- Retail Center Could Break Ground on Former ExxonMobil Brookhollow Campus Next Year [Realty News Report]
- Multifamily, Office, Mixed-Use Developers Interested in Former Dow Chemical Co. Site in Westchase [HBJ; previously on Swamplot]
- 1,674 Condos Sold in Houston from January to May, Up 11.2% Over Same Time Last Year [Culturemap]
- Drees Custom Homes Targeting Empty Nesters with Grand Central Park Floorplans [Houston Chronicle]
- Rent Gap Between Houston Apartment Classes Among Largest Nationally [HBJ]
- Boutique Bowling Alley Restaurant Bowl & Barrel Slated To Open Today in CityCentre [Eater Houston]
- Raising Cane’s To Add 3 Restaurants in Houston Area [Houston Chronicle; previously on Swamplot]
- Despite Opposition, Alief Likely Getting a ‘Little Saigon’ [Houston Press]
- Closed Since ‘Tax Day’ Flood, Johnny Steele Dog Park Reopens on Buffalo Bayou [Houston Chronicle; previously on Swamplot]
- 5 Big Ideas for Houston Metro’s Future [The Urban Edge]
- At Least 600 More Potholes Have Been Filled So Far This Year Versus All of 2015 [Houston Chronicle]
- Engineers Studying If White Oak Bayou Could Return to a More Natural State [Houston Public Media; previously on Swamplot]
- Mapping Third Ward’s Vacant Lots Where Landmarks Once Stood [Houston Public Media]
- Woodlands Pavilion Ranked Most Popular Outdoor Amphitheater in the World [Culturemap]
Photo of East Downtown: Russell Hancock via Swamplot Flickr Pool
Headlines
From the White Oak Bayou article:
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“And if they can do that work, Zeve expects it would be an extensive effort involving multiple city and county departments and costing millions of dollars.”
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How can they justify spending millions of dollars to make the bayou prettier when we’re losing billions of dollars to floods? Even if the beautification doesn’t make things worse, even if it makes them slightly better (which I doubt it can) there have to be other places to spend that money that will better reduce the economic impact of flooding.
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Wouldn’t it be cheaper to buy everyone in the Heights some augmented reality glasses that cover the concrete with wildflowers and bunnies?
@Memebag, people in the heights already live with augmented reality glasses. Their glasses automatically delete the realities of blight, crime, terrible traffic, mediocre schools, and overrated restaurants.
I think we should jack up all the structures like they did in Galveston after the Great Hurricane. During a flood, Houston would become the Venice of the Western Hemisphere. Also, I believe the city should have to account for the flooding caused by their pothole program. Think about all the water those potholes would have retained, that will now flow directly into the bayous, increasing flooding.
that lovely building in the photo is the hq of houston design company primer grey
The flood control district should buy the under-developed acres homes area and turn it into a spillway / public park. Sort of like Keith-Weiss on Halls Bayou.
I’m not sure that I understand why someone would tear down the Brookhollow buildings for retail when there’s an empty shopping mall across the freeway. The demolition would be far easier, and it is at least as accessible from the freeways and surface roads.
Yep, those Brookhollow offices look tough to demolish. Lots of concrete in those Brutalist style structures.
Removing the concrete from the bayou is not just about making the bayou “prettier”, even though this city could benefit from every dollar invested in aesthetics. The natural bayou is full of plants that help filter flood water and mitigate pollution before it gets into the bay. It would also be a much improved environment for birds and other wildlife, which is also very important considering the rate of habitat destruction and isolation due to booming development in Houston. It can even help with our urban heat island problem. All that concrete cooks in the sun and reflects heat day and night. A natural bayou landscape would absorb heat. Our bayous and flood ways are our only natural asset in Houston. We have no mountains, lakes or shoreline. When we invest in our flood control system to make it into attractive and useable free space (like Buffalo Bayou park and Willow Waterhole), we see real benefits in the environment and in property values that well exceed the investment.