Is this for real? According to city records, no building demolitions were permitted yesterday. May be a good day to take the excavator for a loop around the park or something.
Is this for real? According to city records, no building demolitions were permitted yesterday. May be a good day to take the excavator for a loop around the park or something.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
Core and Shell demolition in today’s report. Four addresses of devastation, after the jump.
Two streets. Two houses. Too late. Too bad.
It’s the end of the line for a few orphaned structures, as well as a gas station and some homes already spoken for. All the addresses for today’s takedowns are below the fold.
Another day, another load of rubble! Five delisted structures round out our daily list, which you’ll find after the jump:
In today’s report: some good hunting in Garden Villas; plus a house in Archers Acres that’s ripe for the taking.
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
So there may not be a whole lot of demos in today’s report, but they’re really high quality ones, okay? Check them out . . . after the jump.
A little urban renewal for the slums of West U., plus: Waves of destruction reach the far shore of Lake Houston. A little more excitement — and our handy demo-address guide — can be found after the jump.
It’s a demolition bonanza! There are 46 buildings in today’s report, including a gas station, some apartments, and an entire congregation of church buildings. Our address list is your guide to all the action.
That’s more like it: Demos in River Oaks, Memorial Bend, and Southampton — plus a few less pricy neighborhoods — in today’s report. Addresses are below!
Four homes in two neighborhoods is all today; come back tomorrow for more house-reduction fun!
Swamplot’s Daily Demolition Report lists buildings that received City of Houston demolition permits the previous weekday.
In today’s report: The final test of the Dustless Air Filter, plus the more cloudy futures of three Houston homes. Addresses are listed below.
This landscape plan from the Boymelgreen website is our first glimpse of the two condo towers the company is planning for 5.5 acres on the southwest corner of the intersection of San Felipe and a short segment of Woodway — just west of Voss, on the Right Bank of Buffalo Bayou. And this morning the Houston Business Journal has more to report:
New York City-based Boymelgreen Developers is developing the project for landowner Azorim, a publicly traded company in Israel of which Boymelgreen owns 64 percent. . . . The unnamed project will consist of two buildings with 28 residential floors each and an 18,000-square-foot fitness center and spa. The project will have a total of 237 condos starting at $1 million each. Units will be an average size of 2,500 square feet.
The architect is Ziegler Cooper. Boymelgreen’s website refers to the project as the San Felipe Condominiums. (And it reports a building that’s 14 condos smaller.)
Jennifer Dawson’s report in the HBJ says that sales won’t start until the fall, after a sales center — which will later “be converted into a spa, restaurant or office building” — is built on the site of the former Dolce & Freddo next door.
Below the fold: That 1960s office-and-shopping center on the site won’t go quietly!
Some cracking-up in the academy, plus the deformation of two former residences: That’s all there is in today’s report. Track them all . . . after the jump.
Space cleared near Johnson Space Center, a school smashed on Aldine Westfield, and a gas station given up on Gessner: The action’s all between the lines of our daily demo address list.