Weslaco City Commission Unanimously Approves New Comprehensive Plan

Proposed Streetscape Improvements for the City of Weslaco’s Texas Boulevard.

Proposed Retrofits to the City of Weslaco’s Existing Park Network.

The Weslaco City Commission unanimously approved UTSA’s 2022 update to the City’s Comprehensive Plan. The new document, which establishes a framework for community decision-making through the year 2045, represents sixteen months of collaboration between Weslaco city leaders, UTSA’s Center for Urban and Regional Planning Research (CURPR), and Gabriel Díaz Montemayor, Founding Partner of LABor Studio. Weslaco’s 2022 Comprehensive Plan redefines the City of Weslaco’s growth calculus, expanding the community motto, “City on the Grow,” to include infill, redevelopment, and retrofit strategies.

The City of Weslaco is a rapidly expanding community of 42,000 located in the Rio Grande Valley. Once part of a Spanish land grant known as Llano Grande, Weslaco was incorporated in 1921 and today exists as part of the Reynosa-McAllen metropolitan area, a transnational conurbation along the U.S.-Mexico border. This region, which lies adjacent to the Mexican State of Tamaulipas, is one of the fastest growing urban areas in the United States.

UTSA researchers worked with Weslaco residents and City officials to address the effects of rapid urban growth, specifically as it relates to issues of downtown revitalization, housing, parks, flood control, transportation, economic sustainability, and environmental resilience. The process began in 2021 with three public forums that allowed residents to express their aspirations, concerns, and evaluate how well alternative growth scenarios aligned with community values.

Architecture Jury Shortlists UTSA Design Proposal for International Housing Award

Aerial View of Site.

Axonometric View of Modular Systems.

A jury of architects has shortlisted a UTSA Center for Urban and Regional Planning (CURPR) proposal for an international housing award. The Modular Home Annual International Competition Edition 2, sponsored by Buildner, asked participants to submit innovative modular housing proposals for sites around the world.

CURPR’s proposal, led by Center Director Ian Caine in collaboration with landscape and urban designer Gabriel Díaz Montemayor of LABor Studio, is located in the Rio Grande Valley, a transborder region that lies in the floodplain of the Rio Grande/Rio Bravo River adjacent to the Mexican State of Tamaulipas. The region is home to more than 2,000 colonias–informal, unincorporated settlements that flood regularly and lack civil infrastructure including sewer systems, paved roads, and potable water. In Texas, 400,000 people live in colonias. Many are migrant workers from Northern Mexico who come for seasonal agricultural jobs.

Typical modular housing units are standardized, prefabricated, packed, shipped, and assembled onsite. The CURPR proposal imagines a farming cooperative that extends modular efficiencies beyond housing to the entire site, unitizing the subdivision of land, utilities, flood control, and food production. This vision rejects the adversarial economic, social, and environmental arrangements associated with industrial farming, imagining more sympathetic relations between people, capital, land, and water.

Congratulations to the entire design team, which included Trent Tunks, Joe Valadez, and Tiffany Vargas! The competition jury included Bárbara Bardin, co-Founder of Madrid-based studio Canobardin; Pilar Cano-Lasso, leader of Madrid-based delavegacanolasso; Sarah Broadstock, architect at London-based Studio Bark; Mark Gabbertas of UK-based Gabbertas Studio; Inés Olavarrieta, architect and designer at Madrid-based selgascano.