Old Houston Roadways
#1
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 1:17 PM
This spawned a whole new interest in locating other similar abandoned roads on my side of town, because using Historic Aerials and Google Earth, I was able to discover a whole bunch of other roads that have been bypassed, cut off, or re-purposed. I am finding more and more by using the time comparison feature. I thought I would share my information for others with similar interests.
1.)Addicks Fairbanks Rd: (There is a whole thread about this). Find Eldridge Parkway and Patterson Road. Directly north of Patterson and west of the present day Eldridge Parkway is a small portion of the old road pointing north then sharply east. Further south along Eldridge Parkway is another abandoned road that no longer appears on maps called "Lamb Rd." It once led to a farm, but has been closed off for decades. Lamb Rd. will lead you to the mysterious circles cut into the forest, one of which resembles an upside down cross. This used to be some sort of fish farm or other manmade structure, but it is now only a fossil etched into the greenery.
2.)FM 529/Spencer Rd: Before FM 529 intersects the 290 freeway, it takes a slight curve to the south near Golden Gate Drive. If you ignore the curve and follow the map in a straight line, you will see an abandoned segment of the old two-lane Spencer Rd. aiming towards 290. This expansion was done between 1987 & 1989 according to maps, and has been left to decay ever since. FM 529 used to meet up with Hempstead Road until the 290 freeway reached this area of town, and Hempstead Rd. was overrun by the 290 eastbound feeder. The old portion of 529 was barricaded off with concrete guardrail pieces, and has been used as a dumping site for tree branches, and old appliances. You can still see the railroad crossing markings on the pavement, and can still manage to get a car on the old road, although the area has gotten a bit dodgy, and I would not recommend visiting alone.
3.)Little York/Hillcrest: Further along 290 near the Beltway 8 interchange, there is a small asphalt road behind Carpet Texas labeled simply "Little York". It runs east and then turns north, but the freeway bisects the road, which resumes on the other side of the freeway under the name "Hillcrest". The road is barricaded off on both ends, but is still clearly an old two lane blacktop road. The road is pictured as far back as 1944 on Google Earth, long before any freeway reached out into west Houston.
4.)Telge Rd: South of 290, but west of the current Telge Road path, is an older, narrower road that is labeled Cameron Rd. on maps, but it is now off-limits to public traffic. The road, which runs in a straight line, unlike modern Telge Road, is now enclosed within the perimeter fence of the factories there, and is used as an intercompany transit route. The general public cannot get on this road, but it can still be seen in aerial photos.
5.)Cypress North Houston Rd: Between Huffmeister and Eldridge Parkway, Cypress North Houston runs east/west, and then curves smoothly to the northeast near Tall Forest Drive. This was done to bypass a dangerous curve (circa 1970s), but they left the old corner of road intact, which now serves as the entrance to a small private school. If you use the compare feature on Historic Aerials, you will see how the newer alignment plowed through the first line of houses in the nearby subdivision. This also brought a lot of other homes dangerously close to the roadside.
6.)FM 2920: Just west of the intersection of 2920 and Stuebner-Airline Rd., there is an old abandoned segment of 2920 that has been closed off since the mid 1970's. The old road runs parallel with the north fence of Hooks Airport, and on weekends, private vendors use it to sell arts and crafts. Much of the road has been overgrown with greenery, but you can see the clearing in the treeline where 2920 used to meet up with Stuebner Airline.
7.)Ora St: At Hempstead Highway and Dacoma, there is Ora St, a small residential drive that once led to a tract of small houses. The homes were reduced to slabs, and Ora is now closed off, part of the property of the nearby industrial business.
8.)Addicks-Howell Rd.: Not technically abandoned, just without purpose, is the old north/south alignment of Addicks Howell Rd. Before SH6 was constructed, this road was the main artery south of Addicks linking it with Howellville to the south. The old road remains open today, but is not exactly a necessary path, just an alternative.
9.)Jackrabbit Rd: Just south of Hempstead Road, Jackrabbit runs north, and then takes a sharp curve to the left to meet up with Highway 6. Before Highway 6, Jackrabbit ran straight into Hempstead, without a curve. If you keep looking north of this curve, you will see a small section of exposed asphalt & gravel that used to be Jackrabbit's old path directly to Hempstead Road. I imagine the railroad crossing was also moved.
I would love to post pictures of these roads, but cannot figure out how. It only gives me a blank to fill in a URL code, but I don't know how to obtain this code information from my picture files.
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#2
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 1:40 PM
Near Alvin, some abandoned highway sits near the north end of the loop. Although the loop existed since 60s, sometime, circa 2005, the intersection was redone, and now a chunk of disconnected asphalt is now there.
The Beltway was realigned some point in the past (1980s?), creating a four-lane (no space for frontage) "Old North Belt Dr." and another road (two way).
Near I-45 and Saunders, an entire subdivision was leveled, its roads gone.
Auchan (1988-2003)
Foley's (1900-2006)
Astroworld (1968-2005)
The MKT Railroad (1893-1997)
Variety Fair 5&10 (1948-2010)
Also, please visit College Station Roads & Retail.
#3
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 2:47 PM
#4
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 4:10 PM
Auchan (1988-2003)
Foley's (1900-2006)
Astroworld (1968-2005)
The MKT Railroad (1893-1997)
Variety Fair 5&10 (1948-2010)
Also, please visit College Station Roads & Retail.
#5
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 5:08 PM
I just posted some of the Ora St. area in the Hempstead Drive In thread - here's a street photo:
#6
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 9:37 PM
I have over 250 photos of Hempstead Highway, just in preparation for when they finally make a tollway out of it. Every time I drive on it, I feel like I am visiting a terminally ill cancer patient in the hospital. I never know when the day will come when the old road, in the blink of an eye, will be overtaken.
I didn't find the leveled subdivision off I-45 and Saunders....mainly because I didn't know where to look for Saunders, but I did find some other interesting sights along I-45 using the time travel feature. Northline Mall at I-45 and Crosstimbers before, during, and after its demolition, Landmark Chevrolet before and after it's heyday, and an old apartment complex on I-45 and Gillespie Rd. just inside the Beltway that was demolished in the mid 2000's. The only reason it stuck out in my mind is because I remember driving past it while it was open, thinking how seedy it looked. Dozens of hispanic prostitutes and drifters hanging around like it was some sort of 24 hour bordello.
#7
Posted Sunday, August 28, 2011 at 10:23 PM
Also, here are block book maps - the area was Hall Park and/or Farrington Place:
http://books.tax.hct...997_79_0079.jpg
http://books.tax.hct...997_68_0027.jpg
Harris County Flood Control owns them so Halls Bayou must have had issues..
2011:

April 2005:

February 2004:

December 1978:
#8
Posted Monday, August 29, 2011 at 2:36 AM
In the mid 80's, they added in the curve that took it to the Spur 41 intersection with Alt 90, closed the railroad crossing and alt 90 intersection, and renamed the section of Stiles to Dairy Ashford, leaving just the end of Stiles where a few houses were/might still be.
A few years later, they widened the road to it's current configuration.
I took that road every day going to school at the D-Word.
#9
Posted Monday, August 29, 2011 at 9:16 AM
This was MacArthur street, now a nature trail:
..and here's a HAIF discussion about it:
http://www.houstonar...4055-brownwood/
#10
Posted Monday, August 29, 2011 at 8:16 PM
It was and still is a pretty rough area. It will never be developed again and will probably just be let go to seed although a park MAY eventually result from some of it...as is already the case behind the Fiesta across the freeway.
#11
Posted Wednesday, August 31, 2011 at 9:39 AM
In Will Hogg's 1929 City Planning Commission Report, Hare & Hare's advise on adopting a city plan to include zoning & parks, ..."the people of Houston and their officials will have to decide whether they are building a great city or merely a great population."
#12
Posted Saturday, September 3, 2011 at 12:34 AM
It was rebuilt a few times (all wooden structure on stilts).
we did a few shows there in the 1990's- I don't even know if the structure is still there (if not, good riddance, i hated that place)
#13
Posted Friday, September 9, 2011 at 2:33 PM
Auchan (1988-2003)
Foley's (1900-2006)
Astroworld (1968-2005)
The MKT Railroad (1893-1997)
Variety Fair 5&10 (1948-2010)
Also, please visit College Station Roads & Retail.
#14
Posted Thursday, December 1, 2011 at 10:43 AM
#15
Posted Saturday, December 3, 2011 at 11:56 AM
#16
Posted Monday, December 5, 2011 at 8:36 AM
#17
Posted Monday, December 5, 2011 at 4:47 PM
Auchan (1988-2003)
Foley's (1900-2006)
Astroworld (1968-2005)
The MKT Railroad (1893-1997)
Variety Fair 5&10 (1948-2010)
Also, please visit College Station Roads & Retail.
#18
Posted Wednesday, December 14, 2011 at 11:01 PM
IronTiger, on Monday, December 5, 2011 at 4:47 PM, said:
Yes, that part of N. Houston-Rosslyn was bypassed in the early 90s when the road was widened to 4 lanes. There was a bar and grill there called Zach's Shack. It was popular with the employees of the oil and gas companies that still line that road. I went there once for a wedding reception and stickers advertising those businesses lined the walls.
#19
Posted Tuesday, December 27, 2011 at 2:26 AM
IronTiger, on Friday, September 9, 2011 at 2:33 PM, said:























