Archive for June, 2009

Church Street fire probe planned

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Firefighters declined to speculate Saturday on the cause or origin of a fire Friday evening which gutted a house under construction in the heart of the city’s historic residential district in the 1500 block of Church Street.

The two story structure was engulfed in flames by the time he arrived shortly after 8 p.m., said Bastrop Fire Chief Henry Perry. Firefighters were notified of the blaze at 8:01 p.m., he said.

An investigation into what might have sparked the blaze will begin Monday with the aid of officers from the state fire marshal’s office, said Perry in a Saturday interview. After the fire was doused late Friday, the remaining structure was “too fragile to go into and dig out” for clues to what caused the conflagration, Perry said.

The house was going up on a new lot immediately south of the historic Orgain House at 1508 Church St. An existing wood frame structure was moved onto the new lot, and a second story, new porches and other improvements were being added. The building was unoccupied when the fire broke out Friday.

House fire strikes historic Church Street on Friday

Friday, June 5th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Graduation ceremonies were underway Friday evening at Bastrop High School when the fire department responded to a conflagration in the heart of the city’s historic residential district shortly after 8 p.m.

Fire bloomed from a new home under construction on Church Street between the Orgain House at 1508 Church St., at the intersection of Church and Cedar Street, and the Allen-Bell House next door, owned by Henry N. Bell III.

James and Sue Gurka said they were driving in the area when they noticed what appeared to be flames inside the new house and called emergency services minutes after 8 p.m. Volunteers from the Bastrop fire department were on the scene within about 10 minutes, pumping water onto the structure both from fire hydrants on Church and Wilson Streets.

The cause of the fire and the extent of damage to the structure were not immediately known.

Onlookers said heat from the blaze kept them hundreds of feet from the fire in its early stages. A portable toilet on the site for construction workers appeared to be largely melted by the heat.

Commercial developments surge in Bastrop

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–Developers with an eye on Bastrop apparently see a different future than the one often suggested by newspaper headlines and other news reports focused in recent months on economic recession, tight credit, home foreclosures, job losses, falling tax revenues and related issues. In Bastrop, developers are building commercial projects at a brisk pace while others continue to plan ambitious housing projects which could transform the city and its environs almost beyond recognition by today’s residents.

True, housing construction has been at a virtual standstill in Bastrop for two years or so. But commercial construction is booming.

Three corners at the intersection of Texas 71 and Texas 95 (or Jackson Street) are already under development for commercial uses. Work has also begun for a new commercial center on Childers Street, just east of the Wal-Mart Supercenter. A new funeral home is under construction on Texas 71 just east of Jackson Street.

New banks and hotels continue to be attracted to the Bastrop market. Branch banks are either under construction or in the planning stage at the new Burleson Crossing shopping center, next door to the Jalisco Mexican restaurant on Texas 71 and on Loop 150 in front of the Chestnut Square entertainment center at Texas 95.

Hampton Suites, La Quinta and Quality Inn are among the hotel chain outlets either under construction or in the late planning stages for new Bastrop locations from Burleson Crossing to the Texas 71/Jackson Street (Texas 95) intersection. Hoteliers may be attracted in part by the prospect that Bastrop will begin construction of a new convention/civic center on Chestnut Street before year’s end.

Beyond those projects and plans lie the ambitions of residential developers, led by the dreamers behind the XS Ranch, Colorado Bend and Bastrop Village West projects. The XS Ranch project on almost 10,00 acres north of Bastrop could yield some 7,700 residential sites in the next two or three decades, according to a presentation to the Bastrop City Council last week. As currently planned, the major entrances to the project will be near Waugh Way off Texas 95 north of Bastrop and across a new Colorado River bridge just west of the city, according to officials.

Work on the long-planned Bastrop Village West at the intersection of Texas 71 and FM 20 could begin soon, according to city officials.That’s a project planned for some 700 acres just west of the current city limits. And last week the city council approved the final stage of a pact which allows Bastrop to provide water and sewer service to a 550-acre tract on the Colorado River between Tahitian Village and Texas 304. Called Colorado Bend, the project is designed as primarily a housing development with some areas set aside for parks and neighborhood commercial services.

Splash parks on agenda for recreation planners

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–The city’s parks board continues to develop plans for fencing a site near the Bastrop Police and Court Building for a “bark park” where dog owners can unleash their pets to roam and socialize in a controlled setting. The “bark park” site has been approved by the city council.

At the same time the parks board is studying ways to pay for as many as three “splash park” facilities for children in existing parks. Essentially the “splash park” idea involves a cement slab featuring small water spouts rising into the air, a place where children can play, get wet and cool off–especially in the warmest months of the year.

This week Bastrop Public Works Director Jim Rebecek said three splash sites are under consideration at existing parks–Fisherman’s Park, Kerr Community Park and the small playground area on Hill Street near the city’s Little League baseball fields and the public works offices.

Each “splash park” will likely cost about $80,000, but members of the parks board are looking for both commercial sponsors and grant opportunities to cover construction expenses, said Rebecek.

The parks board met at City Hall on June 4.