Sign up for our newswire newsletter

 

With Its Convention Center Closed, Austin Gets Creative to Host Citywides

Austin skyline

With the Austin Convention Center closed from April 2025 to early 2029 for a $1.6-billion ground-up rebuild and expansion, the mega-event SXSW has adapted its format in order to stay in Austin for its 2026, 2027 and 2028 editions that won’t have the center as its hub. 

The reimagined format will be unveiled when the 2026 festival opens on March 12. SXSW will be a seven-day event, shorter than past editions, and utilize a "pop-up village" approach across various venues and neighborhoods in Austin.

For other large meetings and conventions, some of Austin’s hotels have gotten creative in order to accommodate them over the next three years. 

For instance, an initiative known as the Austin University Hotel Collection is anchored by the AT&T Hotel and Conference Center, featuring 297 guest rooms and 85,000 square feet of meeting space. A recent $30 million renovation added a ballroom and refreshed both meeting spaces and public spaces. It’s the largest of five hotels in and around the University of Texas campus that make up this collection, which offers a total of 900 guest rooms and 114,000 square feet of meeting space. 

The collection has created a website for business-event planners at https://www.cvent.com/microsites/austin-university-hotel-collection that “acts as a tool to navigate the ‘new Austin’ landscape, highlighting a high-density area of attractions and diverse hotel tiers,” according to a media release. The five hotels are located within walking distance of each other as well as Moody Center, a 15,000-seat sports and entertainment arena opened in April 2022 on the university campus; the Texas Capitol; multiple museums; and many restaurants and bars.

“As Austin adjusts to the SXSW format shift and the convention center closure, this collection of hotel partners has united to act as a ‘city within a city,’ offering a unique blend of boutique charm and expansive meeting footprints,” the release noted.

Another Option

In addition, three other hotels close to the convention center formed the Austin Red River Collection as an alternative for citywide events.

Set within five blocks of each other, the Fairmont Austin, Hilton Austin, and Hotel Van Zandt coordinate bookings so that citywide groups have access to sufficient meeting and event space, guest rooms, and food and beverage options. Through ARRC, planners have access to 2,168 hotel rooms and 245,000 square feet of meeting and event space, as well as multiple restaurants and banquet options, nightlife and live-music venues, and health and wellness facilities.

The Fairmont has 140,000 square feet of the collection’s total event space, including four ballrooms; the Hilton has 95,000 square feet, including two ballrooms; and the Hotel Van Zandt has 13,000 square feet. The distance between the Fairmont and the Hilton is two blocks; between the Hilton and the Van Zandt, three blocks; and between the Fairmont and the Van Zandt, five blocks.

The Austin Red River Collection “is a response to the challenges our city faces during the convention center’s redevelopment, and it’s a testament to our community-focused commitment to elevating the group-travel landscape,” said Chris Guse, general manager of Hotel Van Zandt.

Profile picture for user Rob Carey
About the author
Rob Carey | Content Manager, Features & News

Rob Carey serves as content manager, news and features for Meetings Today, where he leads coverage of the latest trends, happenings, data and insights related to corporate meetings and incentives as well as association conventions and exhibitions.

 

Carey has been covering the business-events industry since 1992, when he was hired as an intern at Successful Meetings magazine in New York while still a student at Columbia University. During his 15 years at SM’s parent company Nielsen, Carey moved steadily through the ranks to become editorial director for Successful Meetings, Meeting News and the Meeting World conference and exhibition. SM and MN won several FOLIO: Eddie Awards for editorial coverage during his tenure.  

 

Carey then spent 11 years as principal of Meetings & Hospitality Insight, covering not just the MICE market for various industry publications but also writing about business disciplines such as hotel management, golf-facility management, small-business operations, middle-market leadership and others. For several years he wrote the annual trends white paper for the International Association of Conference Centers.  

 

In 2018, Carey became a senior content producer for MeetingsNet, an Informa media brand, and a panel moderator for Informa’s Pharma Forum annual event. 

 

Come September 2025, he moved to Meetings Today.  

 

A native of New York  Carey now resides in the Phoenix/Scottsdale metro area with his wife Kelley and their dog Ziggy.