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DCReid
Mar 9, 2024, 7:47 PM
Again, I think this is a both/and proposition. Are these venues for the locals? Of course. Is there the potential to grow the regional tourism economy in the process and broaden the reach and appeal of the city and metro, especially this area at the same time? Also, Of course.

The best example is probably the one that will likely appeal to the broadest range of tastes: Great Wolf Lodge. That chain is definitely a destination for families. Where I currently live in Kansas, I'm about 3 hours from one in Kansas City, KS and 5 hours from one in Grapevine. It's a 50/50 split based on where folks tend to go, but there are a lot of families that plan long weekends, spring breaks, and other assorted holidays and make their base there. Yes, that means they will break from the confines of the lodge and explore their surroundings.

It may not even be in the Loop, but within 5-10 miles of it are a number of Houston-specific destinations that would qualify as something that could appeal to different groups of tourists. JSC (https://www.nasa.gov/johnson/)/Space Center Houston (https://spacecenter.org/) probably would be the largest, but there's also the Lone Star Flight Museum (https://lonestarflight.org/) as well. There's a legitimately well-run mall (https://www.baybrookmall.com/en.html) across the freeway that still manages to bring in about 20 million people a year. Among all the other restaurants along Nasa Rd 1 is one of my favorite Italian spots in that part of the area (https://www.houstonpress.com/restaurants/frenchies-italian-cuisine-is-a-40-year-old-essential-restaurant-in-clear-lake-9531522) and is one of the more quintessentially old school "Houston" restaurants on that side of town. Plenty o' chains for those who want them - even big astronaut McDonalds (https://www.space.com/mcdonalds-nasa-apollo-astronaut-statue-houston).

Minus the latter, all of that is in Houston's city limits. I'm not aware of many people that would get hyped up about a McDonalds being in Nassau Bay vs Houston but whatever.



The problem with this is that it isn't simply and solely "some resort in Galveston" nor did I say the city/area would specifically become "a tourist destination".

As I said before, this is actually a series of cumulative developments that happen to be both extremely close to the city proper as well as to other communities that could enhance that portion of the regional economy - which is a great thing.

There's a reason that region in particular is marketed as Bay Area Houston in both the tourism (https://visitbayareahouston.com/) and business realms (https://bayareahouston.com/) over individual chambers and CVBs. Those smaller cities and communities may have a stake in the organizations, but at the end of the day, their city doesn't get top billing nor are they the drivers of much of the overall growth in the region.

As for the people who grouse about Houston or whatever, I really don't care what they think. That type of person is generally lazy and uninformed I find. Most that stay for a bit find the appeal that I and many others have over the years.

I'll happily take their money though, regardless how they feel and wherever they choose to spend it.

In my opinion, the best opportunity to attract tourists to the area would be to better market Galveston. I believe it is the 4th largest cruise terminal. How are its beaches? Since it is a relatively old Southern city, does it have a city scape (and food history) similar to New Orleans or Savannah that would interest tourists? Combining heavily marketing Galveston with other offerings like the Space Center would make Houston more attractive for tourists.

bilbao58
Mar 9, 2024, 8:25 PM
The problem with this is that it isn't simply and solely "some resort in Galveston" nor did I say the city/area would specifically become "a tourist destination".

Unless your name is Maddy McCarty, the article’s writer, I didn’t say you said anything. It was the article, especially its title, that implied Houston is becoming more of a destination as evidenced by the addition of those three resorts.

I doubt (just my opinion here) people attracted to coastal resorts are the same people attracted to Houston. People go to Galveston for fun in the sun. People go to Houston for museums, performing arts, food, food and food, nightlife, cultural diversity, shopping, sports, and NASA. I suspect people specifically visiting Houston are more likely to add a day trip to Galveston than the other way around.

bilbao58
Mar 9, 2024, 10:01 PM
The Woodlands

-Timberloch Tower Site Redevelopment

Found by TowerSpotter on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/53292-former-timberloch-tower-site-redevelopment-multiple-towers/#comment-698351) who writes...



https://www.successlivesherehhc.com/texas/
(https://www.successlivesherehhc.com/texas/)

https://emsvowkdiie.exactdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/woodland-01_final-1024x662.jpg?strip=all&lossy=1&quality=80&ssl=1

https://emsvowkdiie.exactdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/woodland-02_final-1024x503.jpg?strip=all&lossy=1&quality=80&ssl=1

I wish that were in Houston and not The Woodlands.

JManc
Mar 10, 2024, 12:16 AM
In my opinion, the best opportunity to attract tourists to the area would be to better market Galveston. I believe it is the 4th largest cruise terminal. How are its beaches? Since it is a relatively old Southern city, does it have a city scape (and food history) similar to New Orleans or Savannah that would interest tourists? Combining heavily marketing Galveston with other offerings like the Space Center would make Houston more attractive for tourists.

Galveston's selling point is that it has cruise terminals, some history and is a beach town within a couple of hours from most of the Houston area. However, it lacks the nice beaches like South Padre or the other side of the Gulf and nowhere near the sheer amount of historical districts like New Orleans or Savannah. Galveston has the Strand which is very nice and lot's to do but it is only about 4-5 blocks long along a single street. It's a great way to kill a few hours before a cruise.

Again, I think this is a both/and proposition. Are these venues for the locals? Of course. Is there the potential to grow the regional tourism economy in the process and broaden the reach and appeal of the city and metro, especially this area at the same time? Also, Of course.

We own a house down in the Clear Lake area; walking distance from JSC, less than 5 miles to soon to be open Great Wolf Lodge and less than 10 to the Kemah boardwalk plus Galveston about 20-30 minutes away. I think there is a lot potential to boost tourism in that area but I don't think the Bay Area/ Galveston will be destinations in their own right. It will always be for the locals and people already here on business or visiting family.

The Best Forumer
Mar 11, 2024, 9:01 PM
Can you imagine all of Houston's major skyscrapers together in the center of the city?

I made a prototype of what all those buildings would look like together and also another one with the Williams Tower in Downtown, but i don’t know how to upload my pictures in this forum ������

Where is it? Send it to me and I can post it for you.

Wattleigh
Mar 13, 2024, 1:46 PM
In my opinion, the best opportunity to attract tourists to the area would be to better market Galveston. I believe it is the 4th largest cruise terminal. How are its beaches? Since it is a relatively old Southern city, does it have a city scape (and food history) similar to New Orleans or Savannah that would interest tourists? Combining heavily marketing Galveston with other offerings like the Space Center would make Houston more attractive for tourists.



We own a house down in the Clear Lake area; walking distance from JSC, less than 5 miles to soon to be open Great Wolf Lodge and less than 10 to the Kemah boardwalk plus Galveston about 20-30 minutes away. I think there is a lot potential to boost tourism in that area but I don't think the Bay Area/ Galveston will be destinations in their own right. It will always be for the locals and people already here on business or visiting family.

This is basically my point. The Houston market already includes all of these areas - the Bay Area, Galveston, etc. are submarkets within it. As the number of resorts and destinations between all of these locales are built, they will boost the overall Houston market's desirability as a tourist destination to some extent.

Again, I'm not saying it's going to be the next Orlando or San Antonio or whatever, but I'm also not saying the new stuff is solely for the locals. It's more likely to grow over the upcoming years as a regional option for tourism and the money in that pot will only increase. That's pretty much it.

For what it's worth, Houston as a market is doing relatively well it seems based on the hotel information from January per CoStar (https://product.costar.com/home/news/shared/1758676232). The CFP was likely a driver for group sales, but to me, that's all the better. The amount of events the Sports Authority has been landing for venues in the city proper that tend to draw a broader national & international audience (https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2023/04/21/janis-burke-houston-international-sports-city.html) stands only to increase the number of city and area visitors in upcoming years as well.

Wattleigh
Mar 13, 2024, 1:56 PM
The Ion/Ion District

Looks like the block with the Ion Garage to the northwest and Greentown Labs to the southwest (San Jacinto / Cleburne / Caroline / Eagle) will be redeveloped into grad student housing of some kind.

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/17090-ion-district-in-midtown/page/76/#comment-698596)

https://i.imgur.com/50nbscXh.png
https://i.imgur.com/aB3LjSWh.png

https://i.imgur.com/qq6A86Yh.png

https://i.imgur.com/KGjAWXwh.png
https://i.imgur.com/RGxnbOch.png

https://i.imgur.com/5LjVjy2h.png

currysteph
Mar 14, 2024, 4:02 PM
I wish that were in Houston and not The Woodlands.

same difference.....I consider Houston to be from Conroe to Galveston and Brookshire to Mont Belvieu and New Caney to Roenberg

:-)

bilbao58
Mar 14, 2024, 4:56 PM
I consider Houston to be from Conroe to Galveston and Brookshire to Mont Belvieu and New Caney to Roenberg

Hey, I’m a Smug InnerLooper (30+ years) who also spent years in both Sugar Land and Richmond. When speaking with fellow natives of the Swampland, if I say Houston, I mean Houston. :D

Wattleigh
Mar 15, 2024, 3:35 PM
Hey, I’m a Smug InnerLooper (30+ years) who also spent years in both Sugar Land and Richmond. When speaking with fellow natives of the Swampland, if I say Houston, I mean Houston. :D

I tend to feel this way about the city proper, for the most part. Probably even more so about the latter two cities as I grew up in Fort Bend County.

A lot of the new people think they're moving to either and it turns out not to be the case pretty often in terms of the city itself. So many of the communities along the Grand Parkway or Westpark Tollway or FMs 359 or 723 are in those cities' respective zip codes but in someone else's ETJ entirely and in neither's city limits whatsoever.

Richmond hasn't done a lot of annexing to extend it's boundaries, but Sugar Land pretty famously did about 10 years ago (https://www.houstoniamag.com/news-and-city-life/2017/11/sugar-land-annexation-new-territory-greatwood) and added about 30,000 people by taking in a few older subdivisions that were already fairly well associated with the city. They may do it again in the not too distant future (https://communityimpact.com/houston/sugar-land-missouri-city/government/2023/12/11/sugar-land-development-agreement-could-bring-thousands-of-homes-to-citys-etj/).

Rosenberg has been doing it bit by bit over the past couple of decades in each direction, though the bulk of it has been south and west (https://www.rosenbergtx.gov/218/Interactive-Web-Maps). The ETJ is pretty extensive, engulfing Beasley and extending to Kendleton's ETJ. The city limits actually wrap around parts of Beasley as well now. What a change.

same difference.....I consider Houston to be from Conroe to Galveston and Brookshire to Mont Belvieu and New Caney to Roenberg

:-)

If you're talking about the metro - this is pretty much it. I'd add further south to Freeport and all the other cities in the Brazosport area. It's about 60k population which isn't bad. More are definitely on the way.

For the northwest point, that's getting to be a bit tricky IMO. Pretty much anything along 290 through Waller County up to Hempstead would work since that's starting to fill-in pretty quickly. Also Magnolia along the Aggieland Expressway... that's within 20 miles of Navasota and 45 miles to the south side of College Station at this point! Feels faster when you drive it, of course.

I'm interested in seeing how long Rosenberg is the southwestern point though. The amount of development that is coming to that part of Fort Bend County and even further southwest toward Kendleton & the San Bernard River/Wharton County line is insane.

The Southwest Freeway is a solid 6 lanes / feeders / HOV all the way from Rosenberg back into the city. It's 6 lanes pretty much uninterrupted just past Rosenberg and back toward Kendleton now.

Even in Wharton County, the 6-lane configuration is being built out in a couple of sections right now, both on the north and south sides of Wharton and southwest toward El Campo.

I kind of ran into the same surprise driving into town on I-45 last year. The area now feels like it STARTS at Huntsville. Sure, there are breaks in development, but with the interstate under construction along the way, it didn't feel like it. It definitely picks up back around New Waverly and Willis though.

bilbao58
Mar 15, 2024, 4:33 PM
^ The freeway part of I-10 on the West side starts 58 miles from Downtown now.

bilbao58
Mar 15, 2024, 5:18 PM
I tend to feel this way about the city proper, for the most part. Probably even more so about the latter two cities as I grew up in Fort Bend County.

It's normal for someone from The Woodlands to tell someone in New York or Seattle that they live in Houston. That same person would never refer to The Woodlands as Houston when speaking to someone in Sugar Land or Katy.

Anyway, to be VERY specific, I wish the buildings in that rendering were on Allen Parkway and not in The Woodlands.

DCReid
Mar 15, 2024, 8:37 PM
I tend to feel this way about the city proper, for the most part. Probably even more so about the latter two cities as I grew up in Fort Bend County.

A lot of the new people think they're moving to either and it turns out not to be the case pretty often in terms of the city itself. So many of the communities along the Grand Parkway or Westpark Tollway or FMs 359 or 723 are in those cities' respective zip codes but in someone else's ETJ entirely and in neither's city limits whatsoever.

Richmond hasn't done a lot of annexing to extend it's boundaries, but Sugar Land pretty famously did about 10 years ago (https://www.houstoniamag.com/news-and-city-life/2017/11/sugar-land-annexation-new-territory-greatwood) and added about 30,000 people by taking in a few older subdivisions that were already fairly well associated with the city. They may do it again in the not too distant future (https://communityimpact.com/houston/sugar-land-missouri-city/government/2023/12/11/sugar-land-development-agreement-could-bring-thousands-of-homes-to-citys-etj/).

Rosenberg has been doing it bit by bit over the past couple of decades in each direction, though the bulk of it has been south and west (https://www.rosenbergtx.gov/218/Interactive-Web-Maps). The ETJ is pretty extensive, engulfing Beasley and extending to Kendleton's ETJ. The city limits actually wrap around parts of Beasley as well now. What a change.



If you're talking about the metro - this is pretty much it. I'd add further south to Freeport and all the other cities in the Brazosport area. It's about 60k population which isn't bad. More are definitely on the way.

For the northwest point, that's getting to be a bit tricky IMO. Pretty much anything along 290 through Waller County up to Hempstead would work since that's starting to fill-in pretty quickly. Also Magnolia along the Aggieland Expressway... that's within 20 miles of Navasota and 45 miles to the south side of College Station at this point! Feels faster when you drive it, of course.

I'm interested in seeing how long Rosenberg is the southwestern point though. The amount of development that is coming to that part of Fort Bend County and even further southwest toward Kendleton & the San Bernard River/Wharton County line is insane.

The Southwest Freeway is a solid 6 lanes / feeders / HOV all the way from Rosenberg back into the city. It's 6 lanes pretty much uninterrupted just past Rosenberg and back toward Kendleton now.

Even in Wharton County, the 6-lane configuration is being built out in a couple of sections right now, both on the north and south sides of Wharton and southwest toward El Campo.

I kind of ran into the same surprise driving into town on I-45 last year. The area now feels like it STARTS at Huntsville. Sure, there are breaks in development, but with the interstate under construction along the way, it didn't feel like it. It definitely picks up back around New Waverly and Willis though.

So Houston appears to be in a mega sprawl phase like DFW has been in for decades. Hopefully its downtown won't stagnate like Dallas. I was curious why Houston has never sprawled towards to Beamont and the Census does not combine Beaumont into Houston despite the fact that they are both oil towns. Is it because all of the refineries/heavy industry are in that direction and the flat plains in that area are the highest risk for hurricanes? I also noticed that Beaumont is not growing as a small metro for the same reason.

bilbao58
Mar 15, 2024, 9:34 PM
I was curious why Houston has never sprawled towards to Beamont


Because everything east of Downtown Houston (up until recently, at least) smells bad.

AviationGuy
Mar 16, 2024, 2:39 AM
^ The freeway part of I-10 on the West side starts 58 miles from Downtown now.

And coming in on 290, the freeway (and crazy drivers) start at approximately 50 northwest of downtown, just this side of Hempstead.

Zapatan
Mar 16, 2024, 8:40 PM
Any recent pics of the 500 footer U/C?

Double L
Mar 19, 2024, 1:17 AM
I wish that were in Houston and not The Woodlands.

There is a historic setting for this redevelopment, it is replacing buildings that were previously there which were torn down, this development would have to be in The Woodlands, that site needs redevelopment, it doesn’t fit any other setting in the Houston area.The Woodlands Town Center can be a quality walkable urban area, the trolleys make it walkable and it has a good retail and restaurant scene in The Woodlands Town Center.

bilbao58
Mar 19, 2024, 2:49 AM
There is a historic setting for this redevelopment, it is replacing buildings that were previously there which were torn down, this development would have to be in The Woodlands, that site needs redevelopment, it doesn’t fit any other setting in the Houston area.The Woodlands Town Center can be a quality walkable urban area, the trolleys make it walkable and it has a good retail and restaurant scene in The Woodlands Town Center.

I suppose I wasn’t very clear: I mean the buildings themselves. Especially the oval, multi-tiered building. Not the development.

Wattleigh
Mar 19, 2024, 1:48 PM
Knowles-Rowland House, Phase II

A 15-story tower appears to be planned behind St. John's UMC in Midtown. It looks to be the 2nd phase of a redevelopment plan around the church.

The first phase is a three-story building that would replace an existing gym with 31 temporary housing units for the homeless, among other amenities. This was announced last September (https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/trending/article/knowles-rowland-house-construction-homeless-18382263.php).

This new tower appears as a city planning commission agenda item for tomorrow's meeting.

Photos c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/47417-knowles-rowland-house-1615-gray-st/?do=findComment&comment=695029)

The church in front of the tower site
https://i.imgur.com/tpN3S1Xh.jpg

Site behind the church
https://i.imgur.com/DB9nMuph.jpg

COH Proposed Plat Document c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/47417-knowles-rowland-house-1615-gray-st/?do=findComment&comment=698510)

https://i.imgur.com/HPzFfO7h.png
https://i.imgur.com/XwD4MBrh.png

https://i.imgur.com/uVpexZXh.png

https://i.imgur.com/HJhCTDBh.png
https://i.imgur.com/aSCKF0ih.png

Images from the agenda - c/o j.33 on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/47417-knowles-rowland-house-1615-gray-st/?do=findComment&comment=698845)

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.daa3ded57d619b6c7ff35bdc5f624b2c.png

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.e57548f0830027957bde0ac17b344c40.png

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.645c6426e8c44ffb627ad91c61b487f7.png

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.8a58ee7b58909d8960c5112d4d966c9b.png

Wattleigh
Mar 20, 2024, 12:46 PM
JW Marriott Downtown / Battlestein's Redevelopment

Arch-Con's website (https://www.arch-con.com/divisions/hospitality/jw-marriott-houston-downtown-expansion/) has been updated to provide a description of the work taking place here as part of the hotel's expansion.


JW Marriott Houston Downtown Expansion
Owner: Southwest Value Partners | Architect: MCS Architects LLC

The JW Marriott Houston Downtown Expansion is an adaptive reuse of the historic, 10-story Battlestein’s Building built in 1950. It is adjacent to the existing JW Marriott Houston Downtown, an adaptive reuse of the historic Samuel F. Carter Building built in 1910. Arch-Con’s scope of work includes a 72,382-square-foot building conversion to add 56 rooms as well as the demolition and renovation of the storefront, entry vestibule, elevators, ballroom and restrooms on the first floor and meeting rooms on the second floor. Designed by MCS Architects LLC, project highlights include ribbon windows and a rooftop penthouse, bar and pool.



Image c/o InTheKnowHouston on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/22874-jw-marriott-at-806-main-st-expansion-into-battlestein%E2%80%99s-812-main-st/?do=findComment&comment=698942)

https://i.imgur.com/rk9Larbh.jpeg

Wattleigh
Mar 21, 2024, 12:53 PM
The Chaucer

https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2024/03/20/randall-davis-the-chaucer-rice-village-condo-tower.html?cx_testId=40&cx_testVariant=cx_27&cx_artPos=2#cxrecs_s
(https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2024/03/20/randall-davis-the-chaucer-rice-village-condo-tower.html?cx_testId=40&cx_testVariant=cx_27&cx_artPos=2#cxrecs_s)
https://media.bizj.us/view/img/12716585/rdchaucerhero5krgb.jpg

https://media.bizj.us/view/img/12716589/rdchaucerstreetlevel5k.jpg

Randall Davis Co. unveils plans for Rice Village condo tower

By Jeff Jeffrey – Senior reporter, Houston Business Journal
Mar 20, 2024

Randall Davis, the developer behind such condominium projects as the Arabella, Astoria and more recently London House, is planning a new condo tower near Rice Village called The Chaucer.

The Chaucer, which will be built at 2360 Rice Blvd., next to Hungry’s restaurant and opposite Chaucer Drive, was designed as a 12-story, 75,000-square-foot building and will offer 29 luxury condo units.

In an interview, Davis said his company, Randall Davis Co., opened a sales office for the project just this week.

Davis told the Houston Business Journal that the building will offer unobstructed views in all directions, from downtown to the Galleria area.

“This is an area that is really underserved for condo living,” said Davis, founder and CEO of the Randall Davis Co. “There’s currently no opportunity for people to buy a lock-and-leave home. A lot of people in the Rice Village area, especially empty nesters or those wanting to downsize from a large house, want to stay in their wonderful neighborhood. So, that’s what this project hopes to do: give them an option that doesn’t currently exist.”

Davis said he plans to break ground on The Chaucer in the third quarter of this year, though he acknowledged that will depend on how pre-sales in the building go. Those who purchase a unit in the pre-sale phase will receive a discount of $100,000, as well as $25,000 in upgrades, he said.

The project is expected to take two years to build.

Units in the building will start at $1.5 million, while the penthouse units will be priced at about $5 million, he said.

Davis added that he’s already tapped his longtime general contractor, Houston-based GT Leach Construction, to serve as general contractor.

Davis and his daughter Natalie handled the initial design of the building, but Davis said he is in the process of hiring a New York-based architect for the final design.

The Chaucer is being marketed by Gordana Vickers of Compass in collaboration with Compass Development Marketing Group.

“We are thrilled to introduce The Chaucer to the Houston market,” Vickers said. “This distinguished development represents a harmonious fusion of luxury, comfort and sophistication, and we are confident that it will captivate those seeking the finest in urban living.”

Davis said the building’s design was inspired by the art deco movement of the 1920s, but it also includes modern elements.

“I have to admit, I am absolutely in love with art deco,” Davis said. “I think it’s the finest design period of the last 100 years. So, we wanted to include some art deco features at The Chaucer. We wanted a warm design that wasn’t overly modern so it would be welcoming to residents.”

As an example, Davis highlighted the lobby entrance, which will have a brass façade inspired by many of New York’s hotels from the art deco period.

Inside the building, floor plans range from two bedrooms with 2.5 bathrooms to three bedrooms with 3.5 bathrooms.

Most of the units will between 1,900 square feet to 4,000 square feet, but the five penthouse units will be larger.

JManc
Mar 21, 2024, 10:43 PM
For a Randall Davis development, at least this one isn't too garish and ugly.

Wattleigh
Mar 25, 2024, 5:45 PM
Holiday Inn Express/Staybridge Suites Downtown

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/29510-holiday-inn-expressstaybridge-suites-hotel-at-1319-texas-ave/?do=findComment&comment=699104)

https://i.imgur.com/a7Alp2zh.jpeg

c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/29510-holiday-inn-expressstaybridge-suites-hotel-at-1319-texas-ave/?do=findComment&comment=699126)

https://i.imgur.com/z3OK20H.jpeg

Residences on Westheimer

Topped out

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/39294-residences-on-westheimer-multifamily-at-2311-westheimer-rd/?do=findComment&comment=698727)

https://i.imgur.com/alFpvV1h.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/YnYHmB9h.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/HmMFXEdh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/s95tX0Sh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/uG2qXfzh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/7d9mNpMh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/Z90NWDCh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/GO6JXHLh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/IJkQSQJh.jpeg

Houston Methodist Centennial Tower

c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/19831-houston-methodist-walter-centennial-tower/?do=findComment&comment=699136)

https://i.imgur.com/cHlIxRo.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/KCaAXTB.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/mKBl36q.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/CE5izqO.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/98G5Q2K.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/TDnPYjG.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/NVtD96S.jpeg

MD Anderson CSB

c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/27010-md-anderson-clinical-services-building-at-6516-md-anderson-blvd/?do=findComment&comment=699132)

Site is being cleared now

https://i.imgur.com/hfb7wyG.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/5trVQB2.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/sAf2o9w.jpeg

Baylor St. Luke's McNair Campus


Cullen Tower

c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/7864-baylor-st-lukes-mcnair-campus-health-sciences-park/?do=findComment&comment=699134)

https://i.imgur.com/UuqksOs.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/6A2END3.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/XikhxlP.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/y93to8k.jpeg

UTHealth Houston Research Campus

SCRB 5

c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/10645-ut-research-park-complex-developments/?do=findComment&comment=699135)

https://i.imgur.com/uzwR6XP.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/zm1fZpt.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/3qdYbgV.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/B2mxMGn.jpeg

& SOPH

c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/10645-ut-research-park-complex-developments/?do=findComment&comment=699135)

https://i.imgur.com/ZH36P9I.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/DG7GNMz.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/fZHNkad.jpeg

Wattleigh
Mar 25, 2024, 7:05 PM
The Langley

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/13095-the-langley-residential-high-rise-at-1717-bissonnet-st/?do=findComment&comment=698731)

https://i.imgur.com/1NmKa6qh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/Oqi4vWmh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/xooLscOh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/aj7yjf1h.jpeg

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https://i.imgur.com/AB6vQUah.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/EuiVOFph.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/TNXYCO4h.jpeg

1010 Waugh

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/46999-fairfield-waugh-multifamily-at-1010-waugh-dr/?do=findComment&comment=698893)

https://i.imgur.com/oKpEOLPh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/w4oOonWh.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/zXcF3Gkh.jpeg


The Heron - Museum District

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/9037-the-heron-museum-district-multifamily-high-rise-at-4343-woodhead-st/?do=findComment&comment=698900)

https://i.imgur.com/vNWFUOah.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/gyhnmgkh.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/UFMrN0ph.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/VRYUXuCh.jpg

The White Oak

c/o 004n063 on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/45833-the-white-oak-mixed-use-at-2520-houston-ave/?do=findComment&comment=698672)

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/20240314_190240.jpg.ef5f44f7d8f4a588d45f6aa8c3bda2c7.jpg

Wattleigh
Apr 2, 2024, 1:57 PM
Galveston

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/real-estate/article/galveston-new-condo-tower-construction-tiara-beach-19375914.php

New condo tower could be the first in 15 years on Galveston Island

By Marissa Luck,
Staff writer
April 1, 2024

Construction is slated to start this summer on one of the first condominium towers to be built on Galveston Island in more than 15 years, according to the developer.

Houston real estate developer Satya recently announced it’s progressing on the 10-story Tiara on the Beach in Galveston’s West Bend at 10525 San Luis Pass Road. Satya also announced it has completed construction of an associated sand dune and hired Ludlow and Associates as the general contractor.

With a design inspired by Miami architecture, the 63 units, ranging from 1,600 to 2,700 square feet, will be available with one, two and three bedrooms with views of the Gulf of Mexico from floor-to-ceiling windows. Every unit will have its own balcony with gas lines if residents want to install outdoor kitchens, said Anastasia Gaido, real estate associate with Nan and Co. Properties, which is marketing the project.

The units will be priced from $1.2 million to more than $3 million. Seven penthouses on the 10th floor feature private elevator vestibules and fireplaces, Gaido said.

JManc
Apr 3, 2024, 6:49 PM
Isn't there a Margaritaville going up towards the East Beach?

Wattleigh
Apr 4, 2024, 7:04 PM
2415 Westheimer

New proposed office building adjacent to Residences on Westheimer at Westheimer and Argonne, one block east of Kirby Drive.

For site reference - modified photo c/o Cityliving on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/39294-residences-on-westheimer-multifamily-at-2311-westheimer-rd/?do=findComment&comment=695977)

https://i.imgur.com/eILDRd1.jpeg

Website: https://www.2415westheimer.com/

Digital brochure: https://view.ceros.com/cbre-properties/2415-westheimer-digital-brochure/p/1

PDF Brochure: https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/b15dcc7d/1b3ff05b-9584-45f7-aff8-4f46e306ab30.pdf

Renderings c/o CBRE Profile (https://www.cbre.com/offices/corporate/houston/houston-property-search/details/US-SMPL-146680/2415-westheimer-2415-westheimer-road-houston-tx-77098)

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/9aa09b11/56358724-7eac-45c9-b1bb-d6e76b788258_Photo_1_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/60c60b0c/cac88060-bdc5-4b08-ba58-45344ae40fef_Photo_2_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/114386d3/1df05a3b-7c69-46ed-b601-0532ec1f338b_Photo_3_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/708edb5e/366e8bfa-a429-47d7-9a48-cf7bd04318bd_Photo_4_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/dc30b705/735fd886-5515-4ef3-9683-94e76dcc62a0_Photo_5_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/7892e6b7/f7c0611f-6774-4221-a76a-2bda65351dcc_Photo_6_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/8d9f0d66/0ead3fec-7a6a-4bde-b885-6920e146d389_Photo_7_large.jpg

https://www.cbre.com/resources/fileassets/US-SMPL-146680/d4f44c07/a4ed26b6-29a7-4792-8389-06a56e089c8b_Photo_8_large.jpg

AviationGuy
Apr 5, 2024, 1:57 AM
Very nice.

colemonkee
Apr 6, 2024, 9:51 PM
I for one can't wait to eat at The Food Company.

Wattleigh
Apr 10, 2024, 3:51 PM
Knowles-Rowland House, Phase II

A 15-story tower appears to be planned behind St. John's UMC in Midtown. It looks to be the 2nd phase of a redevelopment plan around the church.

The first phase is a three-story building that would replace an existing gym with 31 temporary housing units for the homeless, among other amenities. This was announced last September (https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/trending/article/knowles-rowland-house-construction-homeless-18382263.php).

This new tower appears as a city planning commission agenda item for tomorrow's meeting.

Photos c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/47417-knowles-rowland-house-1615-gray-st/?do=findComment&comment=695029)

The church in front of the tower site
https://i.imgur.com/tpN3S1Xh.jpg

Site behind the church
https://i.imgur.com/DB9nMuph.jpg

COH Proposed Plat Document c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/47417-knowles-rowland-house-1615-gray-st/?do=findComment&comment=698510)

https://i.imgur.com/HPzFfO7h.png
https://i.imgur.com/XwD4MBrh.png

https://i.imgur.com/uVpexZXh.png

https://i.imgur.com/HJhCTDBh.png
https://i.imgur.com/aSCKF0ih.png

Images from the agenda - c/o j.33 on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/47417-knowles-rowland-house-1615-gray-st/?do=findComment&comment=698845)

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.daa3ded57d619b6c7ff35bdc5f624b2c.png

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.e57548f0830027957bde0ac17b344c40.png

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.645c6426e8c44ffb627ad91c61b487f7.png

https://content.invisioncic.com/w329674/monthly_2024_03/image.png.8a58ee7b58909d8960c5112d4d966c9b.png

https://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/housing/article/bread-of-life-crawford-housing-homeless-knowles-19388231.php

New homeless housing project near Beyoncé-backed complex sparks debate over city development rules

By R.A. Schuetz,
Staff writer
April 10, 2024

A new Bread of Life apartment building next door to the upcoming Knowles-Rowland House aims to provide 13 floors of housing for the formerly homeless. To do so, the nonprofit is asking Houston for permission to build closer than 25 feet from the property line.

But lawyers representing the owners of a block of land nearby have protested that the variance would make the area less pedestrian-friendly, which is the purpose of the city rule limiting how close buildings can be to property lines. The permission could also curb the possibilities for any potential park that could take the place of the bordering Pierce Elevated, which is slated to be removed as part of the Interstate 45 expansion, they said.

Winther Investment's Frederic Gautier-Winther told the Chronicle in 2018 that he planned to turn the block, which currently encompasses a fenced-in park not accessible by the general public, into a high-rise residential development. Winther Investment also developed the 2111 Austin, a 216-unit apartment complex on the adjacent block.

Bread of Life says that without the variance, the land is not large enough to accommodate a new apartment building for Houston's most vulnerable. Documents submitted to the Planning Commission show it plans to provide pedestrians with landscaping on both sides of a six-foot-wide sidewalk along Crawford Street. The first floor of the building would be between 15 and 33 feet away from the curb, with an overhang that would create more room for residences on the floors above.

At the past two Houston Planning Commission meetings, representatives of the fenced-off park and neighbors voiced their opinions. Midtown is at an inflection point, they all agreed. Whether the neighborhood's future had space for the proposed housing for the formerly homeless was a thornier topic. The Planning Commission plans to vote on the variance on April 18.

Wattleigh
Apr 16, 2024, 7:53 PM
LBJ Hospital Expansion

c/o hindesky on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/46123-lyndon-b-johnson-hospital-expansion-at-5656-kelley-st/?do=findComment&comment=700563)

https://i.imgur.com/WB0HRQzh.png
https://i.imgur.com/iqgypQ0h.png

Wattleigh
Apr 18, 2024, 12:48 PM
https://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2024/04/17/fertitta-buys-uptown-river-oaks-properties.html

Tilman Fertitta buys properties near The Post Oak Hotel and River Oaks District, plans upgrades

By Jeff Jeffrey – Senior reporter, Houston Business Journal
Apr 17, 2024

Tilman Fertitta, one of Houston's highest-profile billionaires, has added two high-profile properties in the Uptown-River Oaks corridor to his real estate portfolio.

Fertitta paid an undisclosed amount to acquire the office tower at 777 Post Oak Blvd., as well as a 4.3-acre undeveloped tract at 4702 Westheimer Road.

The announcement did not say whether brokers were involved in the two transactions.

Both properties are adjacent to properties Fertitta already owns.

777 Post Oak Blvd. is situated on 2.28 acres of land at the corner of Post Oak Boulevard and Hollyhurst Lane, next to The Post Oak Hotel. Fertitta opened The Post Oak Hotel at Uptown Houston in 2018, and the hotel currently is Texas’ only Forbes Double Five-Star Hotel and Spa. That property, at 1600 W. Loop S., is just over a mile northwest of River Oaks District.

The nine-story, 176,779-square-foot office building at 777 Post Oak Blvd. was built in 1973, but Houston-based Zeigler Cooper recently designed a complete modernization of the building.

Fertitta said in a news release that walkability upgrades are already underway around the building, which will offer a safer, landscaped sidewalk with direct access to The Post Oak Hotel.

While it’s not clear how much Fertitta paid for the office tower, 777 Post Oak Blvd. had an appraised value of $26.6 million for tax purposes as of Jan. 1.

The tract at 4702 Westheimer Road, meanwhile, is next to River Oaks District, a luxury mixed-use property at 4444 Westheimer Road just inside the 610 Loop that Fertitta acquired last month.

The terms of the transaction for 4702 Westheimer also were not disclosed. However, the property had an appraised value of $6.5 million for tax purposes as of Jan. 1.

Because of its proximity to River Oaks District, the undeveloped tract at 4702 Westheimer offers “numerous opportunities for expansion of the district,” Fertitta said in the release.


Wonder if something is happening next door to 777. Immediately east at 755 Post Oak Blvd, an old bank is being demolished at the moment.

photos c/o Highrise Tower on HAIF (https://www.houstonarchitecture.com/topic/5172-post-oak-corner-tract-at-755-post-oak-blvd/?do=findComment&comment=700683)

https://i.imgur.com/sqPyUzO.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/jHpmFGa.jpeg

https://i.imgur.com/w8gnveC.jpeg