Photo Illustration: Dora Godfrey | Photos: Drew Anthony Smith

Austin Was Destined to Replace Silicon Valley. Then the Pandemic Hit

What the hottest boomtown off the coasts will look like on the other side

Adam Bluestein
Marker
Published in
19 min readJul 15, 2020

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Last summer, RigUp moved into a 24,000-foot, magazine-spread worthy office in the kind of location you’d expect for one of Austin’s most buzzed about venture-backed startups. The company — a hiring platform for energy-sector contract workers — had recently raised a $60 million Series C round. It wasted no time spending it, leasing a full floor of a 30-story story highrise on Congress Avenue, overlooking Lady Bird Lake, where hordes of youthful Austinites come to run, walk dogs, and do paddleboard yoga. The airy space, with its ample natural wood, LED boards, and chill-out corners stuffed with natural vegetation, was an ideal backdrop for the company’s co-founders, Xuan Yong and Mike Witte, to lure talent. Over the next nine months, they would hire over a hundred new employees, with no idea just how dramatically their business and the city of Austin would soon change.

Yong and Witte first met at Texas A&M, where Yong studied finance and economics and Witte studied engineering, before starting the company in 2014. The ascent of RigUp was, in many ways, emblematic of Austin’s rise in recent years as the next Silicon Valley — or at least, its closest approximation outside of the coasts…

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Marker
Marker

Published in Marker

Marker was a publication from Medium about the intersection of business, economics, and culture. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Adam Bluestein
Adam Bluestein

Written by Adam Bluestein

I write about business, science, and things that people do for fun. Work published in Fast Company, Inc., Men’s Journal, Proto, Marker. Vermonter by choice.