UT San Antonio opens San Pedro II downtown, adding a new AI and cybersecurity hub to the city core

San Antonio TX – UT San Antonio opened San Pedro II downtown on April 6, adding a major new home for AI, cyber and computing programs near San Pedro Creek.


UT San Antonio opened San Pedro II downtown on Monday, April 6, adding a major new academic and career-focused building to the city center and extending the university’s push deeper into San Pedro Creek’s growing tech corridor.

The opening matters beyond a ribbon cutting. San Pedro II gives the university a larger daily presence downtown, puts more AI, cybersecurity and computing activity in the urban core, and creates another place where students, faculty, employers and community partners will regularly meet.

What opened downtown

According to UT San Antonio’s project record, San Pedro II is a 180,000-square-foot building with a total project cost of $131 million. The university describes it as an advanced facility for business, education and career preparation, built to support interdisciplinary academic programs, experiential learning and professional development.

Local reporting from KSAT and Texas Public Radio confirmed the April 6 opening. KSAT reported the building at 702 Dolorosa Street will serve as the new home of the College of AI, Cyber and Computing, which includes students in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, computing and data science programs.

The building also brings together several student- and employer-facing functions. KSAT reported that San Pedro II houses the USAA Student Success Center for coaching, mentoring and career preparation, the Najim Innovation District for venture incubation and community industry projects, the Center for Civic and Community-Engaged Leadership, and the Valero Engagement Center for industry engagement and conferences.

Texas Public Radio also reported that the building is already being used for research demonstrations, including work tied to digital modeling and simulations. That helps show the project is not just classroom space. It is meant to support applied research and career-connected learning in the same downtown setting.

How it fits the bigger downtown plan

San Pedro II is not a standalone project. UT San Antonio’s district planning page says the university is pursuing long-term growth and continued development in San Antonio’s urban core. The planning effort is aimed at expanding academic and research capacity while creating more opportunities for partnerships that support career-engaged learning.

The university’s San Pedro II project page says the building is designed to work in tandem with San Pedro I across the creek, where cybersecurity and data science research collaborations are already based. Together, the two buildings are intended to anchor more university activity in this part of downtown.

That broader planning context matters for residents and commuters. UT San Antonio also says its downtown planning process is reviewing expanded services and amenities, including support services, retail and dining, and more core classes downtown so students can complete more of their coursework there without traveling back and forth between campuses.

Why residents and business owners should watch it

In practical terms, San Pedro II means more regular foot traffic from students, staff, researchers, employers and event attendees around Dolorosa Street and the San Pedro Creek area. That does not guarantee a direct business boom on its own, but it does add another steady destination downtown during the workday and school week.

For employers, the building gives San Antonio a more visible downtown base for recruiting and collaboration in AI, cyber and computing fields. For students, it concentrates academic programs, mentoring and career services in one place. For nearby businesses and property owners, the main thing to watch next is whether the university’s larger downtown district plan brings more amenities, more classes and more supporting development around this cluster.

San Pedro II is one more concrete sign that UT San Antonio is treating downtown as a long-term campus, not just a satellite location. What happens around it next will matter for how much student life, research activity and employer engagement continue to spread into the city core.

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