Austin weighs how CodeNext became a doomed effort— and what to do now


The controversial and expensive project gave hope to some residents the city's sprawl and affordability, traffic and gentrification crises could be eased through an updated land development code — or, at least, not get worse. But it also became a political lightning rod for activists and neighborhood groups. This month, the "divisive and poisoned" turn of the debate proved too much. So now what?

Previous Phoenix-area construction employment shows big gains in past year
Next On the market: The most expensive homes in O'Fallon