While talking with my mother tonight about Westbury back when all was new, she mentioned something about a street of houses near Westbury Square that had a "gingerbread" theme to their exteriors. She thought it odd for the times.
Anyone else recall those homes or the street they were on?
4 replies to this topic
#1
Posted Monday, December 19, 2011 at 10:48 PM
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#2
Posted Thursday, February 2, 2012 at 1:04 PM
I read this when it was first posted and it didn't stir up any memories.So I googled it and found a site for a gingerbread themed house in the town of Westbury on the Island of Tasmania just off the southeast coast of Australia.Just a coincidence I guess.So end of story........
And then a couple of days ago I was talking with one of my sisters who mentioned how back in the early 70s she and her friends had rode their bikes over near Westbury Square to look at the Gingerbread Houses.
So they did exist at one time but that was nearly 50 years ago.The homes are still there but the molding and trim that gave them the gingerbread theme have for the most part have been replaced or updated or whatever,so only a couple or so still retain the gingerbread theme.
To see them for yourself, fire up Google Earth,zoom into zip code 77035 and the 5500 block of Arboles.
And then a couple of days ago I was talking with one of my sisters who mentioned how back in the early 70s she and her friends had rode their bikes over near Westbury Square to look at the Gingerbread Houses.
So they did exist at one time but that was nearly 50 years ago.The homes are still there but the molding and trim that gave them the gingerbread theme have for the most part have been replaced or updated or whatever,so only a couple or so still retain the gingerbread theme.
To see them for yourself, fire up Google Earth,zoom into zip code 77035 and the 5500 block of Arboles.
#3
Posted Friday, February 3, 2012 at 10:40 AM
my wife and I were reminiscing about Westbury Square and how utterly unique the mix of shops, food, and residential was for the time. even the east side (front) parking lot created a sense of anticipation b/c it was "sunken" below the level of that side of the square, the bermed sides were covered in ivy or some kind of ground cover, and you had to walk up red brick stairs to get to the Square's "street." the west side parking and entrance was pretty bland in comparison, until you walked through the arched entry and the inner "street" opened up in front of you with shops lining both sides, apartment balconies on one side, gas lights, all framing the big fountain way down at the other end of the street.
in the mid-60s there was no place in Houston where you could find a glass-blower, a candle maker, a tailor, a high-end clothing store, wilderness equipment store, a pre-Pier One importer, a steak house with live folk music every night in the bar, a classic Chinese "you look you break you buy of you own use" import shop, a killer ice cream store, and much more I've forgotten.
and lucky people living above the "street" in the kind of mixed-use nirvana that New Urbanists today dream of creating.
in addition to the the faux "gingerbread" houses, there was a row of new townhomes across the street with Euro rowhouse facades, which just just added to the look.
Westbury Square accomplished what Tilman Fertitta has tried many different ways and failed - from the time you entered the parking lot until you left you were no longer on the flat Gulf Coast prairie in a tract home subdivision.
no need to lock your car, punk teens like me mingling with all other ages and zero problems. the place was magical and insanely romantic at night - hip, urbane, and safe - the unattainable trifecta in modern Houston.
if today you could plop it down exactly like it was in 1966 in the Museum District or up the street in Montrose, or in the Heights, you would make a fortune.
in the mid-60s there was no place in Houston where you could find a glass-blower, a candle maker, a tailor, a high-end clothing store, wilderness equipment store, a pre-Pier One importer, a steak house with live folk music every night in the bar, a classic Chinese "you look you break you buy of you own use" import shop, a killer ice cream store, and much more I've forgotten.
and lucky people living above the "street" in the kind of mixed-use nirvana that New Urbanists today dream of creating.
in addition to the the faux "gingerbread" houses, there was a row of new townhomes across the street with Euro rowhouse facades, which just just added to the look.
Westbury Square accomplished what Tilman Fertitta has tried many different ways and failed - from the time you entered the parking lot until you left you were no longer on the flat Gulf Coast prairie in a tract home subdivision.
no need to lock your car, punk teens like me mingling with all other ages and zero problems. the place was magical and insanely romantic at night - hip, urbane, and safe - the unattainable trifecta in modern Houston.
if today you could plop it down exactly like it was in 1966 in the Museum District or up the street in Montrose, or in the Heights, you would make a fortune.
Edited by IHB2, Friday, February 3, 2012 at 10:46 AM.
#4
Posted Tuesday, February 7, 2012 at 2:12 AM
Dagnabbit, on Thursday, February 2, 2012 at 1:04 PM, said:
... Gingerbread Houses. So they did exist at one time but that was nearly 50 years ago.The homes are still there but the molding and trim that gave them the gingerbread theme have for the most part have been replaced or updated or whatever,so only a couple or so still retain the gingerbread theme. To see them for yourself, fire up Google Earth,zoom into zip code 77035 and the 5500 block of Arboles.
5500 block of Arboles is the location but according to one of the original owners every house on the block had a DUTCH theme. I checked them last year and all but 3 or 4 still had signs of the style. This is two blocks south of the 1959 Parade of Homes site on Warm Springs where Houston Mod has featured several of the houses as Mod of the Month.
#5
Posted Sunday, February 19, 2012 at 9:08 AM
in the mid-60s there was no place in Houston where you could find a glass-blower, a candle maker, a tailor, a high-end clothing store, wilderness equipment store, a pre-Pier One importer, a steak house with live folk music every night in the bar, a classic Chinese "you look you break you buy of you own use" import shop, a killer ice cream store, and much more I've forgotten.
Indeed, the Westbury Square atmosphere was magic. I seem to remember that they even had a shop that specialized in miniature lead soldiers.
Indeed, the Westbury Square atmosphere was magic. I seem to remember that they even had a shop that specialized in miniature lead soldiers.














