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  2. October 25, River project breaks ground with Hugman as architect. March 14, A river carnival and night parade are held. The walkways, stairways to street level, footbridge, rock walls lining banks, and Arneson River Theater are completed as is the restoration of La Villita.

  3. History. Looking down at the river at Market and Alamo streets. The colorful umbrellas mark Casa Rio, the first restaurant built on the water in 1946. In September 1921, a disastrous flood along the San Antonio River took 51 lives, with an additional 23 people reported missing. [1]

  4. In the late 1990s and early 2000s City and County leaders began planning for extensions of the Riverwalk to the North and to the South. The river is not just an entertainment area for visitors and residents but also functioning waterway that funnels water through central San Antonio and the southern parts of the City and South Texas.

  5. Construction of the riverwalk began in 1939 and was completed in 1941. The Works Progress Administration (WPA), a New Deal agency, provided funding for the project. The riverwalk was built using local materials, including limestone and river rock. Great Depression and Flood Control.

  6. The first phase of construction began in 1939 and took nearly 30 years to complete. Through the decades, the River Walk has been transformed into a lush, green oasis in the heart of the city. It now features restaurants, shops, hotels, and numerous other attractions.

  7. The San Antonio River flows through the Riverwalk, which has been central to the city’s development since its founding. It initially provided water for irrigation and now serves as the heart of a cultural and commercial hub. How has the San Antonio Riverwalk evolved from its inception to today?

  8. Jan 29, 2014 · The River Walk has its origins at the end of the nineteenth century, when the narrow San Antonio River was replaced as the source of the city’s water by a municipal system fed by artesian wells. The wells began lowering the water table and periodically caused the river, some twenty feet below downtown street level, to go dry.

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