Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Woe, destruction, ruin, and decay; the worst is demolition and demolition will have his day.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Woe, destruction, ruin, and decay; the worst is demolition and demolition will have his day.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
People may hear your words, but they feel your demolitions.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
If it can be destroyed by the excavator, it deserves to be destroyed by the excavator.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
If everything seems under control, you’re not demolishing fast enough.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Demolition is not a long race; it is many short races one after the other.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
The end of these buildings doesn’t mean that it’s over.
Bankruptcy and, today, demolition — so ends the journey for the Black-eyed Pea at 4211 Bellaire Blvd. Swirling rumors and previously filed variance requests suggested that apartments would go up on the site, and an actual design for a multifamily midrise was even floating around as early as last year — but the property changed hands again in the fall, as a reader noted.  The new plan for the site, evidently part of Dallas-based serial apartment developer Ojala Holdings’s bid to cash in on the Texas big-box storage market, looks to be a 4-story storage facility. And permitting reviews look to have started in the fall, not long after Ojala’s Uncle-Bob’s-turned-Life Storage got wrapped up across from the no-longer-listed-for-lease Wabash Feed Store:
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
They left tracks in history that will never be demolished by wind or rain, never plowed under by tractors, never buried in compost of events.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
I have not failed. I’ve just found 10,000 buildings that won’t work.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Tomorrow is a new day; you shall begin it serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old demolitions.
First on Linbeck’s docket for the block across Prairie St. from the slowly dissolving former Chronicle building: the 11-story parking garage rendered above. The structure is planned for the southern half of the block between Prairie St. and Market Square, which means the restaurant space depicted in the rendering will face Travis St. (presuming the retail spot is not just part of a clever disguise). The garage is being branded as One Market Square until such time as something a little taller goes up next to it and takes the name, joining Market Square Tower and Aris Market Square along Preston St. to either side.
Back across Prairie St., the wrapped-together collection of buildings formerly housing the Houston Chronicle‘s operations has been getting slowly disassembled since a judge ruled over the summer that Hines could carefully demo the structures. A couple of high-up shot from this morning (above, and below) shows the current state of affairs inside the rubble-in-progress:
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
You can hide memories, but you can’t erase the demolition that produced them.
The excavator treatment is complete for that subset of Archstone Memorial Heights apartment buildings that’ll be replaced by a mixed-use midrise with an H-E-B at the bottom, a neighbor notes. The shot above shows one of the buildings midway through the deconstruction process, which began earlier this month after that fenceless gate showed up on the site. Also noted during the demo weeks — a handful of firefighters rappelling down the side of the empty unit above.
As of about sunset yesterday, the site is now fully emptied out:
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Maimed, spoiled for aspiration: farewell buildings!
The 10-story tower segment of the Americana building at 811 Dallas St. is now undergoing disassembly, Nancy Sarnoff confirms this afternoon. A few folks caught sight of the tell-tale orange barricades and fencing around the base of the tower over the weekend; the view above was captured from Milam St. and shows the defunct former Subway on the Dallas corner of the block. Hilcorp, which owns the site (and also wrapped up its new tower across Travis St. on the site of the Foley’s blowup early last year), hasn’t yet announced further-down-the-line plans for the block. No explosives are part of the plan for this demo, however — the tower will be taken apart piece by piece, leaving the parking garage intact.
Photo: ThaChadwick