
Texas Materials is gearing up for a major home‑turf upgrade in Cedar Park, with plans to grow its headquarters and roughly double its local workforce. The Austin-area construction‑materials firm says its current office is so tight on space that hiring has effectively stalled at about 80 employees, and leaders are mapping out a phased expansion that stretches toward 2028.
What’s Changing At The Cedar Park Office
Texas Materials has been working out of a roughly 30,000‑square‑foot office in Cedar Park for about a decade and is now “maxed out” at around 80 employees, according to the Austin Business Journal. The outlet reports that the company plans to take over additional office space at its Cedar Park site, with 2028 flagged as a key milestone in that buildout.
Company Footprint And Hiring Goals
The firm lists its main office at 1320 Arrow Point Drive, Suite 600, Cedar Park, on its corporate website and notes that it operates plants and offices across Central Texas, according to Texas Materials. The company’s LinkedIn profile pegs its size in the 51–200 employee range and highlights recent hiring and internship posts, a public signal that more recruiting is already underway. Those details line up with the company’s stated aim to grow its headquarters headcount alongside ongoing site operations.
Local Impact And The Office Market
If Texas Materials follows through on its plan to roughly double its office staff to about 160 employees, the move would add around 80 local jobs and put more pressure on mid‑sized office inventory in Cedar Park. Nearby commercial listings in the Arrow Point Drive and Discovery Boulevard area show contiguous office spaces that could support a phased expansion, with some suites offering up to roughly 24,875 square feet, according to CityFeet. The company is also listed among regional economic development partners on Opportunity Austin.
What Comes Next
Beyond the broad timeline and staffing goals reported so far, Texas Materials has kept specifics close to the vest. The pace of any headquarters expansion will hinge on lease terms, interior build‑out schedules and local permitting, and the clearest public signal that the plan is moving ahead would likely come in the form of new filings or updated lease assignments tied to its Cedar Park campus.









