A swing! And down goes . . . a golf shop. And a restaurant. And a house. Swamplot’s daily report on Houston demolition permits begins after the jump.
A swing! And down goes . . . a golf shop. And a restaurant. And a house. Swamplot’s daily report on Houston demolition permits begins after the jump.
Eight homes, one taqueria, one credit union, and a whole mess of apartments are ready to get down. Houston demolition-permit addresses revealed—after the jump.
Train buildings, plane buildings, and automobile buildings meet with destruction in today’s Houston demolition listings. As usual, addresses are after the jump.
Five homesites and a school get ready for clearing in today’s address listing of Houston demolitions. Learn those addresses after the jump.
In today’s list of doomed Houston buildings: Five houses. See the addresses where they soon will have been—after the jump.
A shoe-repair store near Hobby airport is just one of the exciting doomed structures in our daily report of Houston demolition reports. See the rest of it after the jump.
Just one home goes bye-bye in today’s report. Where is it? Read on to find out.
Today’s demolition report is short and sweet: Two houses in Shady Acres, side by side, falling together. Sounds kinda poetic, huh? You’ll find our not-quite-haiku-quality address listing after the jump.
Two homes and a gas station get their walking papers in today’s list of Houston demolition permits. You’ll find the addresses, as always, after the jump.
Amazing what a little “freshening up” can do for a city, isn’t it? A little trim, please! Now doesn’t that look better? Our daily list of approved Houston demolition permits begins after the jump.
Washers and dryers are set free, along with a handful of homes. Find out what’s going down in our daily list of demo sites, after the jump.
A Canal St. warehouse and a club in a park are among the latest casualties of Houston’s long-running demolition drive. Our daily list of permitted take-downs begins after the jump.
What a way to make up for yesterday! Finally, demolition permits are issued for more than a dozen addresses within the almost-full-block at Main and Rusk being offed to make way for Hines’s MainPlace downtown — including the historic 1912 Beatty-West Building, the 1940 former Bond Clothes store, and the 11-story Montagu Hotel, originally the 1913 Hotel Cotton. Plus: Way, way down Main St., the Droubi’s railroad car at Kirby Dr. finally leaves the station.
Our list of colorful names and addresses of stores-no-more, as usual, begin after the jump.
What? Is there nothing left to tear down? The City of Houston’s code enforcement group indicates that no demolition permits were issued in the entire city yesterday.
This is ridiculous. There’s plenty of stuff still standing. How we gonna make any progress in Houston if everyone just decides to take a day off?
More demo in the Village and along San Felipe in today’s dusty address list. You’ll find it after the jump.