15
5
0
Female
%
Under 5 Years
5 to 9 Years
10 to 14 Years
15 to 17 Years
18 to 24 Years
25 to 34 Years
35 to 44 Years
45 to 54 Years
55 to 64 Years
65 to 74 Years
75 to 84 Years
85 Years and over
Age
0
Male
Age Pyramid
Population increases by 1000% in past decade
5
10
Waste Water
2030
1.5 MGD
2.275 MGD
Current
5.5 MGD (2027)
5.675 MGD (2024)
Projected
Capacity for Growth
2020
2040
2050
0
0.175 0 .175 0 0.35 .35
0.7
79
Miles 1.05
°
SH130
ucation Center d E er h g Hi
Waste
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
2060
2070
15
Center amily F CA M Y
SH130
685
×
°
0
0.35 0 .3 5
0.7
1,733 Acres
Develo pe
Park
Utilities
Undeveloped / Vacant
Multi-Family
Industrial
Education
Commercial
Agricultural
Single Family
Hutto city limits
Mi Miles 1.05
Farm 60% Land
3,100 Acres
Unde vel o
Single 61% Family
Ranch Land House + Limited Acres
79
Agricultural and Family Friendly
1600
1600
!! ! !! ! !! ! !! ! !!
Hutto Demonstration Area
Hutto ETJ
Old Town
5 Hutto Schools × Community Resource Center
k EWCHEC
î Church
Library
d
100,000
120,000
140,000
Population of the Year
Population Projection for Hutto, 2020-2070
10
2010
Stock market crash and Hutto businesses close
Hippo comes to Hutto
1915
1929
City of Hutto incorporated on July 17th
Population growth due to cotton industry and an influx of Swedish and German immigrants
Hutto Station built
James ames Hutto sells fifty acres to the nternationall & Great Northern Rail lroa International Railroad
Tonkawa Native Americans inhabited Hutto vicinity when the first non-native settler arrives, a slave named Adam Orgain
1911
1890
1877
1876
1854
h School g i oH t t Hu
!! ! !! ! !
Hutto Williamson County, TX
Hutto n w To d Ol
Park z t i Fr
0
2
°
0
Suburban flood zone
Rowlinson Lule-Hurtado Strickler Chou Garcia Richter Rowlinson | Lule-Hurtado | Strickler | Chou | Garcia | Richter
Highway 79
Fertile soils allow for flexibility when preserving agricultural land. Homes are isolated from schools and Old Town.
Diversity and density of housing stock can attract new residents.
Abandoned lot
Smart Growth can protect Brushy Creek from agricultural runoff.
°
“Likely to change” parcels intersecting wetlands or floodplains
FEMA 100 yr floodplain
Closed landfill
Historical Wildfire Ignitions
98% of employed residents commute outside Hutto for work.
1.5
Miles 4.5
Hutto city limits
!
ETJ
!
Vacancy opens opportunities for infill, protecting agriculture from sprawl.
1
3
! ! ! ! ! ! !
!
Buffer
!
!
Active landfill or recycling center
!
Concentrate growth outside hazardous and sensitive zones.
0
1.5
! ! ! !
!
!
Wetlands
!
!
Major highways form barriers that divide the city.
1.5
0.75
High/Very High
! !
!
!
!
Hutto Recycling Center
Churches, Schools, and the YMCA give the city a sense of community.
1
Regional Road 2
Miles
Regional Road
Hutto City Limit
°
Hutto City Limit
Undeveloped Land
Miles
Carts
High
Mod./High
!
Moderate
Carts
Wildfire Ignition Density
!
Proposed Trail
!
!
!
Williamson County Landfill
Environmental Constraints
Existing Trail
Trail / Bike
Sidewalk
No Sidewalk
Sidewalks
!
Barriers to Mobility
Carts Stop
Vacant Land
Community & Opportunity
! ! ! !
stern Williamson a E Co CE un t CH
op o C to t u H
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
EW
HUTTO TX State of the Community
! !
! ! ! !
! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !!
y
! !! ! !! !
! !
d e p