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38 summer camp options to check out in the Northwest Austin area

With the weather already warming up, summer break seems just around the corner. Parents seeking camps for their children have several options in the Northwest Austin area.

Club Pup Kids and Dogs
Type: day
Ages: 9-16
Dates: June 1-July 31
Cost: $520 weekly

  • 13291 Pond Springs Road, Austin

DC Riding by Camp Doublecreek
Type: day, equine
Ages: 7-14
Dates: weekly June 1-July 31
Cost: $550 weekly
  • 7815 Spicewood Spring Road, Austin

Dive World Austin Seal Team
Type: day, scuba
Ages: 8-11
Dates: five sessions to choose from June-August
Cost: $560 (four-day camps for ages 8-11); $695 (five-day camps for ages 8-11)
  • 12129 N. RM 620, Ste. 430, Austin

Summer Wonders
Type: arts, education
Grades: 1-5
Dates: June 8-July 24
Cost: $430 weekly
  • 5206 Balcones Drive, Austin

Young Rembrandts Drawing Workshops
Type: arts
Ages: 6-12 for most camps
Dates: June 1-Aug. 7
Cost: $190-$315 weekly
  • Various locations in Austin

 
Latest City News
Austin collected nearly 10K tons of material through new on-demand pickup service in 2025

The first year of Austin Resource Recovery's new on-demand pickup service saw "overwhelming" use by residents, who placed tens of thousands of appointments and had nearly 10,000 tons of bulk trash, brush and hazardous waste collected, according to the city.

The details: ARR launched the new on-demand service in January 2025 after years of limited pilot programs for on-demand pickup services. The change was billed as a strategy to divert bulk items from landfills, limit wildfire risks, and offer flexibility to residential customers.

ARR reported the pickup service saw gradually increasing usage and high resident approval throughout last year as public awareness grew. The city will continue to monitor the service and adjust operations as needed going forward to divert even more materials, and boost public satisfaction.

 
Stay In The Know
Climate resilience accelerator identifies 'triple threat' in Central Texas

The focus of a national initiative to build climate resilience at the local level in Central Texas will focus on three specific climate hazards, the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions announced in February.

What you need to know: The Feb. 18 announcement states that the triple threat of extreme heat, wildfires and flooding in the area will be the focus of the Climate Resilient Communities Accelerator hub in the area. This comes after months of meetings with area leaders, assessment of area disasters and other information gathering.

What they're saying: This accelerator program will be the first through the CCES to include flooding, according the news release.  

"Although the harmful impacts of any of these hazards alone can be very significant, the compounding impacts when they overlap can be devastating," the release states. "Extreme heat can amplify wildfire risk, and heavy rainfall immediately following wildfire can increase erosion and flooding due to soil and vegetation changes."

 
Transportation Tuesday
Light rail, corridor redesigns: 6 Austin metro transportation updates

Check out six upcoming or ongoing transportation projects around the Austin metro.

Upcoming projects
Austin Light Rail
Project: The 10-mile rail system will initially feature 15 stations along the alignment and all-electric trains running every five to 10 minutes throughout most of the day.
Update: Austin Transit Partnership approved a $60 million design-build contract for the first phase of the project Feb. 18.

  • Timeline: construction expected to begin in 2027
  • Cost: $7.1 billion
  • Funding source: federal grants and infrastructure loans, Project Connect revenues, city taxes

Ongoing projects
Hero Way, RM 2243 expansion
Project:
The project will transform Hero Way in Leander and RM 2243 in Georgetown into a divided, controlled-access highway from 183A Toll to Southwest Bypass. The existing rural two-lane roadway will be expanded into two main lanes running in each direction alongside two three-lane frontage roads.
Update: Phase 1A broke ground Jan. 30, which will connect 183A in Leander to Garey Park in Georgetown.
  • Timeline: 2026-28 (Phase 1A)
  • Cost: $30 million (Phase 1A)
  • Funding sources: federal funding, city of Leander (Phase 1A)

 

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General Manager

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