Manor Mayor Dr. Chris Harvey on the 225% Boom Reshaping Austin's Eastern Edge

June 4th, 2026 4:00 PM
By: Newsworthy Staff

Manor, Texas, a city on Austin's eastern edge that grew 225% between 2013 and 2023, is racing to build its first-ever library, recreation center, and hospital to accommodate an expected 22,000 new residents by 2030, as semiconductor and logistics industries transform the region.

Manor Mayor Dr. Chris Harvey on the 225% Boom Reshaping Austin's Eastern Edge

In the latest episode of The Building Texas Show, hosted by Justin McKenzie, Manor Mayor Dr. Chris Harvey detailed the infrastructure sprint underway in a city that grew 225% between 2013 and 2023. The 153-year-old municipality on Austin's eastern edge is preparing for an additional 22,000 residents expected by 2030, with 14,000 housing units already in the planning pipeline. The conversation highlighted how semiconductor manufacturing, logistics hubs, and Samsung-related suppliers are reshaping what Harvey calls the region's "Golden Triangle of Opportunity."

Across roughly thirty minutes, McKenzie and Harvey walked through the policy choices behind Manor's transformation from a bedroom community to a full-service city. Key topics included building Manor's first-ever city-owned library and recreation center, funded through a recent bond election; a feasibility study supporting a proposed 50-bed hospital, anchored by a relationship with St. David's, which already operates a full-service emergency center downtown; the push to diversify the tax base beyond residential property and recoup sales tax revenue committed away in a 1985 vote; and Manor's first-ever comprehensive plan, a 600-page document mapping the next 30 years of growth.

Harvey was candid about why the city is only now standing up basic civic infrastructure. "Our city is 153 years old and this is the first time we're building these facilities. And so that's phase one," he told McKenzie. He also pushed back on assumptions about local tax policy, explaining that lowering the rate is a long game tied to economic development, not rhetoric. "The tax rate is not the tax rate because we want it to be a high tax rate. Being able to get to a lower tax rate is city leadership's dream," Harvey said, describing efforts to recover sales tax dollars and reinvest them into roads, parks, and drainage.

The episode also explored how Manor is knitting together workforce development with Manor ISD, which was for years the city's largest employer before logistics and semiconductor suppliers arrived. Harvey described regular meetings between the city manager and the superintendent to share demographic data, coordinate employer recruitment, and connect new companies to college, career, and military pathways for students. McKenzie drew a broader Texas parallel, noting that Garland is currently the largest city in the country without a hospital and that Bastrop faces similar healthcare gaps, framing Manor's 50-bed hospital ambitions as part of a statewide reckoning with suburban growth, public safety, and public health.

About The Building Texas Show: The show, hosted by Justin McKenzie, travels the state to spotlight the mayors, builders, employers, and civic leaders shaping Texas communities. Each episode digs into growth, policy, housing, and economic development with the people making the decisions on the ground. The show is sponsored by Chisos Boots. This episode with Manor Mayor Dr. Chris Harvey is available now wherever podcasts are heard, and on YouTube.

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