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The Great Hizzy!

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Posts posted by The Great Hizzy!

  1. Don't panic just yet. Much easier to get the big name stuff signed up than the niche stuff. HOB and Lucky Strike are big name tenants to start with. The stuff that many of you are coveting is likely to be hit or miss until the thing actually gets built.

    I'm surprised to hear about Mia Bella, though. Would this be a second location? Their current one is basically el primo, as far as location goes.

  2. For housing? Because it's a slightly different animal than retail. You have to identify the market and learn what type of residents are easiest to bring into the fray. Then you have to wrestle with financing and the like. That takes a little time. Just look at Midtown.

    I'm certainly not saying that HP's going to take 3-5 years. I expect that to be up and going in full within the next couple of years provided that groundbreaking is this fall.

    Sorry if I didn't make the distinction. I was just more talking about the longterm impact on residential. Tends to take longer than it does for retail, especially in a market like Houston (or Dallas, Phoenix, Denver, etc).

  3. That'd be cool if true. That would allow the Pavillions to develop a bit of a connection with Toyota Center, which is what the planners eventually want anyway, to connect eastern downtown with the rest of downtown.

    I've also heard that the Yao restaurant in Westchase has been very successful so far, so a second location, if this is all true, wouldn't seem like a particularly risky move.

  4. The key to HP is the long range planning and its long range effect on three primary DT areas: north on Main, east on Dallas and south on Main.

    My vision is for HP to affect retail on Main from Dallas to the Historic District, to affect hotel and housing on Dallas from Main to the new downtown park/convention center/Toyota Center and to affect the empty lots south on Main with new residential construction. We'll see, though. A lot is riding on HP's placement and management.

    It's going to be a ceremonious event once groundbreaking commences.

  5. League City has been moving towards Sugarland in terms of development and niche for about ten years now. Pearland is now where League City was five years ago and League City is where Sugarland was in the early 90s.

    And so it goes...

    After Pearland, I expect Manvel and Arcola to start "booming" as well. Tomball's already starting to see Pearland-type activity.

    And so it goes...

  6. What they are running with is a study that I read about a few years back that said that since Houston Metro area goes so far west that in reality the center of the city is 10 miles west of downtown at the Beltway and I10. They said most of the time cities grow equally in all directions from the downtown. I remember thinking to myself when reading that at the time that I can think of several cities that do not match that. Mostly cities that sit on the water like Chicago, but also Dallas. Sorry I do not have a link to the article, but it was in the Chronicle or the Houston Business Journal. For those with time might be able to locate it.

    The Atlanta Metropolitan area is urbanizing to the north (northeast and northwest) at a much faster rate than in any other major direction. The west and east sides are seeing some growth but at not nearly the rate as is the north. The southern sector is seeing sporadic growth but it would probably be akin to the development that's taking place on the northern half of the east Sam Houston Parkway here in Houston.

    * Seattle's growth seems to be heading north and west rather than south.

    * Detroit's growth is mostly to the north. Some growth is occuring to the west but almost none to the south.

    * Denver's growth is mostly to the west and north. The eastern edge of the city, much like Houston, is growing at a much slower rate.

    In other words, I, like you, see great contradictions to the notion that cities all growth radially from a central point. Growth follows corridors of economic growth. It's not a coincidence that Houston's recent growth is following the same direction as the Energy Corridor nor is it a coincidence that Dallas' growth is following the Platinum Corridor.

  7. Actually, Houston is fine as an amusement park town. The problem more lies with Six Flags. If you have an LA-area park that you think you need to shut down then that tells you all you need to know about how your park is run.

    I think Six Flags overextended itself and should've focused on their original seven or eight parks (Mid-America, Magic Mountain, Georgia, Texas, Astroworld, etc), which would've allowed them an opportunity to better manage and maintain them.

    Even Six Flags Over Georgia is starting to look shabby, and it used to be one of their cleanest parks.

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