Community Participation
Austin's greatest asset is its people: passionate about our city, committed to its improvement, and determined to see this vision become a reality. Because of participation from the great people of Austin, the Imagine Austin visioning process was named a national best practice by the Alliance for Innovation for Building a Community Vision with Sustained Community Engagement.
Community Inventory
Throughout the Imagine Austin process, many reports and analyses were conducted and created. This page collects them together.
- Demographics & household trends
- Natural environment
- Land use and zoning
- Economic development and employment trends
- Housing and neighborhood conditions
- Transportation
- Public utilities
- Parks and recreation
- Community facilities
- Historic Austin
- Urban design and urban form
Austinites Shaping the Plan
Austin's greatest asset is its people. With this in mind, public participation has been and continues to be the lifeblood of the Imagine Austin plan. In fact, more than 18,500 ideas and contributions from Austinites have helped shape the plan. Public participation in Imagine Austin moved in four main segments, called Community Forum Series, with numerous smaller meetings and opportunities throughout Austin.
Each Community Forum Series featured different combinations of public meetings, surveys, and opportunities for the public to hold their meetings in their own time and place. As much as possible, participants were asked to provide demographic information. Staff, the consultant team, and the Citizens Advisory Task Force monitored gaps in participation and worked to engage underrepresented communities throughout the process. Below is a summary of public participation:
Community Forum Series
Community Forum Series #1: What do we aspire to be as a community in 20 years?
Participants: 5,662
The public:
- Identified issues & aspirations
- Reviewed common ground from Kickoff Meeting
Work products produced:
Community Forum Series #2: What are we in the process of becoming?
Participants: 4,211
The public:
- Completed 64 chip exercise maps indicating their values for where and how growth should occur
- Reviewed the Draft Vision statement
- Reviewed sustainability indicators and existing conditions
Community Forum Series #3: What are the choices to “change course” in the direction of the Vision?
Participants: 4,741
The public:
- Rated alternate future scenarios
- Rated the sustainability indicators
Work Products:
- Plan Framework
- Preferred Growth Scenario (small PDF) (large PDF)
Working Groups: What do we need to do to achieve the Vision?
471 Austinites signed up for seven Working Groups. Each Working Group met 6 times and completed two surveys. There were also two general Working Group meetings on issues related to the Preferred Growth Scenario and six panel discussions.
Work Product:
- Prioritized actions
Community Forum Series #4: Reviewing the draft plan and setting priorities
Participants: 2,979
The public review the draft plan and set priorities. The plan was presented to 19 Boards and Commissions. Over 1,800 comments on the draft plan were generated; each comment was reviewed by the Citizens Advisory Task Force, consultants and staff. In addition, the Comprehensive Plan Committee of Planning Commission reviewed 26 master plans and 28 neighborhood plans for consistency with the draft comprehensive plan.
Other Public Engagement Efforts:
Going Out Into the Community:
- Speakers Bureau: 78 presentations to more than 1,655 people
- Speak Week Participation: 42 events reached out to 873 people
- Takin’ It To The Streets: 15 events
- Community Conversation/Meeting in a Box: 1,406 participants (This # was included as part of CFS1-3 participation)
Interaction with Neighborhood Stakeholders:
- Two community meetings to discuss the relationship between Imagine Austin and neighborhood plans
- One community meeting to receive feedback on comparison between the Future Land Use Map and draft Preferred Growth Scenario
Other Public Forums:
- University of Texas City Forum Speaker Series
- Austin’s Comprehensive Plan: Opportunities and Challenges for Citizen Engagement
- Comprehensive Planning: The Fort Worth Experience
- Transit Integration: Light Rail and Transportation Planning in the Austin Region
- Livable City: Comp Plan 101
- What is Austin?: Futures Fair
- Envision Central Texas: Regional Forum – Innovate or Stagnate: Could New Approaches to Infrastructure Transform Our Region?
- Leadership Austin: Rising from Recession: Central Texas Strong and Sustainable
- Urban Land Institute, Austin Chapter: Imagine Austin Comprehensive Plan: Impacts to Real Estate Development and Planning