringos.
maroon barchetta said:
Nail salons have to park their money somewhere.
Yes I ran into the city manager yesterday and he said it was gas pipeline installation.FearNoWeevil said:
Believe that work along Texas is Atmos gas line installation.
Bryan has worked on it. Axis Pipe and Tube and Toyo Ink spring to mind.AggieCVQ said:
Curious as to how other cities get large employers to get interested in their town.
We are growing, but we kinda lag in that area.
AggieCVQ said:
Curious as to how other cities get large employers to get interested in their town.
We are growing, but we kinda lag in that area.
Cyp0111 said:
the hope should be that easier access to IAH will help college station. However, the cost of living isnt too much lower if at all than suburban Houston so it's a hard pitch.
College Station is also more or less a suburb in design, so you do not have the sense of place that other smaller towns or college towns may have in attracting corporations. I guess to an extent, it matters what type of business you are trying to attract.
I think to an extent, the University needs to lead the way with public/private venture labs/space to incubate companies. Difficult with the pull of Austin in that space for early stage companies.
You, sir, are a man who knows things.maroon barchetta said:AggieCVQ said:
Curious as to how other cities get large employers to get interested in their town.
We are growing, but we kinda lag in that area.
They don't run off Brett Giroir while he's busy pulling in Biotech companies.
What is the timeline on starting construction at RELLIS for the semiconductor facility?rocketscience said:Cyp0111 said:
the hope should be that easier access to IAH will help college station. However, the cost of living isnt too much lower if at all than suburban Houston so it's a hard pitch.
College Station is also more or less a suburb in design, so you do not have the sense of place that other smaller towns or college towns may have in attracting corporations. I guess to an extent, it matters what type of business you are trying to attract.
I think to an extent, the University needs to lead the way with public/private venture labs/space to incubate companies. Difficult with the pull of Austin in that space for early stage companies.
The university was successful in getting $220 million in the supplemental budget from the state (SB 30) to fund the construction of a semiconductor research and secure fabrication facility on the RELLIS campus for the semiconductor institute approved by the regents a couple weeks ago. Something like that (especially the fabrication part) I think could be good at attracting larger business investments, especially for suppliers.
I haven't been inside of a bank since before covid. I don't understand why there needs to be so many physical locations.Red Pear Luke (BCS) said:Just what we needed - another bank.Orlando Ayala Cant Read said:
First National Bank of Central Texas is about to break ground next to Gringos.
But for real - I don't understand why there are so many bank branches. That puts Chase, ANB, ExtraCo, Veribank, Guaranty Bank, Frost Bank, First Financial Bank, maybe more in like a 1-2 mile radius of that area.
Red Pear Luke (BCS) said:maroon barchetta said:
Nail salons have to park their money somewhere.
And we can't forget about the car washes.
Viasat is not done. They just went remote.MS08 said:
It is a small business, entrepreneur, self employed, and A&M centric town. Also, Easterwood is a deterrent for BIG Business and Corps. I mean look at Lakewalk Area - all of those are corporate campus sites and it's very serene over there, but the corporate campus sites have had zero traction/remain available and undeveloped and they have actually lost 2 (ViaSat - I think they are done?; and Woodbolt) that were previously up and running.
I agree it is a need and would help the City but I do not see it happening with any sort of regularity. Maybe one company makes an attempt in 3-5 years.
I occasionally dip into Brenham National with the kiddo to get some free ice cream and withdraw some cash or deposit some. That's really about it.ElephantRider said:I haven't been inside of a bank since before covid. I don't understand why there needs to be so many physical locations.Red Pear Luke (BCS) said:Just what we needed - another bank.Orlando Ayala Cant Read said:
First National Bank of Central Texas is about to break ground next to Gringos.
But for real - I don't understand why there are so many bank branches. That puts Chase, ANB, ExtraCo, Veribank, Guaranty Bank, Frost Bank, First Financial Bank, maybe more in like a 1-2 mile radius of that area.
ElephantRider said:I haven't been inside of a bank since before covid. I don't understand why there needs to be so many physical locations.Red Pear Luke (BCS) said:Just what we needed - another bank.Orlando Ayala Cant Read said:
First National Bank of Central Texas is about to break ground next to Gringos.
But for real - I don't understand why there are so many bank branches. That puts Chase, ANB, ExtraCo, Veribank, Guaranty Bank, Frost Bank, First Financial Bank, maybe more in like a 1-2 mile radius of that area.
Cyp0111 said:
I think access to IAH through the new toll road could be a key growth item, with that said, I do not see many companies of note relocating.
You see college towns like Ann Arbor or Chapel Hill do well but they're closer to cities, have better towns and both have better institutions.