
Liberty Hill is clearing the way for a major new batch of apartments right at its border with Georgetown. City Council has approved a site plan for a 320-unit complex at 250 Gracie Lane, sitting just off State Highway 29 and the 183A toll road beside the Costco. The project is proposed on about 12.5 acres within a larger commercial and housing area, with plans calling for on-site amenities such as a pool, fitness center, and clubhouse if the developer ultimately moves ahead.
Signed off at the Feb. 25 council meeting, the site plan allows the project to move into the permitting phase, according to Community Impact. That reporting notes the parcel sits inside an approximately 82-acre planned unit development tied to the 183 BLW retail area.
What's planned
Site-plan drawings filed with state regulators identify Endeavor Real Estate Group as the applicant and lay out the 320 apartments, internal access roads, and surface parking, according to site-plan documents filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality. The materials also detail the amenity package and show how the project’s roughly 12.5-acre footprint fits inside the larger planned unit development.
Location and utilities
The property, addressed as 250 Gracie Lane, sits on Liberty Hill’s main commercial corridor near the Hwy. 29/183A interchange and Costco, squarely in the city’s growing retail cluster. Regional utilities background from the City of Georgetown outlines how the area's water is supplied and moved through a network of agreements. This project’s utility setup is expected to plug into those existing regional hookups as the city and developer coordinate service.
What’s next
Construction cannot start until the developer clears the city’s permit reviews and secures building permits. The City of Liberty Hill maintains a site-development permit checklist and submittal requirements that spell out the infrastructure, drainage, and utility information reviewers will require during the building-permit process.
Why it matters
The approval adds another marker to the rapid residential and retail growth along the SH-29 corridor, where both single-family neighborhoods and build-to-rent projects are multiplying. Regional planning and water agreements are already part of the equation, as officials from Round Rock, Georgetown, and Liberty Hill work to move treated water around to meet rising demand. Developers are bringing hundreds of new homes to the area, and each new project like this one turns up the pressure on local utilities and roads.









