Austin’s Mexican American Cultural Center Reopens After Renovations, Expansion

After years of renovations, the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center is finally welcoming la gente back home this June with an expanded space built to preserve our history for generations to come.

The Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center will reopen its expanded and renovated space on June 2026. Photo Contributed by Bud Franck, courtesy of Miro Rivera Architects

Steps away from Lady Bird Lake in downtown Austin, surrounded by an ever-changing city skyline near the Rainey Street District, sits an innovative, newly renovated cultural center thatโ€™s ready to welcome the comunidad back into its doors for a long-awaited homecoming. 

After being closed for about three years as it underwent construction and renovations, the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center, also known as the ESB-MACC, will bring the community together on June 6 for the centerโ€™s grand reopening featuring dance performances, comida, live mรบsica, exhibits y mรกs.

The expanded and renovated cultural center, now 55,000 square feet, includes new building features such as a teaching kitchen, revamped performance spaces, classrooms, gallery spaces, a new youth education wing, music rehearsal spaces with studio rooms, a shaded structure on its beloved central zรณcalo, or Perez-Ramos Plaza, among other indoor and outdoor upgrades.

Primary funding for the center’s Phase 2 project came from a 2018 bond, where $27 million was allocated for the cultural center’s new chapter. Additional funding came from parkland dedication fees, rental proceeds from nearby properties as well as an unused balance from a 2006 bond, according to the city. But the road to a renovated and bigger cultural center hasn’t been easy.

Sign up for our free newsletter for our monthly Cultura Guide and community news that centers the voices of nuestra gente.

Get the latest stories from your comunidad, directly to your inbox.

Dreaming of A Home

Juรกrez-Lincoln University on Cesar Chavez Street in Austin served as an independent Chicano college. Photo courtesy of ESB-MACC

Before Rainey Street became an entertainment district, it served as home to many Mexican American families. Schools such as Juรกrez Lincoln University and Palm School, on the corner of Cesar Chavez Street and the I-35 frontage road, were once hubs for gathering, educating, and celebrating community before the both closed and the university building razed.

โ€œOur space (ESB-MACC) being near where Juรกrez University was bulldozed and near Palm School, where some of our board members went to (elementary) school, is like living real history,โ€ said Olivia Tamzarian, marketing representative for the MACC. 

The struggle for a local cultural center goes back to the 1960s and 1970s with the rise of the Chicano Movement. Local artists, cultural leaders, educators and neighbors came together to discuss the need for a cultural arts space with programming and education.

In 1974, the Brown Berets along with residents, launched El Centro Chicano and later the independent Chicano college Juรกrez-Lincoln University opened. But tragedy struck both sites when El Centro Chicano was destroyed by arson and the Juรกrez-Lincoln building was firebombed and then later demolished.

It would take decades, failed bond propositions and many uphill battles before the Mexican American Cultural Center held its grand opening in 2007. It was later renamed the Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center after Austin cultural arts leader and political activist.

Angelica Navarro, chair of the ESB-MACC advisory board, said that local families and advocates who used to live in the area fought for the MACC to preserve the culture and to celebrate a place that was for the community and by the community.ย 

โ€œGoing back to the โ€˜60s during the Chicano movement, all of the hard work, struggles and fights that these people went through culminated into this beautiful place,โ€ Navarro said. 

Sรญ Se Puede

Olivia Tamzarian of the ESB-MACC sits by the new Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center sign. Photo by Brianna Chavez/Austin Vida

From construction, budget constraints and pandemic closures, Tamzarian said that the people who make up the MACC persevere knowing that the result is rewarding in many ways. 

โ€œSรญ se puede,โ€ Tamzarian said. โ€œWeโ€™re creating a legacy and a place where creativity can thrive. If you build it, they [the community] will come.โ€

The MACC now has a variety of programs to offer for all ages to explore including at its Casa de La Cultura, which offers family-friendly workshops rooted in preserving Mexican American, Indigenous and Latino culture and traditions. Upcoming workshops include everything from ancestral movement to gardening traditional herbs and plants in their new healing garden. From dance studios for ballet folklรณrico to classrooms and multi-purpose spaces for groups such as the Tejano Genealogy Society of Austin to meet, the cultural center aims to have something for everyone to learn โ€” and a place for them to grow.

The Caminos Teen Leadership group work on murals, art projects and more in activity rooms at the cultural center. Photo by Brianna Chavez/Austin Vida

A notable program of the MACC, the Caminos Teen Leadership Program will continue at the cultural center. The paid internship helps uplift youth in the area by educating them on Latin American and Indigenous cultures, creating art and content for the community and more.  

Tamzarian recalled a special moment from years ago that she still remembers fondly. While taking a lunch break at work, she noticed the teens from the Caminos program and the elders from the Genealogy Society came together in the music room, sharing stories and learning about Tejano history. 

โ€œIt brought tears to my eyes,โ€ Tamzarian said. โ€œWe are not creating isolated experiences. This is oral history we are creating and passing.โ€ 

Lily Zamarripa-Saenz, vice chair of the ESB-MACC advisory board, called the reopening a significant milestone for everyone involved, especially its returning members.ย 

โ€œWeโ€™re all excited to come back home,โ€ Zamarripa-Saenz said. โ€œThereโ€™s an embrace when you walk into the MACC where you can celebrate yourself.โ€

Tamzarian said that even with the quickly growing city surrounding the MACC and the inevitable gentrification pushing families away who once called the area home, the center will continue to be a permanent resident off of Rainey Street on the shores of Lady Bird Lake.

โ€œWe will continue to thrive in the shadows of skyscrapers,โ€ Tamzarian said. โ€œBecause this land is sacred. We are not going anywhere.โ€ 


IF YOU GO:

What: The Emma S. Barrientos Mexican American Cultural Center (MACC) grand reopening and celebration. The celebration will feature live music, performances, art activities, food, an artisan market and family-friendly activities.

When: June 6

Where: 600 River St., Austin, TX 78701

When: 11:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

More Details: austintexas.gov/macc/grand-reopening

Sign up now to get instant access to Austin Vida’s latest Cultura Guide, featuring local cultural happenings focused on Austin gente. Email info@austinvida.com if you have any issues.  

Sign up for your free Cultura Guide

โœจ
โœจ
Author

Brianna Chavez (she/her) is a born and raised Austinite and serves as Austin Vida’s Spring 2026 Editorial Intern. She graduated with a Bachelor’s in Journalism from Texas State University in 2024. She worked for four years as a Life and Arts reporter with The University Star, Texas Stateโ€™s student-run newspaper. Her work has been recognized by the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas and the Society of Professional Journalism. She has contributed to various publications in Austin, including the Austin American-Statesman and Austin Woman.

Get your latest Cultura Guide

Sign up for our free newsletter to get our monthly Cultura Guide and community news that centers the voices of nuestra gente.

¡Viva la Latinidad de Austin!

Help our small Latina-run newsroom amplify our comunidad's voces and celebrate our Latinidad.