01/30/17 8:30am

mural-super-bowl

Photo of Midtown’s “Preservons la Creation”: Ruben S. via Swamplot Flickr Pool

Headlines
01/27/17 5:30pm

Dillon Kyle Architecture office, 1500 W. Alabama St., Menil, Houston, 77006

Dillon Kyle Architects’s new dramatically cantilevered headquarters at 1500 West Alabama at the corner with Mulberry St. is now largely enveloped by the leafy wooden screens mentioned in the firm’s announcement of the building early last year. The company moved into the space in December, around the time work crews wrapped up most of the cherry-picker-assisted installation of the paneling (shown below):

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Both Made of Trees
01/27/17 3:00pm

Astrodome Super Bowl Lighting Rendering
 
After a few years of mulling it over, the Texas Historical Commission voted this morning to give State Antiquities Landmark status to the Astrodome (formally known, the agency notes, as the Harris County Domed Stadium). About a dozen Houston buildings have the designation (which can also go to shipwrecks and archaeological sites); the status means that any attempts to “remove, alter, damage, salvage, or excavate” the Dome — a spread of activity which probably includes installing that parking garage in the bottom — will now also need a permit from the state. 

THC’s Executive Director Mark Wolfe says in this morning’s statement that the Dome is “one of the most significant sports and entertainment venues in history, setting the standard for modern facilities around the world.” The structure will continue adding to its sports resume during the impending Super Bowl week by storing Super Bowl-related things and being lit up nearby (as rendered above).

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Under State Protection
01/27/17 12:30pm

Rendering of Levy Park, 3801 Eastside St. at Richmond Ave., Upper Kirby, Houston

Levy Park, 3801 Eastside St., Upper Kirby/Greenway Plaza, Houston, TX 77098
Levy Park, 3801 Eastside St., Upper Kirby/Greenway Plaza, Houston, TX 77098The new swirls and swoops around Levy Park are starting to look more like those previously released renderings of the space’s total facelift, as a planned February 25th reopening date draws near. The Levy Park Conservancy is throwing an opening party that day, including art performances, workshops, gardening demos, and piano music (presumably from the moveable park piano.) The group sends along some photos of the increasingly colorful construction site, from the spiraling walking path both pictured and rendered above, to the repurposed double-decker bus that’ll eventually sit alongside the park’s main open greenspace to tend a beer garden. The bus previously made an appearance in this rendering of the lumpy triangular dog park:

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Sprouting in Kirby Grove
01/27/17 12:00pm

Downtown Houston Skyline

Today our sponsor is Houston’s own Central Bank. Thank you for the continuing support of Swamplot!

Central Bank has 4 (central) Houston branches available to meet your business or personal needs: in Midtown, the Heights, West Houston, and Post Oak Place.

Central Bank believes that change is essential to its success; the company actively pursues the latest in service, technology, and products. Central Bank aims to know its customers personally and to be their primary business and personal financial resource. The bank’s staff values relationships and strives to be available when you need them.

To learn more about how Central Bank can meet your banking needs, please call any of the following Senior Vice Presidents: Kenny Beard, at 832.485.2376; Bonnie Purvis, at 832.485.2354; Gary Noble, at 832.485.2366; or Ryan Tillman, at 832.485.2307. You can also find out more on the bank’s website.

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Sponsor of the Day
01/27/17 9:30am

DECADES-OLD JIMMY’S ICE HOUSE ON WHITE OAK DR. TO TURN BRAUN, CHANGE NAME, TENANTS Jimmy's Ice House, 2803 White Oak Dr., Houston Heights, Houston, 77007 The current owners of Jimmy’s Ice House at the corner of White Oak Dr. and Threlkeld St. are in the middle of working out a sales agreement with serial redeveloper Braun Enterprises, Jim Reynolds reports this week. The late eponymous Jimmie Murray opened the place back in the late 1940s; the bar is currently owned by a group including Jimmie’s son’s widow. Current co-owner Eric Quinn says the likely plan is for Braun to lease the space out to a new tenant, who definitely won’t use the Jimmy’s Ice House name; he also notes that various grandfathered building code violations mean remodeling may be prohibitively expensive. Jimmy’s Ice House sits across Threlkeld from the Studewood BB’s Cafe, and across White Oak Dr. from the South Heights Retail Center, near both Fitzgerald’s and Christian’s Tailgate. The -ie to -y swap looks to have happened around the time the current owners bought the place in 2008, as part of the signage switch from Jimmie’s Place. [The Leader] Photo of Jimmy’s Ice House at 2803 White Oak Dr.: David Richmond/Houston Ice House

01/27/17 8:30am

local-foods

Photo of Local Foods Downtown: Marc Longoria via Swamplot Flickr Pool

Headlines
01/26/17 1:45pm

Rice Village parking meters, Morningside Dr. at University Blvd., Rice Village, Houston, 77005

The latest edits to the Rice Village area’s look include the installation of the above parking meters for the spaces along Morningside Dr., as captured by a reader this morning. The Rice Village District folks announced in January that the formerly free spots around shopping complex will become pay spots in February. There will still be free parking in the area, for those who watch the clock: parking in the garage between Morningside and Kelvin St. and on the rooftop lot on across Kelvin will be free for the first 2 hours.

The changes appear to fall in line with some of the suggestions made in a 2015 Kinder Institute report on the area’s parking congestion and access inefficiencies; the authors noted at the time that the shopping district always had at least 1,000 unused parking spots even at times when parking seemed hardest to find (like during the peak of the weekday lunch rush).

The to-be-metered zones are marked in light blue in the map below; those zones include the spaces around the former Village Arcade structures between Kirby Dr. and Morningside along University, as well as parts of Times and Rice boulevards and parts of Amherst St.:

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Spot Spotting
01/26/17 12:00pm

Downtown Houston Skyline with Cranes at Night

Swamplot is brought to you today by the Downtown District — also known as the Houston Downtown Management District. Thanks for supporting Swamplot!

Super Bowl LI is just days away! And Downtown Houston is a flurry of activity — as some big projects reach completion, new restaurants serve their first meals, and businesses throughout the area dress up their windows. It might feel as if this is all for the big game, but the development underway is the result of years of planning and collaboration that will affect the city for decades to come.

An astounding $2.8 billion in new construction projects have recently been completed or are currently underway in Downtown — including 16 residential properties, 7 hotels, 3 highrise office buildings, a new campus for the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts, major improvements to the George R. Brown Convention Center (GRB), and several public parking garages.

Much of Downtown Houston’s growth can be attributed to the city’s focus on increasing the residential population in the area — which is needed to achieve a high-energy vibe in the district. There are currently more than 65,000 residents in Greater Downtown and 5,400 residents within the Downtown District’s boundaries; that number is expected to more than double over the next few years, thanks to the city’s Downtown Living Initiative, a tax-incentive program created in 2012 to encourage new mixed-use multifamily residential developments Downtown.

The number of hotels Downtown has grown from 15 to 22 — just in time for Super Bowl LI. This helps make Downtown a better destination not only for business travelers and conventioneers but for weekend wanderers as well. Transformational interior and exterior enhancements to the GRB include the addition of 5 new restaurants, a new grand entrance, and a new people-friendly plaza called Avenida Houston that accommodates public art, alfresco dining, casual gatherings and, of course, Super Bowl festivities.

Thanks in large part to the boom in residential and hospitality development, award-winning chefs and restaurateurs have been creating new restaurants Downtown. Among the establishments that have opened or are close to opening in the area around the GRB and Avenida Houston are Xochi, Grotto, Biggio’s, and Brasserie du Parc. Historic Market Square has also welcomed newcomers to the neighborhood, including Dizzy Kaktus, Craft Beer Cellar, and Houston favorite Local Foods.

Want to learn more about the latest developments Downtown, as well as what’s coming in the future? Please visit the development page of the Downtown Houston website.

Get involved in the web publication where Houstonians learn more about their neighborhoods. Become a Swamplot sponsor.

Sponsor of the Day
01/26/17 11:15am

WHITE OAK MUSIC HALL’S OUTDOOR SOUNDMAKING CAPPED UNTIL TRIAL IN MAY White Oak Music Hall Lawsuit Map, Near NorthsideThe judge judging the lawsuit filed by some Near Northside residents against White Oak Music Hall has issued another temporary injunction this week, this time limiting the venue to no more than 2 events on the venue’s outdoor Lawn area between now and May 15th, according to a document filed with the county clerk’s office. That means the Pixies show recently announced for April will still happen as planned (though the venue will have to pay for sound monitoring to prove they’re not passing city decibel limits, or cranking up the bass more than the order allows). Chris Gray writes that outdoor shows at the Raven Tower aren’t affected, as long as they comply with the volume and vibration metrics; a press release from the venue says all the indoor shows at both venues are still on as well. [Houston Press; previously on Swamplot] Image of map submitted in Theresa Cavin et al v. White Oak Events, LLC: Harris County District Clerk’s office

01/26/17 8:30am

Brays-Bayou

Photo of Brays Bayou: Jan Buchholtz via Swamplot Flickr Pool

Headlines