Greater West Houston Population and
Employment Growth Drives 2050 Plan
Greater West Houston in 2050 will have a total
population larger than Dallas and San Jose today--2.2 million people, a
120% increase from 2000.
Employment in the Region will reach
925,000 by 2050, equal to the number currently employed in Austin or San
Antonio. The represents a 117% increase from 2000.
Our future mirrors out past. Since
1970 when the area's population was below 200,000 and jobs numbered
below 20,000, the region has experienced nothing but growth. With
the influx of jobs and families, city boundaries have expanded.
The 1980s brought the the most significant growth for West Houston as
major employers migrated to suburban locations.
West Houston Plan 2050 forecasts a
continuation of this patter of suburban growth and job migration along
with the continued revitalization of Houston's inner city areas.
The Plan is being introduced at a critical
time. As the region's major proponent for quality growth, the West
Houston Association believes there are no indications that the forces
and economic trends that drive families and employers to seek improved
quality of living and working environments will change. In our
view, nothing will significantly alter current trends toward
geographically diverse growth.
To plan and manage this unprecedented
growth, West Houston Plan 2050, which will be released in April,
has several key goals:
-
To ensure the Greater West Houston
remains the premier place to live, work and play in the Houston
metropolitan area
-
To make West Houston even better by
setting new standards for quality growth
-
To anticipate and plan for critical
infrastructure needs
"By developing West Houston Plan 2050,
the West Houston Association continues to lead the region in
strategically thinking about our future growth and how to best
accommodate that growth, while at the same time ensuring the highest
quality of life for those who work and live here," stated Ted Nelson,
past-chairman of the West Houston Association. "Behind the numbers
of people and jobs are tens of millions of dollars for new and
rehabilitated infrastructure. Over the next 43 years we will in
essence build a new city with homes for over one million new residents
and office building for 450,000 new employees. This represents a
great opportunity to make sure we build the best," he concluded.
Growth in Greater West Houston will
Require Expanded Residential, Commercial Areas
The Region's anticipated growth by 2050
will require an estimated 258 additional square miles of land for new
single and multi-family housing units. New areas for commercial
office, retail and distribution facilities will be needed as well.
The West Houston Plan 2050 provides a
likely land use forecast based upon expected growth, known current
activity and probable location for new and expanded residential and
commercial development.
In our estimation residential development
will extend west and northwest along existing and new radial
transportation spines. Office, light industrial and retail
development will be concentrated at nodes of major roadways and exiting
activity centers will expand and be joined by strategic satellite
commercial concentrations.
Mid-Century to Bring Major Growth to
Greater West Houston
Forecasts
of population and employment growth complied by the West Houston
Association indicate significant growth for Greater West Houston through
2050. The result will be unprecedented opportunities for living,
working and recreation in the region.
"The West
Houston Association is launching a major new effort to ensure that
Greater West Houston experiences quality, sustainable growth to mid
century, says Mark Kilkenny, chairman of the West Houston
Association Board of Directors. "The West Houston Plan 2050 is the
product of months of analysis and discussion concerning the nature and
location of growth and the infrastructure needs to support and sustain
that growth," he concludes.
Greater West
Houston-Setting the Stage for Sustainable, Quality Growth
For West
Houston Plan 2050 the West Houston Association defines Greater West
Houston as an area of approximately 1000 square miles of urban and
suburban communities that includes portions of Harris County (50%), Fort
Bend County (25%) and Waller County (25%). Twenty percent of the
region falls inside the City of Houston's extraterritorial jurisdiction.
The region is comprised of 11 additional municipalities; 15 independent
school districts; 11 special purpose districts and over 200 utility
districts.
By
mid-century the region will have a population of 2.2 million and
employment of nearly one million. Three major activity employment
centers, totaling over 30 million square feet of office space highlight
a region that has enjoyed stellar employment growth since the 1970s.
"By any
measure, Greater West Houston is a massive, economically vibrant
community with significant growth in its future and the promise of
almost unlimited opportunity," says David Hightower, vice
chairman of the West Houston Association Board of Directors. "By
publishing West Houston 2050 we hope to influence policies, and actions,
so that the excellent quality of life the region provides today will
continue into the future." |