
Neuralink is teeing up an $8.2 million renovation at its Del Valle site east of Austin, a project that will turn roughly 37,600 square feet of shell space into office and small-scale manufacturing. State records list construction starting March 2 and wrapping up May 25, 2026, which puts most of the work into a tight spring window. The filing focuses on a third-floor tenant improvement inside the company's ATX1 building and comes as Neuralink continues to grow its local footprint. Neighbors and local planners may notice more activity at the 2200 Caldwell Lane property in the months ahead.
Local reporting first flagged the filing
MySanAntonio first spotted the state filing, which labels the effort "ATX1 - Third Floor Tenant Improvement" and describes work on 37,607 square feet of existing shell space for combined office and manufacturing use. That coverage also pulled together earlier filings at the same address that total about $15.7 million in recent campus work. The outlet framed this new remodel as the latest visible step in Neuralink's Central Texas buildout.
TDLR record shows cost and schedule
The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation project page for TABS2026011928 lists Neuralink Corporation as the owner, an estimated cost of $8,200,000, and a scope described as "tenant improvement of existing shell space for office and manufacturing use" at 2200 Caldwell Lane. The entry records a March 2, 2026 start date and a May 25, 2026 completion date and shows the status as "Project Registered." The filing names Kristin Lorentzen as the company contact and notes that the project is privately funded.
Part of a larger buildout east of Austin
Local reporting and state filings indicate this interior remodel follows a broader buildout on a 37-acre property in Del Valle, roughly 20 minutes from Tesla's Gigafactory. Earlier 2024 filings detailed a $14.7 million, three-story building for offices, a machine shop, and a cleanroom, along with a separate $1 million interior fit-out. MySanAntonio summarized those earlier projects and their anticipated completion dates. Taken together, the recent public records lay out nearly $16 million in documented investment at the site.
Why regulators and industry will pay attention
The timing matters beyond local construction schedules because Neuralink moved into human implantation in 2024, a milestone that has drawn national attention and scrutiny. The Washington Post covered the company's first human implantation, while Business Insider has reported on Neuralink's plans to scale production and automate procedures. Upgrades to local manufacturing and office space could fit neatly into that push, which is likely to draw interest from economic development officials and federal regulators alike.
What to watch next
For now, public project pages and local reporting offer the clearest view of the schedule and price tag, with construction listed to begin in early March and conclude before the summer. As that spring window approaches, observers can watch for building permits, contractor notices, and any public community disclosures tied to work at 2200 Caldwell Lane. Residents and local officials can turn to the state project entry and recent reporting for technical details and the project's listed points of contact.









