A Row of Old Live Oaks Awaits the Arrival of 75 Townhomes in East Downtown

leeland-oaks-row

Behind this row of 9 live oak trees along Leeland St., one block north of the Gulf Fwy. (and the southern edge of East Downtown), Talia Homes is planning a development of 75 gated homes called Talia Village — on the site of what was, until last summer, the Spencer Company’s Florabunda wholesale nursery at 1609 Ennis St. South of the development is the Metro Auto Storage tow lot; to the east lies what a reader describes as “uh, a large pasture next to the bike trail which is used by somebody’s horses fairly often.”

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Oak Trees Along Leeland St. at Ennis St., East Downtown, Houston

The oak trees, writes the reader, “shade the entire street and touch in the middle. I don’t know the exact age of them, but based on early 1950s aerial photographs, these live oaks were there at that time and some already had a canopy spread of 40 feet or more. So maybe they were planted in the 1930s? Or even earlier? Some are close to two feet in diameter. . . . These trees are really an asset in a part of East Downtown that doesn’t have many assets.”

leeland-oaks-street

Photos: Swamplot inbox

Talia Village Greenery

4 Comment

  • Agree with the reader. I would add the East Downtown Management district has begun a promenade extending several blocks south from Dynamo stadium. Hopefully in time, the trees recently planted along the pathways there will one day resemble the canopy on Leeland.

  • Nothing screams “gentrification” more than gated communities.

  • Hope the builder isn’t associated with any Burger King franchises! If so, these trees may disappear in the dark of the night and become sawdust filler for a Whooper!

  • ive seen the horse(s) a few times! i think the downtown horse and carriage people have a stable nearby