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Where is the "Montrose Parking Garage"? I am kind of confused. Obviously the church and the museum made a deal for the land. 

 

Where will the church parishioners park for church now?

 

Where will museum visitors park?

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I believe that the new garage is built under the new Glassel. Thats what was going in underground.

The church parking is north of the church on a lot that the museum owned and traded to the church for the southern lot between the church and museum.

Edited by bobruss
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Correct.  The new underground parking (underneath the under-construction new Glassell building) will be opened for parking on Monday, May 22.

 

The museum has owned the parking lot on which the new Kinder building will be constructed since 2007 and had an arrangement with the church to allow the church to use that parking on Sunday mornings.  I believe they will now allow the church to use the new underground garage on Sunday mornings.

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17 hours ago, Urbannizer said:

Work for Phase III to begin May 22nd

 

Via email from the Museum Park Neighborhood Association:

 

 

 

 

0489_mfah_150120.jpg?itok=4I0BUr5t

 

Hell freaking yeah, this rivals 609 Main and Marriott Marquis for impact on the city. (Sorry I didn't mention ROD or any of the grocery/multi-family sandwiches.)

 

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24 minutes ago, H-Town Man said:

 

Hell freaking yeah, this rivals 609 Main and Marriott Marquis for impact on the city. (Sorry I didn't mention ROD or any of the grocery/multi-family sandwiches.)

 

I agree 100% only in my mind this is even bigger because this is a public building that is going to be full of great art and wonderful spaces.

Its going to allow the Museum so much flexibility with the collection and how they exhibit work. It will give the Museum the room to do things like show so much of the modern and contemporary work that has been collected over the last 20 years and store away for this building.

Its going to be incredible. Now lets get on with it. 

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8 hours ago, bobruss said:

I believe that the new garage is built under the new Glassel. Thats what was going in underground.

The church parking is north of the church on a lot that the museum owned and traded to the church for the southern lot between the church and museum.

 

Yes, the new underground garage is at 5101 Montrose. Museum members received a flyer in the mail about this earlier this week communicating that the current surface lot is closing after this weekend. After that, you will have to park in the new underground garage or the existing one on Fannin adjacent to the Beck Building. 

 

I have to admit that as much as I'm happy for the upcoming expansion of the museum, as a semi-regular filmgoer there I'm really not thrilled about having to pay $8-10 to park every time I want to see a film, in addition to tickets to the film (members receive a parking discount - for 31 minutes to 4 hours, the $8 and $10 rates apply to members and non-members, respectively). I take light rail there about half the time, but sometimes that's just not optimal. I'm willing to bet the folks that run the film program probably aren't too happy either - it would be nice if there was some way they could validate garage parking for filmgoers, but I doubt they'd be allowed to do that to the exclusion of other museum visitors.  

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11 minutes ago, mkultra25 said:

 

Yes, the new underground garage is at 5101 Montrose. Museum members received a flyer in the mail about this earlier this week communicating that the current surface lot is closing after this weekend. After that, you will have to park in the new underground garage or the existing one on Fannin adjacent to the Beck Building. 

 

I have to admit that as much as I'm happy for the upcoming expansion of the museum, as a semi-regular filmgoer there I'm really not thrilled about having to pay $8-10 to park every time I want to see a film, in addition to tickets to the film (members receive a parking discount - for 31 minutes to 4 hours, the $8 and $10 rates apply to members and non-members, respectively). I take light rail there about half the time, but sometimes that's just not optimal. I'm willing to bet the folks that run the film program probably aren't too happy either - it would be nice if there was some way they could validate garage parking for filmgoers, but I doubt they'd be allowed to do that to the exclusion of other museum visitors.  

Maybe you should suggest it. Im a member and will make a call myself. Thanks for all of the information. I should read those things when they get home.

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20 hours ago, bobruss said:

Maybe you should suggest it. Im a member and will make a call myself. Thanks for all of the information. I should read those things when they get home.

 

I overlooked it myself for several days, then did a double-take when I finally glanced at it and realized what they were talking about. 

 

A correction: the 31-minute to 4-hour rate for members is $6, not $8 - I misread the small type. 

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  • 2 weeks later...

http://www.bizjournals.com/houston/news/2017/05/31/museum-of-fine-arts-houstons-450m-expansion-hits.html

 

Quote

A considerable part of the Museum of Fine Arts Houston's $450 million campus redevelopment officially broke ground on May 31.

 


A formal groundbreaking ceremony was held for the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building, a 165,000-square-foot building that'll contain 54,000 square feet of gallery space, a 200-seat theater, a restaurant overlooking the campus' sculpture garden and an underground parking garage. It's the largest structure underway as part of the MFAH's 14-acre expansion to its Fayez S. Sarofim Campus. 

 

"This is not about us today," said Rich Kinder, board chairman of the MFAH and executive chairman of Houston-based Kinder Morgan Inc. "This is about a great project. … I'd argue it's transformational for Houston."

 

The building is set to deliver in late 2019 and is being built by St. Louis-based McCarthy Building Cos.

 

Kinder, whose foundation donated at least $50 million to the MFAH expansion, attended the building's groundbreaking ceremony alongside his wife and Kinder Foundation President Nancy Kinder, as well as Gary Tintertow, director of the MFAH; Anne Duncan, vice chairman of the MFAH and Steven Holl of New York-based Steven Holl Architects, which designed the Fayez S. Sarofim Campus master plan.

 

So far, $390 million of the campus' total cost of $450 million has been raised, Tintertow said at the building's groundbreaking.

 

The Nancy and Rich Kinder Building's perimeter will be lined with six small pools. It'll be connected to the 80,000-square-foot Glassell School of Art and the Caroline Wiess Law Building via two pedestrian tunnels. The Glassell School of Art, as well as the 36,000-square-foot Brown Foundation Inc. Plaza, are currently under construction and scheduled to open in January 2018.

 

The Sarah Campbell Blaffer Conservation Center, a 30,000-square-foot conservation center with studios and offices, will be built on top of a MFAH parking garage and should deliver in late 2018.

 

Quote

 

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43 minutes ago, bobruss said:

I hope everyone realizes how fortunate we are in Houston to have such a dynamic art community.

We just witnessed the opening of Match, a new arts venue, and Rice University's new art center. October will bring the opening of the much anticipated Drawing Center and new park and landscaping at the Menil and now the MFAH steps up huge with the new designs by Stephen Holl for the  Glassel school, and  new Contemporary exhibition space and the Lake Flato conservancy center atop the Beck garage.

These are the type of things that great cities are defined by. Not how tall their buildings are or how big the galleria is.

Its the opportunities for people to thrive that makes great cities. 

Just like the TMC, Buffalo Bayou park, and our growing community of higher education institutions that are all striving to become more responsible to the communities they serve.

Its a great time to live in Houston.

 

Which makes me having to move in a few months that much more sad :(

Edited by jmitch94
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We went to see sneak preview of the new Pipilotti Rist piece and its truly amazing. I highly recommend. By the way this is now part of the museums permanent collection. I'm getting ready to go back and take my grandson!

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1 hour ago, bobruss said:

We went to see sneak preview of the new Pipilotti Rist piece and its truly amazing. I highly recommend. By the way this is now part of the museums permanent collection. I'm getting ready to go back and take my grandson!

 

Ugh.. I'm jealous of all you members of the museum. I have a feeling it's going to be packed tomorrow. Yeah its awesome that both of the Pipilotti Rist installations are now part of the permanent collection. They will go great with the Kusama infinity room, that the museum bought before the exhibit last summer, over in the new Kinder building.

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A couple of great purchases and definitely with the Kinder in mind. The Rist is huge and will create the kind of buzz that will bring everyone out.

They have cushions on the floor for people to lie down and watch the videos. The big screen videos are incredible and the audio is perfect.

Both this and the kusama piece are Transcendental.

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On 6/10/2017 at 4:54 PM, cloud713 said:

 

Ugh.. I'm jealous of all you members of the museum. I have a feeling it's going to be packed tomorrow. Yeah its awesome that both of the Pipilotti Rist installations are now part of the permanent collection. They will go great with the Kusama infinity room, that the museum bought before the exhibit last summer, over in the new Kinder building.

 

Membership is cheap! (relatively)

 

I went to the preview also, and it is a great exhibit. Also took the chance to see the Mueck exhibit.

 

I noticed there is a model of the new building, didn't take a close look at it though.

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14 hours ago, slcowart416 said:

Is there a webcam for the Sarofim Building? They have one for Glassell. How does one find these webcams?

 

There is no Sarofim Building. I assume you're talking about the new 20th/21st century museum expansion that recently broke ground, which is the Kinder Building. The entirety of the museum complex is named the "Sarofim Campus" though.

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I didn't see the base for this tower crane that went up, it was so close to the northern wall I couldn't see it. The easternmost base still waiting for a tower crane. The Museum may have 6 tower cranes unless they take down one of the others down to use elsewhere.

 

S5akIqa.jpg

H09uL9B.jpg

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Quote

You see that wood wall on the all deep foundations, does it stay or go away?

 

What you are looking at is a Solider Pile with Timber Lagging retaining wall.  These systems are a common way of doing soil retention on deep excavations.  They are almost always left in place once construction is complete.  Sometimes they are used as the backside of form work for concrete placement (if that is where your permanent wall goes).  Other times the permanent wall is formed away from the lagging and the open void is back filled with soil or gravel.

 

If you would like to continue to nerd out on deep foundations check out two of the big contractors that play in this space:

https://www.berkelandcompany.com/sheeting-and-shoring

http://www.haywardbaker.com/solutions/earth-retention-shoring

 

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12 hours ago, CrockpotandGravel said:

From Lake Flato's Instagram this week:

Our first ever DLT panel flying into place in Houston for the Museum of Fine Arts Houston Conservation Center
DsCCBwr.jpg
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bbhv4AQh9Ft
 

 

I had to Google "DLT". Sounds like a mortise and tenon joint, but on a larger scale? I gather this is a fairly new technique, as the first North American DLT plant apparently just opened recently.

North America’s First Dowel Laminated Timber Plant Underway

Edited by mkultra25
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On ‎11‎/‎19‎/‎2017 at 3:24 PM, mkultra25 said:

 

I had to Google "DLT". Sounds like a mortise and tenon joint, but on a larger scale? I gather this is a fairly new technique, as the first North American DLT plant apparently just opened recently.

North America’s First Dowel Laminated Timber Plant Underway

 

More like just dowel joints.

 

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