12/16/09 4:32pm

Only 3 categories in the Swamplot Awards for Real Estate remain open for your nominations. If you’ve got a good suggestion for Houston Neighborhood of the Year or Grocery Store of the Year, please make it today. Nominations for both will close at the crack of dawn tomorrow.

This morning, nominations closed for 2 earlier categories: Most Underappreciated Neighborhood and Most Overappreciated Neighborhood. Yesterday we announced the official nominees and began voting for Best Teardown. We’ll be doing the same for the “Only in Houston” Award and today’s 2 categories next.

Meanwhile, it looks like some of you have taken the hint and started your own email and social media campaigns in support of your favorite candidates. Here’s a list of all the categories that are now open for voting. Remember, you can rack up an extra vote in each category if you send it through Twitter! Voting in all the categories will end at 5 pm on Monday, December 28th.

12/15/09 4:57pm

Yes, it’s true: This year you can actually vote twice for each category in the Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. Once in the usual way (through comments or emails, as we’ve spelled out before) and — if you like — a second time on Twitter.

We’ve spelled out the rules for Twitter voting in a brief post, but it’s not too complicated. (The short version? Give us a #swampies and a @Swamplot, name the category and your vote.) For these votes to count, of course, you’ll need to be following Swamplot on Twitter first.

12/15/09 11:31am

Nominations closed for 2 more award categories early this morning: Best Teardown of the Year and the “Only in Houston” award. We’ll announce the official nominees and open the voting for both today. Voting began late yesterday for Favorite Houston Design Cliche and Best Vacancy.

We’ve also posted the official voting rules. Please note that campaigning for your favorite award candidates — by sending out emails to friends, Twittering, or posting about the contest in forums, other blogs, or on Facebook, for example — is highly encouraged. Start a groundswell for your choices!

And there’s something new this year: If you follow the rules, there’s a way to vote for your nominees twice! We’ll post more about that later today.

There’s still just a bit more time for you to submit your nominations for the 5 remaining categories. The deadline for submissions for the Most Underappreciated Neighborhood and Most Overappreciated Neighborhood awards is early tomorrow morning. Got any last minute suggestions — or improvements to the nominations that have already been submitted?

12/14/09 9:56am

Nominations are now closed for the first 2 of the 9 categories in this year’s Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. We’ll be announcing the official nominees and opening the voting for these categories — Favorite Houston Design Cliché and Best Vacancy — later today.

This means there are now less than 24 hours left to make your nominations for the next 2 categories. We have some great nominations for the first of them, Best Teardown of the Year, but it’s clear that the second category — the “Only in Houston” Award — needs some attention. What potential award winners are missing?

Nominations will close as the sun rises tomorrow. Help save these 2 award categories with your smart nominations!

12/11/09 4:41pm

Voting begins next week for this year’s Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. Some terrific nominations have already come in for many categories, but we still need your help to make sure that all the candidates are the right ones, and that each is presented in the best possible light.

So if you see something missing from any award category, please add your nomination now! Or if you think you can improve on any of the explanations submitted with a nomination you like, feel free to write in with your own better presentation. Got photos of any of the nominees? Please send them!

Early Monday morning, nominations will close for the first two award categories: Favorite Houston Design Cliché and Best Vacancy. Then we’ll announce the official slate of nominees for those awards and open them for voting. We’ll close nominations and open the voting for the next two categories on Tuesday. There’ll be two more each on Wednesday and Thursday, and the final one on Friday.

There’s still plenty of time to contribute. Add your nominations to the comments section below the post that announces each category. Or send them to us in an email. Who are the contenders in Houston real estate this year? What deserves recognition?

12/11/09 10:50am

We’ve announced 8 categories so far in the 2009 Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate: Grocery Store of the Year, Neighborhood of the Year, Most Overappreciated Neighborhood, Most Underappreciated Neighborhood, The “Only in Houston” Award, Best Teardown of the Year, Best Vacancy, and Favorite Houston Design Cliché. What’s left to cover?

We’re down to the last category — which may be the hardest one to fill. What was the Greatest Moment in Houston Real Estate of 2009? This year we had no newly shuttered stadiums, no hurricanes blowing through, no expensive new parks opening Downtown.

And yet Swamplot is dedicated to covering great moments in Houston real estate. That’s why we’re here. Did we miss a few this year? Browse through the site if it’ll help you to draw up a list of contenders; or raid your own memory banks. Then tell us what moment deserves this recognition.

A great moment is lost if there’s no one there to chronicle it or cherish it. Which is why we need your help. Add your comments or send us an email describing the moments you’d like to nominate.

12/10/09 2:57pm

This is it: The next-to-last category in this year’s Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. So far, we’ve opened nominations for Neighborhood of the Year, Most Overappreciated Neighborhood, Most Underappreciated Neighborhood, The “Only in Houston” Award, Best Teardown of the Year, Best Vacancy, and Favorite Houston Design Cliché.

What is it with Houstonians and their grocery stores? We dunno, but how about we bring it all to the fore in the battle for the award in our 8th category: Grocery Store of the Year. Which of the greater Houston area’s many fine coupon-accepting, candy-and-gum-displaying, veggie-bagging establishments deserves this title — and why? (Yes, the award is meant for an individual store, not a company.)

If you’re new to the Swampies, be sure to read the official nominating rules. We need your smart, succinct nominations! Add them in a comment below or send them to us in a private email. If you’ve got photos to contribute, send them too. Let the grocery wars begin! Or . . . continue!

12/10/09 2:18pm

If you want to participate in our latest group photo feature, tonight’s the deadline! Submit your photos to the Swamplot Flickr pool by midnight. This time we’re looking for pix taken within 500 ft. of the intersection of Bellaire Blvd. and Bissonnet St. in Bellaire.

Make sure your photos are tagged “Bellaire & Bissonnet,” and that you haven’t disabled Flickr’s galleries feature on your account. Some great photos have already been submitted. Got any more to share?

12/10/09 10:19am

We’re on the home stretch! Yesterday we opened two more categories for nominations in this, our second-annual Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. Here’s the list of categories introduced so far: Most Overappreciated Neighborhood, Most Underappreciated Neighborhood, The “Only in Houston” Award, Best Teardown of the Year, Best Vacancy, and Favorite Houston Design Cliché. To make these awards as smart and razzle-dazzly as they can be, we need you to add your suggestions!

And now our next category: Neighborhood of the Year. What qualifications does a neighborhood need to meet in order to be declared Houston Neighborhood of the Year? You tell us — as you make your nomination! Of course, a neighborhood might be considered for Swamplot’s Neighborhood of the Year award for vastly different reasons than another one might be considered for an award of the same name from, say, the GHBA.

Please note that entrants in this category — as well as all the others — need not be located strictly inside Houston’s municipal boundaries. As longtime Swamplot readers will note, we try to track the idea of Houston as it regularly travels outside the city limits. Who’da thunk it, but last year’s “Only in Houston” award, for example, went to a rollercoaster-and-residence combo in Kemah.

Add your nominations in the comments below, or send us an email. If you need more guidance, consult the official rules. Who are the contenders?

12/09/09 3:37pm

It’s neighborhood day here at Swampies Nominations Central! This morning we introduced the 5th category in the second annual Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. Here’s the complete list of our categories so far: Most Underappreciated Neighborhood, The “Only in Houston” Award, Best Teardown of the Year, Best Vacancy, and Favorite Houston Design Cliché.

Now it’s time to gather your nominations for category number 6: Most Overappreciated Neighborhood. If recognition breeds attraction, which breeds appreciation, and which in turn often breeds a different kind of appreciation, what changes will a neighborhood go through during the process? In which neighborhood are property owners are most likely to be shocked by reappraisals? Which area best fits the Most Overappreciated label?

Refer to the official nominating rules here if you need them. But we need your smartly worded suggestions for this category! Add them below — or email them to us privately.

12/09/09 11:34am

Yesterday we announced a couple more categories in this year’s Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. That means 4 categories are now open for your nominations: The “Only in Houston” Award, Best Teardown of the Year, Best Vacancy, and Favorite Houston Design Cliché. We need your suggestions for all of them!

Now we have our next category: the Most Underappreciated Neighborhood. We Houstonians show our appreciation for different neighborhoods in various ways. And when the timing and the market are right, neighborhoods often respond in kind — with some appreciation of their own. Sadly, many fine parts of this city simply miss out on one type of appreciation, the other, or both — when clearly they deserve some. Here’s our chance to recognize and cheer on these underperformers! Which neighborhood in this town is most suited to the Most Underappreciated title — and why?

This is a brand-new award category for the Swampies, and we’ll need your smart nominations to make it work. Tell us which neighborhood should receive this singular honor — in a comment below or in a private message. Consult the official nominating rules if you like. What’s your choice?

12/08/09 3:47pm

So far, we’ve begun accepting nominations for 3 categories in the Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate: Favorite Houston Design Cliché, Best Vacancy, and Best Teardown. Up next: a very special prize that celebrates the unique character of our very special city — it’s called the “Only in Houston” Award.

You may have noticed a few differences between Houston and many other places — especially when it comes to this city’s real estate landscape. This award is meant to celebrate an event, circumstance, development, or phenomenon of the past year that could only have manifested itself hereabouts. Or somewhere around hereabouts. Or maybe, okay, it happened somewhere else too, but it really seems like a Houston thing, anyway.

As usual, your spin can make the difference between a possibly dull and obvious entry and a compelling choice for the award. So think hard, reframe the ordinary to make it seem extraordinary (and consult the nominating guidelines if you need to). Then submit your nominations!

12/08/09 9:19am

Yesterday we introduced the first 2 nominating categories in the Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. Nominations will remain open until the crack of dawn next Monday for both awards: Favorite Houston Design Cliché and Best Vacancy.

Today, there are 2 more award categories to introduce. And the first is one you’ve been waiting for: Best Teardown of 2009. What property would you nominate for this singular honor — and why?

Sure, teardowns are raw, physical acts, but there are emotional, historical, cultural, artistic, literary, sonic, and ecological aspects to consider too. Add your thoughtful and well-argued nominations for this coveted award to the comments section below — or send them in a private message to Swamplot HQ. If you’d like a more complete description of the nominating process, see these instructions.

It’s time to knock out the nominations for this category. Give us what you’ve got!

12/07/09 8:00pm

Earlier today, we introduced the first category in the Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate, celebrating the year’s best and most. And now nominations are open in a second category: Best Vacancy.

Mind the gaps! For Houston, 2009 was a year full of them. New empty lots took up residence where older buildings and newer but suddenly unfunded dreams once resided. Gaping holes in balance sheets swallowed up banks, homebuilders, and development schemes, leaving new but incomplete neighborhoods, vacated and foreclosed homes, unsold condos. So many holes, big and small! Which Houston vacancy of the last year most deserves recognition — and why?

You can help your nominee win this award by introducing your choice well. If you’d like to make a nomination, we suggest reading the brief instructions summarized here. The comments (and the Swamplot tip line) are now open for your nominations in this category.

12/07/09 10:40am

It’s time to begin the nominating process for the second annual Swamplot Awards for Houston Real Estate. The awards cover the best and most of Houston Real Estate over the past calendar year. To make these awards the best they can be, we need your input!

Our first category this year: Favorite Houston Design Cliché. Last year’s winner, you’ll recall, was “Tuscanization,” with home turrets coming in a close — and only partially redundant — second place. What Houston building, shopping center, streetscape, home, interior, neighborhood, or yard cliché deserves recognition this year? Your suggestions may be inspired from stories on Swamplot or from your own keen eye.

Nominations for this category are now open! Enter your nomination in a comment to this post only or — more privately — to the Swamplot tip line, with the subject line “Nomination: Favorite Houston Design Cliche.” Nominations will be accepted for one full week, after which the best-presented choices will be opened for voting.

You may submit as many nominations as you like in this category, but your choices will have a better chance of succeeding if you use your nomination to make your point in a clever and convincing way. When the actual awards are open for voting next week, each selected nomination will be introduced with some edited bastardization of the arguments readers made in the nomination — so be eloquent and persuasive! Submitting photos in support of your nomination is encouraged — illustrations will likely help make your case to voters. Send them to the Swamplot tip line; be sure to identify them and indicate what they’re for.

Comments to this post will be counted as nominations only. Nominations may be seconded, expanded, or improved. Even simple “me too” posts will help an entry find a place on the actual ballot, but they won’t be counted as votes for the winner. The actual voting in this category will begin next week. Stay tuned!