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Build Order

Build Order

By: Lauren and Jen
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Summary

Build Order is a podcast and essay series about why certain things grow in certain cities. Every city carries the invisible architecture of decisions that were once made. Early choices, local constraints, historical momentum, and just a dash of chaos quietly, and sometimes loudly, determine what industries take root, which ideas scale, and which futures become possible. Starting in Austin. Expanding outward. Every system has a build order. Cities are no exception. We’re excited to begin. Lauren & Jen buildorder.substack.comLauren and Jen Social Sciences Travel Writing & Commentary
Episodes
  • Austin 004: The Secret Theater on Lake Austin
    May 3 2026

    A private astronaut built a Shakespeare theater near Lake Austin. Now that strange little piece of land raises a bigger question: what does Austin preserve, and what does it let slip away?


    The hidden, Elizabethan-style theater that many Austinites have never heard of was built by Richard Garriott — creator of Ultima, private astronaut, medieval enthusiast, and one of the more Austin characters Austin has ever had.


    In episode 004 of Build Order's series on Austin, Lauren and Jen talk about founder-led culture, Alamo Drafthouse, Austin’s live music identity, and why some cultural institutions only become precious after they are threatened or gone. They also compare Austin to New York and San Francisco, asking whether density, transit, patronage, zoning, or individual eccentrics matter most in keeping a city culturally alive.


    The uncomfortable answer: there may be no silver bullet. Austin can protect land. Culture is harder. It has to be made possible again and again.


    Chapter descriptions:

    00:00:10 – What Austin preserves and what it lets slip away

    00:01:11 – The hidden Shakespeare theatre near Lake Austin

    00:02:26 – Richard Garriott and Austin’s founder tradition

    00:06:20 – Alamo Drafthouse and the limits of exporting culture

    00:17:06 – Whether founders owe their cities anything

    00:25:03 – How live music became Austin’s official identity

    00:31:10 – Whether Austin’s cultural venues are forever lost or regenerated

    00:35:18 – Do the arts need cheap rent to survive?

    00:41:25 – How New York and Los Angeles’ cultural engines work

    00:48:03 – What cities can and can’t do to preserve culture


    … and if you want to see the only science fiction film actually filmed in space, we highly recommend you watch all 7 minutes of Apogee of Fear here.


    For more Build Order content, go to buildorder.substack.com.

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    58 mins
  • Austin 003: Did Austin Need Nate Paul to Become a Boomtown? Or Is It Better Off Without Him?
    Apr 20 2026

    The biggest Austin real estate story of the last decade wasn’t Tesla, Oracle, or a sky full of cranes. It was a guy who barely built anything — and then lost nearly all of it.


    For a few years, Nate Paul, founder of World Class Capital, seemed to own half the city. Not in the traditional developer sense. Not by breaking ground or building tower after tower. But in a more disorienting way: he was young, aggressively buying up prime land, and moving faster than anyone else. The kind of pace that made people in the industry stop and ask: how is he doing this? Depending on who you ask, the reaction was somewhere between admiration and suspicion.


    And if you were in Austin, you remember the banners. Big. Black. Everywhere.
    Another World Class Project.
    A city-wide branding campaign for buildings that didn’t yet exist.


    What he ended up doing — whether intentionally or not — was something more unusual than typical development. He accumulated the right to build across some of the most important parcels in Austin, often without actually building on them. In practice, that meant influencing the timing of when large parts of the city could evolve.


    There’s another layer to the story that doesn’t get talked about much. One longtime student housing operator told us many local pensions avoided investing in their own backyard altogether. Not because the returns weren’t there, but because of reputation risk. If something went wrong at a property down the street, it wasn’t just a bad investment. It was a local problem.


    So while most Austin capital hesitated, Nate Paul kept moving.


    Then, just as quickly: the FBI raid. The lawsuits. The unwind. A portfolio once valued in the billions reduced to a handful of assets, a few court battles, and a LinkedIn feed that reads like a man gearing up for a comeback. Because of course it does. This is America. We love two stories above all others: meteoric rise and improbable return.


    In this episode, we try to answer the harder question:

    Does a city need someone like Nate Paul to grow — or is it better off without him?


    You can watch this episode on all your favorite platforms: Substack, YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Pocket Casts, iHeartRadio, and Overcast.


    Chapter descriptions:

    00:00:10 – The Real Austin Story Isn’t Tesla

    00:01:32 – Nate Paul’s Rise: From College Kid to Real Estate Power Player

    00:04:05 – “Another One”: Hype, Branding, and Big Returns

    00:06:24 – The Capital Behind the Curtain

    00:10:46 – The Red Flags Everyone Ignored

    00:14:13 – The FBI Raid That Shocked Austin

    00:18:56 – Politics, Power, and the Indictment

    00:26:22 – Did Nate Paul Stall Austin—or Supercharge It?

    00:33:00 – The Debate: Why Cities Might Need a “Nate Paul”

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • Austin 002: Can a City Outgrow Its Water Supply?
    Apr 6 2026

    “Wow, you’ve lived here so long! I bet you’ve seen Austin change a lot.”

    We sure have, and it’s changed in many ways that you wouldn’t expect. Sure, more and more people move in, our city bird — the “crane” — frequents all parts of the city, neighborhoods reshape themselves faster than the maps can keep up. If you zoom out, it all looks like momentum. The kind that suggests there isn’t really a ceiling, just a next phase.

    And then you start to notice smaller things. Creeks that don’t flow the way they used to. Water restrictions that show up more often and stick around longer. Infrastructure conversations that sound less like planning and more like a serious constraint. None of it feels like a crisis on its own. But taken together, it points to a quieter question underpinning any city’s growth story — one that doesn’t get asked as often because it feels too basic to be the issue: what happens when a city starts growing faster than the system that keeps it running?


    0:00 Intro — Austin’s “liquidity problem” isn’t what you think

    0:43 Where water actually comes from (and where it goes)

    3:02 Austin’s water conflicts: greenbelt, growth, and system stress

    6:03 The greenbelt is drying up — and why that matters

    7:28 Too much water ≠ usable water (floods, turbidity, limits)

    8:27 Droughts, wells running dry, and trucking in water

    12:44 The Kyle Bass water fight — who owns water in Texas?

    20:49 Boil water notices and system failures in Austin

    23:24 Who controls Austin’s water (and how the system

    works)

    28:01 The math: how much water Austin actually has

    36:27 The real story: conservation is holding everything together

    40:34 Should Austin slow its growth?

    42:54 Big solutions: desalination, reuse, and global examples

    57:41 The hidden impact on real estate development

    1:01:08 What other cities are doing better (or differently)

    1:14:07 Final question: can Austin keep growing without running dry?

    Correction: We described Singapore’s NEWater as direct potable reuse. Though it is designed to this specification, we want to be clear that they are currently blending with local reservoirs. Further, we want to give a shoutout to El Paso’s ⁠Pure Water Center⁠! It will soon supply nearly 10% of the city’s municipal needs. Secondly, Land of Lakes is neither Michigan nor Wisconsin, but Minnesota.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
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