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editor

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Posts posted by editor

  1. On 6/9/2023 at 11:56 AM, bobruss said:

    Perhaps public bathrooms and a bathing facility would be a humane and forward thinking solution. It wouldn't have to be on Main street but somewhere that was fairly accessible and patrolled.

    Or Houston could do what other cities do: Make it easy for charities to help the homeless with their hygiene.

    In some places I've lived, if a church provides bathing facilities for the homeless, it stops getting a water bill.  Easy peasy. 

    • Like 2
  2. 6 minutes ago, Amlaham said:

    This is soooooo true, i've never thought about that. The Galleria should definitely hire more security.... and they should be bigger/ more active. The ones they have now look like they were hired off of Facebook marketplace. 

    A lady got mugged this afternoon around 2pm right by the Fendi store. There's usually a guard near there, but the perp must have been watching for him to wander away.

    The lady was knocked to the ground and the guy took her purse. 

    • Sad 3
  3. On 6/5/2023 at 1:09 PM, Houston19514 said:

    My understanding is that some of them were simply turned off because the homeless were bathing in them/and using them as urinals (or worse).

    Oh, how awful — human beings who want to be clean!  We should definitely make their hygiene worse.  That will totally solve homelessness! 

    You know the homeless sleep in the streets, don't you?  By that logic, we should get rid of all the streets.  And I saw a homeless guy in the park the other day.  We should shut down all of the parks! 

    The solution to vagrants bathing in the fountains isn't to remove the fountains.  It's to give people a better place to bathe.

    Municipal bathing facilities have been around for as long as there has been plumbing. 

  4. 3 hours ago, Caribomoa said:

    ROD is a luxury only, self contained new urbanist shopping district so it’s able to secure itself better while attending to the shopper’s liking more.

    Is "urbanist shopping district" the new "lifestyle center" which was the new "strip mall?"

    I don't think that the River Oaks District has any advantage in security over the Galleria.  It's open to the street, and anyone can walk in.  The Galleria literally has doors that people have to go through to get in.  The problem is that Simon is too cheap to staff the Security department properly.  There should be a security person at each door.

    There was a note in the Chronicle a couple of months ago about the city sending more HPD officers to patrol the Galleria.  The Galleria is private property — it shouldn't have HPD on patrol.  It should hire enough of its own security to do a good job, so that taxpayers don't have to fund its security, and HPD officers can work where they're needed more.

    As for the tug-of-war I mentioned, it's not speculation.  I know someone who was involved with the process of a high-end overseas brand trying to decide between Houston and Dallas. 

    • Like 2
  5. 1 hour ago, BeerNut said:

    I frequent Midtown and Downtown,  it doesn't seem as bad as it used to be.  The worst was when it was a free for all under 59 near Fiesta and at Wheeler Station.  Even the area under 45 near Hutchins and Pierce has recently been cleared out.  Can't forget about the corner of Herman Park that was out of hand till they had the od incident.

    I think vagrancy seems worse in downtown and Midtown because numerically, there are far fewer non-vagrants than there were before so many people went work-from-home.  It's a ratio thing.

    Also, I think it seems worse because there's fewer people who are "homeless" and more people who are just junkies.  The city seems to be doing a good job of moving people who want housing into housing — the actual homeless.  But most of the vagrants I see downtown aren't people who are too unfortunate/poor to afford a place to live.  They're people so blitzed out on drugs that they don't care if they have a home or not.

    Protip: No shoes is a sure sign of an addict.  You can sell a pair of shoes for a week's worth of fentanyl.

    Another sign is hygiene.  Yesterday I saw a guy bathing behind the bushes of the Chase bank in Midtown, using the lawn sprinklers as a shower.  That's a sign of someone who works, but has a super-crap job, like the homeless guy who sweeps the parking lots at the Chevron and Walgreens.  Homeless because he's poor.  Not homeless because he's drugged-up and face-down in his own filth.

    I sometimes wonder if there's a drug dealer right near the intersection of Main and Rusk, because worst of the the vagrants seem to pass out there.  And while I'm not a drug user, I suspect that when a junkie gets some new drugs, he uses them immediately rather than going somewhere else to imbibe.

    I know there's a dealer who works Main Street between SoDo and the SuperGhettoMart on the corner of Lamar.  He's approached me twice.  But something else is going on at Main between Capitol and Rusk.

    • Like 1
  6. Three Keys is open.  It actually replaced, not supplemented Greenway Coffee.  Word around the food court is that Greenway's lease expired, but no one is sure if it jumped or was pushed.  Strangely, Three Keys operates in the opposite direction as Greenway — the ordering area is now the pick-up area, and the pick-up area is now the ordering area.  This is actually an improvement.  Greenway was always counter-intuitive because instead of having the front of the joint face the building entrance, you had to circle around to the back.  Reducing friction is key to getting new customers.

    The baristas are unusually eager (for Houston) to serve, which is nice.   The one I spoke with said that it's been a roasting company for years, and this is its first retail location.  I will do what I can to help it out, but I already drink at least six cups of coffee a day.

    The Three Keys menu is a little brief.  Perhaps it will expand when it gets settled in.  I'm not sure I was supposed to take the menu, but here it is:

    IMG_8308.jpeg

    49287E1F-AE36-42F6-BB6D-337B1EBE4BFA_1_105_c.jpeg

     

    Also new (to me) is Carol Kay Cafe.  I know nothing about it other than it occupies the space that was once occupied by a place that didn't have physical menus, and if you brought a book with you to lunch instead of a telephone, they looked at you like you were from Mars and refused to serve you.

    IMG_8304.jpeg

     

     

     

     

    • Like 7
  7. On 6/3/2023 at 12:52 PM, Houston19514 said:

    Perhaps.  But that's no excuse. Journalism should be more than just checking the fax machine/email box. A journalist with the slightest bit of curiosity about the world around them could (should) have easily have found this information, without even leaving their house (or bed, for that matter).  Do they not even have anyone checking the agendas of City Council and Committee meetings?  Truly pathetic. 

    You're not wrong, but you're also outdated.

    It's not 1990, or even 2010 anymore.  The number of journalists in America — especially in local newsrooms — has plummeted.  I'd be surprised if the Chronicle had even a quarter of the number of reporters today that it had in 2000. 

    When I was in television, a 30-minute local news program in a market the size of Houston would have at minimum: two field reporters, two writers, a producer, an associate producer, an executive producer, and an intern or three.  Today, it's very often just one field reporter, a producer, and maybe an executive producer shared with other shows.  It's so bad that the anchors in Houston are even running their own TelePrompTers. That's why they have one hand on a black knob all the time. 

    People complain about the poor quality and lack of local news, then instead of spending 71¢ a day to support local journalism they choose to get their "news" from social media because they think it's "free." 

    Well, you get what you pay for.  Enjoy the world you made.

  8. 1 hour ago, Houston19514 said:

     Even had to go outside of downtown to find yourself another non-working foiuntain,

    Nope.  I was walking to Walgreens today and just happened to notice it.  Sorry to deflate any conspiracy theory you might be forming.

    1 hour ago, Houston19514 said:

    As to the Houston Center fountain, I doubt it was ever their intention to have it running 24/7.

    If it's not running, it's not working.  A car that also doesn't start 24/7 can also be described as not working.

    That Houston Center photo was taken at 9:00am on a weekday.  I don't consider a water feature that runs from 11:54am to 11:57am every other Thursday to be a fountain.

     

    Also walking around today:

    F541C0ED-51F4-46BD-981C-70EACB06FA90_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    EBAAA8BB-B4ED-4AAF-9DB1-EB7D489D8AF7_1_105_c.jpg

    Partially working fountain, but good to see the spigot working for the first time in years. I guess that's progress.

     

    DB66EB55-3285-4B99-BDA2-58C1636C1523_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    B6007508-4013-4C5C-9E23-FE5BA5EB2065_1_105_c.jpg

    Amazingly working fountain.  This has been dead for years, then was working on-and-off.  This is twice in a row that I've walked by and it's working, so hopefully this one can be considered a success.

     

    B6B848A2-DE2F-4D4B-89B8-E4D818DF7E2F_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain replaced with a bowl of dirt.

     

    8455DFD3-22EB-4948-BBB6-4D17AEB93EC4_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    8350EF78-FD65-4D43-8DA1-B55032850EDF_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    5743D1A3-6052-4C37-B4AF-631F9815EEC2_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    440AB0CD-B30A-4FC5-85A6-5C30F850DE6B_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    50C3D212-40A3-4660-A9CD-A31B46E6DA60_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain replaced by a bowl of flowers.

     

    32C45A8C-530F-4E1F-B28A-8FBEFA7EB903_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    09B6CA82-1562-40F3-9F42-6542197820E9_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    1D960179-9941-4BB1-993A-C00B90271799_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain.

     

    0E9F69DC-C032-40B2-91E8-9ED8B923E0E2_1_105_c.jpg

    Dead fountain replaced by a bowl of weeds.

     

    It's a shame about those fountains that have been replaced by bowls.  Some of them used to be baseballs with water flowing out from under them.  They were made to look like giant baseballs crashed to earth.  They were supposed to line the street all the way down to the baseball stadium.

     

    While looking for an old photo of the baseball fountains, I came across this picture.  I'd forgotten there used to be a fountain in front of Chase Tower:

    Chase Tower - Houston, Texas - March, 2000 - 001.jpg

     

    I think the El Paso Energy fountains are gone, too.  But I'm happy to be corrected about that:

    El Paso Energy Fountain - Houston, Texas - March, 2001 - 001.jpg

     

    I also forgot that there was a fountain on Milam between Rusk and Capitol:

    JPMorgan Chase Park - Houston, Texas - April, 2002 - 004.JPG

     

    I haven't been over by the bayou in a while.  Does this one still flow? 

    Downtown Houston - May, 2001 - 003.JPG

     

    For some reason when I put in "fountain," my computer sent this back.  It must be psychic, because this has a fountain today (working!) that wasn't there when I took this picture:

    Market Square - Houston, Texas - May, 2002 - 009.JPG

     

    The computer search for "fountain" also popped up lots of pictures I took of Sesquicentennial Park, but I'm not going to post those here.  That would only embarrass anyone who believes that downtown Houston doesn't have a problem with its fountains.

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  9. On 5/27/2023 at 9:22 AM, Caribomoa said:

    While I already knew Houston was a premier shopping destination, I sometimes get surprised by how much brands invest in Houston

    There's a lot of tug-of-war going on between Houston and Dallas recently when it comes to luxury brands.  Also a lot of the same between the Galleria and the River Oaks District.

    The luxury stores in the Galleria are not happy with the levels of crime at the mall, and worse — the number of their customers (and employees!) who get followed home and robbed by thugs who see them leaving the mall. 

    Purely speculation, but Simon must be discounting rent to keep those luxury brands in the Galleria.  Especially considering that the Galleria is really showing its age, in terms of infrastructure.  (Some stores struggle with chronic HVAC issues, and other basic problems that can't seem to be solved for months or years.)

    • Like 4
  10. On 5/27/2023 at 9:22 AM, Caribomoa said:

    Update: it appears that the Gentle Monster boutique will be the largest in the US. And it will not only be a store but an experience center for the Korean brand.

    https://www.rli.uk.com/gentle-monster-opens-new-boutique-in-houston-texas/amp/

     

    While I already knew Houston was a premier shopping destination, I sometimes get surprised by how much brands invest in Houston. I believe Harry Winston still has their largest NA store in Houston as well.

    Already open.  People are raving about the sunglasses.

    • Like 3
  11. On 5/12/2023 at 1:26 PM, Amlaham said:

    I remember vaguely that Mayor Turner and Houston First were trying to get a theme park into our city since we're the only major city without one. Well, Therme Group is European wellness theme park that is looking to expand into the US. It just worked with city officials in DC to open their first US location there. The company has also been looking at Dallas and LA. Feel like we will be left out.....again. This project would be a good fit for Houston, especially since its mainly caters towards adults and specifically for "wellness." We were recently named one of the most stressed cities in the nation 😂

    I'm going to email the mayor and Houston first......is there anyone in particular that I can get to look into this? 

    https://www.thermegroup.com

    https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/economic-development/european-resort-operator-expanding-to-us-looking-for-up-to-600k-sf-in-dc-118918

     

    I wouldn't get my hopes up about this. 

    Essentially, it's like one of those Great Wolf Lodges, but without the kids. 

    From the web site, of the dozen or so places they've announced, only three have opened — two in Germany, and one in Romania.

    • Like 3
  12. 5 hours ago, hindesky said:

    "Market Square Tower at 777 Preston — is taking that approach a step further by converting a dozen residences to hotel rooms and turning some of its amenity spaces into event venues that can be rented to the public.

    A Woodbranch team will manage the initial 12 fully furnished hotel rooms. More could be added if the concept is successful. For now, the rooms will be available for the public, but Woodbranch expects most to fill up with guests of residents, people booking event spaces (think a bridal party) and temporary residents living there one to three months. Prices aren't set and will depend on several variables, Woodbranch said."

    https://www.houstonchronicle.com/business/real-estate/article/market-square-tower-downtown-hotel-event-apartment-17884994.php

    Ugh.  I lived in a building that was ⅓ apartments, ⅓ condos, and ⅓ Radisson Blu.  Shared amenity spaces are awful.

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