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Skyboxdweller

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Posts posted by Skyboxdweller

  1.  

    too bad they couldn't' repurpose the old bank facility as a restaurant.  I like places that still have the old vaults as a private dining room.  Although I hated what they did to the Manufactuers Hanover branch on 43rd and Fifth, NYC  that is a landmarked mid-century modern masterpiece.

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    I guess they were both bank branches but the comparison ends there.  

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manufacturers_Trust_Company_Building

     

    • Like 4
  2. It's owned by Apacne and is probably not going to get developed until Apacne flips it to another owner.  It's investment in a new Permian gas field has not paid off and it just announced lay-offs, etc.  I view this as excess property held for investment and couldn't imagine mgt. putting cash into an office building development when it is struggling to keep its shareholders fat and happy with dividends and stock buy backs.  Would make most sense for Hanover to own as it could design a complex that wouldn't totally destroy the value and views of the two buildings it already built and the building it will put up on the site it owns next to the one with its HQ. 

    • Like 8
  3. I think the shape of the tower is as courteous as possible to the Cosmo, while still making economic and aesthetic sense.  The pool/roof garden area is going to wrap around the western side of the building, with a pool  set in the corner of  San Felipe and the parking lot of adjacent strip center. Based on where the columns are being set and some of the renderings  that are available,  I think the tower is going to get wider as it moves back from San Felipe towards the Cosmo, and that the elevation facing the Cosmo is going to have angled corners to push the views out beyond the Cosmo. The tower stops about three columns in from the northern side of the podium.   They are framing and pouring the 6th level now , which is the last parking level.  In about 3 weeks the tower floors should be under construction. 

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  4. I"m 63 and now live in Four Leaf Towers. My 6000 sq. ft. house in Hedwig Village was a great place when I had two kids in school and had tons of gear, a son who played guitar and drums and parking for our three cars.  It had a back staircase that allowed a summer to go by without having to meet my daughter's then-current boyfriend. But the kids are now in L.A. and Austin, one is married and my wife is nearing the end stages of a decades long rare neurological disease, By the time both kids were in their mid-=twenties, when they were at home, it was like running a small hotel and I was the staff.  I miss my garden and pool, but not much else about the property. At Four Leaf Towers, I have someone to unload my packages from my car after returning from Costco or HEB  and bring the stuff up to my apartment.  I;m now living in 2690 sq. ft. and its certainly more than enough for my needs.  Right now, I have one guest room and when  both my son and my daughter and son-in=law visit, I usually book one of them into a hotel for a few days. I think one could live nicely with a family in this apartment, but for many reasons, including the amount of personal possessions amassed by the affluent, including sports gear, cars, etc. it would feel cramped by most families.

    • Like 7
  5. They recently power washed Neiman Marcus and it looks a helluva lot better. The Galleria would be more attractive from a pedestrian standpoint if they developed another restaurant or entertainment pod in the parking lot on the corner of Wertheimer and Post Oak.  Dillard's is a box that truly offends.  It looks like at one time it had large display windows facing the parking lots but that these were covered by stucco at some time in the past.  Some attractive displays, trellises with greenery and a paint job to the concrete block walls on the parking structure would make the store look more user friendly and less dated.

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  6. I'm a walker too. Houstonians are afraid they are going to melt in the rain and turn into a puddle when its above 90 degrees.  I try to walk four miles a day.  One year I walked across England, from the Irish Sea to the North Sea, about 215 miles and it rained 12 of the 13 days I was on my trek.  People used their legs to get places until the automobile took over our cities and our lives.  Walking a half mile, if that, from the Hard Rock to the Galleria should not be a challenge.  I agree that there aren't enough entertainment oriented venues in Uptown. The Galleria itself is often touted as the number one tourist attraction in Houston.  Pretty depressing. 

    • Like 4
  7. On 6/11/2019 at 3:18 PM, gclass said:

    wow-e1484418777188.png

    @Skyboxdweller simply OUTSTANDING illustration!  we can even view the new road construction happening upon POST OAK BLVD...

    I am on the 37th floor of Four Leaf Towers and look east and south.  My view towards downtown is going to be framed by this new building, but I"m happy to have new neighbors and restaurants.  This area would work a lot better with higher residential density.  Maybe restaurants would stay open later and we might support more entertainment options.  The rooftop cinema is a good addition. 

    • Like 7
  8. It's where an old post office now sits.  I hope the US got a good price for the site. It's walkable to Sam's club and Walmart, a few blocks from the Galleria  and  a chipotle and Mod pizza in the strip mall on Richmond.  I would consider this a really off location for a place that is associated with Buzz.  Maybe that's the problem with the 

    brand and which sells nostalgia to middle aged people and is a few stages removed from the energy and creativity of rock n roll.

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  9. NOPE. It's south of the two HANOVER  buildings and is a deep but narrower lot.  One of those jenga block high rises would look great there and keep the views from the two Hanover buildings from being blocked. I'm not sure who owns the other vacant lot that is next to our park bench.  All in all, its been slow going with this development. Over a decade and three major blocks and two smaller development sites ( on the south and west of the Whole Foods c complex) still vacant.

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