article by Kristin Phillips, Sustainability Communications and Events Coordinator, Assistant Manager

Waller Creek — the corridor that enlivens The University of Texas at Austin just east of the original Forty Acres — is gaining center stage. Until recently, the creek had been simultaneously central to campus and nearly invisible, as noted in the proposed Waller Creek Framework Plan due to be finalized this fall.

Screen Shot 2018 06 13 at 11.11.38 AM 
 photo by Kristin Phillips

Part of the lack of focus on Waller Creek is rooted in history. Many say that the university turned its back on the creek almost 50 years ago after students protested the removal of trees to reroute San Jacinto Boulevard. Another part of this legacy is constructed, like the collection of buildings that make up the Cockrell School of Engineering.

“Our buildings built in the 1970s literally wall off the creek,” said Sharon Wood, dean of the Cockrell School. “But there is change. Our new Engineering Education and Research building embraces the creek with a wall of windows, a door to bank-side seating, and a bridge to San Jacinto.”

Waller Creek draws from a narrow but completely urban watershed of 3,662 acres. The stream flows through Austin, starting near the intersection of Lamar and Airport boulevards. It flows through and under neighborhoods and past the Intramural Fields. It bisects campus, goes through downtown and empties into Lady Bird Lake. The city and university are looking into ways to integrate Waller Creek back into community life.

“Students quickly cultivate a love of the creek once they realize it is there,” said Tim Riedel, a clinical assistant professor who directs the DIY Diagnostics stream of the Freshman Research Initiative. “It is kind of a natural refuge from the urban UT campus.”

[[Read More About Waller Creek: A Mile-Long Classroom]]

Currently, the creek is undergoing a renaissance of sorts. Although it has always been used by faculty members for hands-on learning and experience, interest in the creek as an outdoor classroom and living laboratory is becoming more formalized.

“As Texas cities grow, natural watersheds will become urbanized,” said Jay Banner, a professor in the Jackson School of Geosciences and leader of the new urban watershed project. “We can learn lessons from Waller Creek and improve our understanding of the complex interactions between hydrologic systems, ecosystems and human infrastructure systems.” Banner plans to conduct research in the creek as part of the university’s Bridging Barriers initiative on Planet Texas 2050.

On the UT campus, with safety paramount, dense brush and invasive species have been removed to increase visibility and sight lines, and Landscape Services is planting native plants along the creek’s path. The newest reinvention of the creek’s path through the city is the award-winning landscape design along several blocks of the Dell Medical School.

“This is the moment for defining our vision of the creek and thinking as a community about what Waller Creek means to us and what to do in the future,” said Stuart Reichler, a senior lecturer in the College of Natural Sciences. “Waller Creek is more central to the university than most people realize. There is so much happening in the creek all of the time.”