These five structures made a choice to work, a choice to sacrifice, to put themselves on the line for years, to represent you, this city. That kind of commitment and effort deserves and demands your respect. This is your team.
These five structures made a choice to work, a choice to sacrifice, to put themselves on the line for years, to represent you, this city. That kind of commitment and effort deserves and demands your respect. This is your team.
Tired of all that house chopping? You can cross these off your list:
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
These four sure had a lot of gall, to be so useless and all…
Nothing new to tear down in today’s report. Sorry. Don’t you have some unfinished finishing business you could keep working on?
A funky bunch of buildings gets ready to strip down:
Whaddya say? Should it be thumbs up or thumbs down for these prize residential properties? And . . . whose thumbs?
No permits were issued Monday — a day off for the City of Houston.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Today’s report combines the last demolitions permitted last year, on Thursday and Friday. A little more wire steel and wire cleanup in the Heights, plus a smattering of shatterings further out:
It’s the end-of-year rush. Don’t get left behind! Get yer demo permits now.
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The demos return with a sextuple knockdown, including an odd little mod on Mignon and an old 1928ish number hogging too much land in the Museum District.
Demo fans, your late Christmas gifts will arrive . . . tomorrow. The long holiday weekend for city employees — and doomed structures — only ended today.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
’Twas the night before Christmas, and if you had a teardown house, not a demo permit was stirring, because city offices were closed. Try again today, and we’ll list it tomorrow.
Set with care under a few trees in the nick of time: a few hot items, including a mid-century mod in River Oaks and a colonial revival from 1928 taking up 2 lots in Boulevard Oaks. Plus, a kickoff for Kickerillo:
Pounding the pavement to bring you Houston’s best pavement pounders. And here they are:
Can’t we use wit as a pitchfork and drive these brutes off?