Southwest Austin - Dripping Springs Edition | July 2025

Real estate

BY ELISABETH JIMENEZ

Home Edition

2025

Readers, welcome to your annual Community Impact Home Edition! This annual guide features news from key real estate trends to tips on buying a home for the rst time. All of the stories included in this guide are compiled by our team of local journalists. The goal of this guide, published every July, is to bring readers vital information about home ownership and real estate in Southwest Austin and Dripping Springs. Our cover story this month ties into our Home Edition. Reporter Haley McLeod explores the rising cost of homeowner’s insurance, and how factors such as weather events continue to impact costs. Also in this edition is a look at the Home Ownership for Middle-income Empowerment, or HOME, initiative after more than a year in eect in Austin on page 22, upcoming changes to another building program in Austin on page 23, a guide to special districts for homeowners on page 28, the slow of housing production in the Austin-area on page 25, residential market data on page 29 and more.

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Locals turn to regenerative agriculture in times of drought

the space between them, Topiwala said. During rain events, water will rush through the swales and feed into the berms, hydrating the soil. Hays County resident and permaculturalist Annie Spade said incorporating native plant species can be benecial for the landscape. She encourages experi- menting with dierent plants to see what works best for an individual’s home. “That’s the beautiful thing about native plants— they will naturalize,” she said. “They will just live in the places that work for them.” The bigger picture Despite recent rainfall, drought conditions are projected to persist for at least the next three months, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor. Topiwala said regenerative agriculture is one easy way to positively impact a stressed environment. “There’s things that we can do at home that will have amazing impacts on the microclimate of your local environment,” he said.

Despite recent rainfall, the U.S. Drought Monitor is projecting drought for the next three months as of July 21. Locals are working to rehydrate the land through practices such as regenerative agriculture. The background Regenerative agriculture focuses on restoring the environment by promoting biodiversity and rebuild- ing soil, said Kiran Topiwala, owner at Nurture Nature Regenerative Landscaping. Similar to xeriscaping—a landscaping approach focusing specically on water conservation through planting native, drought-tolerant species—regener- ative agriculture takes the practice a step further by “being proactive in the restoration of the environ- ment,” Topiwala said. How it works People can incorporate regenerative agriculture into their homes through “low tech” systems such as berms, or raised gardening mounds; and swales,

The setup

Regenerative agriculture can be done at home and helps rehydrate plants.

Berm: raised mound to improve drainage

SOURCE: NURTURE NATURE REGENERATIVE LANDSCAPING COMMUNITY IMPACT

Swale: collects runo to go back into the ground

Drought-tolerant plants

The following plants are perennial, drought- tolerant and deer-resistant. For sunlit areas For shaded areas

• Flame acanthus • Mistflower • Lantana • Skeleton-leaf goldeneye

• Turks cap • Chili pequin • Beautyberry

SOURCE: PERMACULTURALIST ANNIE SPADECOMMUNITY IMPACT

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SOUTHWEST AUSTIN  DRIPPING SPRINGS EDITION

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