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  • The exterior of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 163x.jpg
  • Construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 135x.jpg
  • Construction of a 66-story office called 6th and Guadalupe building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 118x.jpg
  • Construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 84x.jpg
  • Construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 65x.jpg
  • Construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 132x.jpg
  • Construction of a 66-story office called 6th and Guadalupe building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 120x.jpg
  • Construction supervisor at the construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 106.jpg
  • Construction of a 66-story office called 6th and Guadalupe building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 109x.jpg
  • Construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 69x.jpg
  • Construction of a nine-story office building a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 62x.jpg
  • Scene of a 28-story hotel under construction a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 49x.jpg
  • Scene of a 28-story hotel under construction a short distance from the Texas Capitol as a building boom continues in the Texas capital. There are at least two dozen buildings under construction in Austin with several more on the drawing board.
    TBA Building 44x.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_435X.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_418X.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_401X.jpg
  • Workers continue to sift through the rubble of the Murrah Federeal Building in downtown Oklahoma City for days after the bombing on April 19, 1995 that claimed 168 lives, including several children. Army veteran Timothy McVeigh was convicted in the murders.
    EDMK023161x.JPG
  • Workers continue to sift through the rubble of the Murrah Federeal Building in downtown Oklahoma City for days after the bombing on April 19, 1995 that claimed 168 lives, including several children. Army veteran Timothy McVeigh was convicted in the murders.
    EDMK023160x.JPG
  • A fireman pets his rescue animal in downtown Oklahoma City as workers continue to sift through the rubble of the Murrah Federeal Building for days after the bombing on April 19, 1995 that claimed 168 lives, including several children. Army veteran Timothy McVeigh was convicted in the murders.
    EDAE0198971x.JPG
  • A fireman pets his rescue animal in downtown Oklahoma City as workers continue to sift through the rubble of the Murrah Federeal Building for days after the bombing on April 19, 1995 that claimed 168 lives, including several children. Army veteran Timothy McVeigh was convicted in the murders.
    DDMC9994x.JPG
  • Workers continue to sift through the rubble of the Murrah Federeal Building in downtown Oklahoma City for days after the bombing on April 19, 1995 that claimed 168 lives, including several children. Army veteran Timothy McVeigh was convicted in the murders.
    CDMM0018x.JPG
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_433X.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_422X.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_428X.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_396X.jpg
  • The Texas State Capitol building is seen in Austin looking northeast from the corner at 12th and Colorado St. on a warm August summer evening. The building, built in 1885 in the Italian Renaissance Revival style, was designed by architect Elijah Myers and is 302.64 feet tall.
    ATCapitolView_408X.jpg
  • Workers continue to sift through the rubble of the Murrah Federeal Building in downtown Oklahoma City for days after the bombing on April 19, 1995 that claimed 168 lives, including several children. Army veteran Timothy McVeigh was convicted in the murders.
    CDMM0003x.JPG
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the South b Southwest Building during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM10xmit.JPG
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the South b Southwest Building during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM09xmit.JPG
  • Austin, TX March 2005: Saturday open house at the University of Texas at Austin. Students using building blocks to engineer a high-rise in the engineering department <br />
©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0164738.jpg
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2057x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2052x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2105x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2060x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2058x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2056x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2053x.JPG
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 :  Family spokesman Rayford Walker speaks to reporters in the Scofield Farms neighborhood in north Austin where Joe Stack allegedly set fire to his home before piloting a small plane into an IRS building on Thursday.  Walker read a statement from Stack's wife Cheryl who apologized for her husband's action and pleaded for privacy.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387792.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 :  Family spokesman Rayford Walker speaks to reporters in the Scofield Farms neighborhood in north Austin where Joe Stack allegedly set fire to his home before piloting a small plane into an IRS building on Thursday.  Walker read a statement from Stack's wife Cheryl who apologized for her husband's action and pleaded for privacy.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387791.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 : An Austin police officer tapes off the street in front of the home of Joe Stack who is accused of setting fire to his house before he crashed a plane into the IRS building in Austin yesterday. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387790.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 :  An Austin fire department investigator wheels equipment into the burned home of Joe Stack while looking for clues to the fire that leveled his home before he crashed a plane into the IRS building in Austin yesterday.
    EDAE0387789.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 : Federal investigators from the FBI and National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and other workers remove the fuselage of a Piper single-engine plane that crashed into the IRS offices in Austin on Thursday.   Andrew Joseph Stack III allegedly burned down his house nearby before allegedly making a suicide crash into the building. © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387782.jpg
  • Austin, TX March 2005: Saturday open house at the University of Texas at Austins. <br />
Students using building blocks to engineer a high-rise in the engineering department <br />
©Bob Daemmrich/
    EDAE0164739.jpg
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2104x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2103x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2059x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2055x.JPG
  • Visitors wander through the memorial site in downtown Oklahoma City on July, 2001 in memory of the 168 people killed in the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building on April 19, 1995.
    CDMK2054x.JPG
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 :  Family spokesman Rayford Walker speaks to reporters in the Scofield Farms neighborhood in north Austin where Joe Stack allegedly set fire to his home before piloting a small plane into an IRS building on Thursday.  Walker read a statement from Stack's wife Cheryl who apologized for her husband's action and pleaded for privacy.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387793.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 : ATF investigators photograph the remains of the home of Joe Stack from a crane bucket while looking for clues to the fire that leveled his home before he crashed a plane into the IRS building in Austin yesterday.
    EDAE0387788.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - February 20 , 2010 :  An Austin fire investigator walks a bomb-sniffing dog to the home of Joe Stack while looking for clues to the fire that leveled Stack's home before he crashed a plane into the IRS building in Austin yesterday.  © Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387787.jpg
  • Austin, TX:  February 20, 2010. Federal investigators from the FBI and National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) and other workers remove the fuselage of a Piper single-engine plane that crashed into the IRS offices in Austin on Thursday.   Andrew Joseph Stack III allegedly burned down his house nearby before allegedly making a suicide crash into the building. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0387781.jpg
  • Austin, Texas: Texas State Capitol Building at Sunset.       ©Bob Daemmrich / The Image Works
    CDAE4325.jpg
  • The Texas Capitol is seen at sunset in the evening of the opening of 87th Legislative session on January 12, 2021.  The 308-foot tall building was designed by Elijah Myers in 1881 and built from 1882-1887 by civil engineer Reuben Walker.
    Capitol1890.jpg
  • The Texas Capitol is seen at sunset in the evening of the opening of 87th Legislative session on January 12, 2021.  The 308-foot tall building was designed by Elijah Myers in 1881 and built from 1882-1887 by civil engineer Reuben Walker.
    Capitol1888.jpg
  • The Texas Capitol is seen at sunset in the evening of the opening of 87th Legislative session on January 12, 2021.  The 308-foot tall building was designed by Elijah Myers in 1881 and built from 1882-1887 by civil engineer Reuben Walker.
    Capitol1883.jpg
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the Texas Capitol and grounds during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgrate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM12xmit.JPG
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the Texas Capitol and grounds during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgrate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM11xmit.JPG
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the Texas Capitol and grounds during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgrate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM06xmit.JPG
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the Texas Capitol and grounds during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgrate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM07xmit.JPG
  • ©1994 William B. Travis State Office building 17th and Congress near the Texas Capitol.
    IWI3B&W708.jpg
  • The Texas Capitol is seen at sunset in the evening of the opening of 87th Legislative session on January 12, 2021.  The 308-foot tall building was designed by Elijah Myers in 1881 and built from 1882-1887 by civil engineer Reuben Walker.
    Capitol1880.jpg
  • The Texas Capitol is seen at sunset in the evening of the opening of 87th Legislative session on January 12, 2021.  The 308-foot tall building was designed by Elijah Myers in 1881 and built from 1882-1887 by civil engineer Reuben Walker.
    Capitol1853.jpg
  • The Texas Capitol is seen at sunset in the evening of the opening of 87th Legislative session on January 12, 2021.  The 308-foot tall building was designed by Elijah Myers in 1881 and built from 1882-1887 by civil engineer Reuben Walker.
    Capitol1864.jpg
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the Texas Capitol and grounds during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgrate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM13xmit.JPG
  • August 15, 2020 Austin, Texas:  Views of the Texas Capitol and grounds during an early morning sunrise, looking east from the Westgrate Building. <br />
© Bob Daemmrich
    CapitolAM08xmit.JPG
  • Heavily-armed troopers from the Texas Dept. of Public Safety make a routine patrol of the grounds of the Governor's Mansion in Austin. Security around the mansion was beefed up considerably after an arson fire on June 8, 2008 nearly destroyed the building.
    Gov'sMansion600_334X.jpg
  • Brownsville, Texas USA:  Building collapse due to heavy rains in Brownsville, Texas on the Mexican border killed 14 people. ©1988 Bob Daemmrich
    Daemmrich-474.JPG
  • Austin scenes from Sunday, October 17, 2021 for Le Point of Paris, France, reporter is Claire Meynial email address cmeynial@lepoint.fr <br />
<br />
View of the Austin skyline looking northwest from the 11th floor of an apartment building at the foot of the Rainey Street entertainment district.
    RaineyStSkyline19.JPG
  • Tyler County Courthouse building in East Texas. July 24, 2011  ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0417444.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - January 6th, 2011: Interior of the Texas Capitol building ©Marjorie Kamys Cotera / Daemmrich Photos
    EDAE0406805.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387068.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387066.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387064.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387065.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387063.jpg
  • Austin , Texas -  FBI investigating the scene  of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387062.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387061.jpg
  • Austin , Texas - The rubble and smoke of the damaged IRS office building .  Joseph Stack III , a software engineer, crashed his single-engine private plane into IRS offices in Austin, Texas, killing himself and at least one worker, and apparently left behind an irate anti-government manifesto detailing his financial difficulties and tax problems.<br />
© Marjorie Kamys Cotera/Daemmrich Photos / The Image works
    EDAE0387057.jpg
  • Dalls, Texas: Dallas City Hall is a modern building designed by I. M. Pei. ©Bob Daemmrich
    EDAE0198991.jpg
  • Oklahoma City, Oklahoma:  Federal Building bombing aftermath. *  1995 ©Bob Daemmrich / The Image Works
    CDMM0003.jpg
  • Restoration of Texas Capital Building Exterior  ©Bob Daemmrich/THE IMAGE WORKS
    CDMC1782.jpg
  • Austin TX January 20, 2008: Interior of the Texas Capitol, looking up from the center of the rotunda.  The Texas Capitol is 311 feet tall, six inches higher than the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.  ©Bob Daemmrich /
    EDAE0302063.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0794AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0790AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0753AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0507AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0468AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0419AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0365AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0271AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0231AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0210AL.jpg
  • Austin, TX USA July 14, 2020: Construction workers and concrete specialists continue progress on the ground floors of a skyscraper in the Rainey Street district during an eight-hour shift in the 105-degree Texas heat.  Crews are on the second story of a planned 53-story building as they take precautions against the coronavirus pandemic.
    Constr0131AL.jpg
  • A dump container filled with asbestos-laden demolition debris sits in the alley behind a state office building in downtown Austin, Texas in November, 2020.  Renovation and construction projects continue unabated in Austin during the pandemic where other endeavors have closed shop. Asbestos was used in insulation, flooring and flame retardant materials in the 50's and '60's.
    Asbestos593X.JPG
  • A dump container filled with asbestos-laden demolition debris sits in the alley behind a state office building in downtown Austin, Texas in November, 2020.  Renovation and construction projects continue unabated in Austin during the pandemic where other endeavors have closed shop. Asbestos was used in insulation, flooring and flame retardant materials in the 50's and '60's.
    Asbestos574X.JPG
  • A dump container filled with asbestos-laden demolition debris sits in the alley behind a state office building in downtown Austin, Texas in November, 2020.  Renovation and construction projects continue unabated in Austin during the pandemic where other endeavors have closed shop. Asbestos was used in insulation, flooring and flame retardant materials in the 50's and '60's.
    Asbestos564X.JPG
  • A dump container filled with asbestos-laden demolition debris sits in the alley behind a state office building in downtown Austin, Texas in November, 2020.  Renovation and construction projects continue unabated in Austin during the pandemic where other endeavors have closed shop. Asbestos was used in insulation, flooring and flame retardant materials in the 50's and '60's.
    Asbestos543X.JPG
  • A dump container filled with asbestos-laden demolition debris sits in the alley behind a state office building in downtown Austin, Texas in November, 2020.  Renovation and construction projects continue unabated in Austin during the pandemic where other endeavors have closed shop. Asbestos was used in insulation, flooring and flame retardant materials in the 50's and '60's.
    Asbestos546X.JPG
  • Heavily-armed troopers from the Texas Dept. of Public Safety make a routine patrol of the grounds of the Governor's Mansion in Austin. Security around the mansion was beefed up considerably after an arson fire on June 8, 2008 nearly destroyed the building.
    Gov'sMansion600_346X_1.jpg
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