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dalparadise

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Posts posted by dalparadise

  1. Isn't all the area around and on the Memorial City property redeveloping? This isn't a mall aquarium. I think it's part of the larger vision for the mixed use development of MC. There will be highrise residential, office, medical, new open-air retail, restaurants and plazas. I think the vision is to try to integrate the streets into the surrounding area, too, so it's not just a shopping center in a parking lot, like so many "town(e) cent(re)s" are these days. I think the developers have their sights set on a mini Uptown.

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  2. I apologize if I sound insensitive, but I've been reading your whining for some time, with an "if you can't say something nice..." attitude. However, since you continue to air this laundry here, you must not mind a harsh criticism. So, here goes...

    Crack baby? And you have the nerve to seek sympathy? Jeez. Quit playing the victim, get your ____ together and move on. Quit instilling this victim's role in your kids, too. Teach them how to overcome the things you seem to be determined to let keep you down. And stop blaming yours and your kids' shortcomings on disorders, past addictions, poor marriage choices and all the other crap you constantly cry about. You are at the top of a slippery slope of misery for your children, who don't even realize how much their happiness depends on your somehow mustering the strength to break that chain. Overcome your BS disability. Work two or three jobs. Sell whatever of your "just stuff" you can con your old crack buddies into buying and fix your place up into a home your family is proud of. Doing so will not make you special, exceptional or anything else. People who've been dealt much worse hands than yours have done more than that. What it will do is square you with your family and yourself.

    I realize I speak from mostly ignorance of the specifics of your situation and what I've said may not be fair. But, I do so not to be mean, rather to offer something more than just a vote of sympathy to contribute to your weekly emotional yard sale. Surely you're looking for something other than just a hollow affirmation that you're doing alright, aren't you?

    You seem well educated and willing to better yourself, if not for yourself, then for your family. It's time to kick it into a higher gear.

  3. Ponzo's in Midtown is good - NY Style

    Romano's in the West Gray Center is good - NY Style

    Frank's Pizza Downtown by Cabo's is good - NY Style

    BJ's Brewery Pizza is damned good - Chicago-style

    Brother's Pizza is good - NY-style

    Doubledave's is good. - Austin-style

    Birra Poretti's was very good - Houston Irish-Italian Style

    Fuzzy's is good

    Kinneally's is good thin crust (ever try the corned beef pizza?) - Irish Pub Grub Style

    Napolis is good - NY Style

    Collina's is good pizza, is it still BYOB? - Italian Style

    Mario's Flying Pizza on Galveston Island...good pizza. - NY Style

    Star Pizza is the most constantly overrated pizza in Houston, IMHO. Gave it two tries just to make sure...nothing special there. I found it to be quite bland. Of course, I may not have had their 'signature' pizza.

    Gonna have to try Dolce Vita, I love good prosciutto pizza. Reminds me of my European escapade.

    Double Dave's blows. Pep rolls are interesting, but too greasy. The pizza is on par with Chucky Cheese.

    The others on your list are all among my favorites, though.

  4. Are you comparing that photo of downtown LA to "North Main, just across the bayou from Downtown" ???? Seriously? I had to go to a place near North Main and Hogan once. There were very few people around and no tall buildings and no urban style street retail. All I saw was a mexican grocery store with a huge parking lot called "El Guero" and a hamburger place with picnic table seating out front and another big parking lot. In that photo of LA, the buildings are packed together with no space in between and they all seem to have retail on the ground and apartments above. They also seem to be 5-10 stories, and there are no parking lots.

    The streetscape of North Main is nothing like downtown LA in that photo!

    Anybody got any photos of North Main to compare? This is the closest I've got (taken about one block from North Main and Hogan).

    476865916_e3d015749a_b.jpg

    Yeah, Harrisburg is probably much closer, but North Main just past the tunnel is what I was talking about. Not far up, where that photo is taken. I agree that it isn't really all that comparable -- proportionally it seems like a comparison, though. LA is about 3 times larger than Houston. Those shots seem about 3 times more built up than the areas I was talking about.

  5. Actually, I was never one that was overly impressed with the one-sided niteclub scene downtown. Niteclubs are what they are. They only appeal to the under-30 crowd. I was always rooting for something with more staying power...restaurants, bars and lounges. I am not the least bit upset to see the club scene die downtown. They'll be replaced with something that will better serve the downtown clientele of business people, (a few) residents and sports fans.

    That is not to say that a club district is not useful, only that I would rather it be somewhere other than Main Street. But, then again, I passed my clubbing age a couple of years back. This is my selfish wish. ;)

    Yes, on all these points we are in complete agreement.

  6. Hey, Ch2News, what magazine did the picture of the Republic Bank model and the steelworker walking on top come from? I remember reading that article 25 years ago! I distinctly recall the photo of the steelworker.

    In "A Place of Dreams" or whatever that book is called, there are several really cool photos of workers on the Heritage Plaza skeleton, if I remember correctly.

    Really nice photos. I especially like the one with the lunar eclipse.

  7. I can't help but imagine what HAIF posters would say if they saw THAT downtown. With the number of people that go into full panic mode if a panhandler asks for some spare change, and the screams that Main Street went ghetto because club-goers are Black, a scene like those pictured above would cause a caucasian calamity.

    Actually, minus probably 3/4 the people on the street and half the "retail", those photos look like Main St. Houston about twelve years ago. I believe I remember your saying how terrible that was in another thread.

    No caucasian calamity here. I don't find those pictures particularly appealing, though. The streetscape is similar to North Main, just across the bayou from Downtown, or maybe Harrisburg Blvd. -- both areas similar, proportionally and logistically speaking -- to the area of LA pictured. Yeah, it's sort of Downtown, but it isn't really what you go to for the "Downtown experience". It also isn't the Downtown people are really talking about when they think about building in new residential and retail. Whether it should be or not, is probably another discussion. LA doesn't currently have an area central to Downtown that's like Houston's...holy crap, now I'm starting to sound like those Dallas posters...

  8. That is true, although they are our gems primarily because of what they do for our skyline. On the street level, their environment is inhuman and forbidding.I welcome any addition to our skyline, but I'm not sure more skyline is what downtown Houston really needs right now. We have one of the most visually appealing skylines in the country, but on the street level downtown is still mostly a no-man's land. Downtown Austin or Fort Worth are more exciting for a pedestrian.That could have been done much more appealingly.ground_level.jpg

    As for "inhuman environments at street level" I'd say that Pennzoil and Chase do an amazing job of humanizing their scale and sites without turning them into strip centers. The entrance to Pennzoil is almost on the scale of a private residence, the way it slopes down to sidewalk level and brings people inside before they actually enter the building. Chase actually made a large city square with sculpture the justification for its massive height and edge siting. You walk up tiny steps with long runs to get to it. I'd say that is a pretty good urbanist's approach to humanizing the scale. BofA is a scaling disaster, I agree, but it was designed to be freeway architecture at the height of that movement's heydey in the epicenter of its most prominent city. Plus, it's so beautiful, I think most give it a pass for the damage it did to the sidewalk experience. Regardless, there's an entire city block-sized park across the street where you are free to be as pedestrian as you want. Calpine I don't consider a major building in any regard, except that it is very new. It does happen to be in probably the most walkable areas of Downtown, near several cool eateries and bars and adjacent to major performing arts centers, so I'm not sure what your beef is there. I walk around it all the time and find it neither inhuman nor forbidding. 1000 Main closed the entire street in front of itself to make a pleasant pedestrian plaza. How much more freaking human can you get?

  9. Sorry for sparking the Houston Vs. Dallas debate.

    I just mentioned what my friend said with the intent of finding out how much of it was true. The interesting part for me is that Dallas is perceived as having a more vibrant downtown by a lot of tourist type people who just visit the city once or twice.

    I think Downtown Dallas is cleaner at the street level and that DART is much better integrated into the Downtown infrastructure, meaning it causes less of a disruption of vehicular or pedestrian flow through Downtown. I think the historic buildings are better preserved and presented in DT Dallas, as well. I believe the perception of this, to an outsider, might represent a more vibrant downtown during the workday.

    After 5:00pm, though, DT Dallas looks like a neutron bomb hit it. The West End is a ghost town. The southeast portion running into Deep Ellum is a haven for junkies and thugs. The central part is all offices and closed lunch spots. DEAD.

    The northern portion, leading into Uptown and Victory and making up the new Arts District is showing a lot of promise, though. It's looking nice and is something to be proud of. I just think the comparisons to the vibrancy of Times Square or even Downtown Houston are very premature.

  10. Well, I was not trying to fuel a Dallas vs. Houston contest, but rather to answer some of the points made above in the thread -- which included Dallas comparisons that, to me, sounded a little off. The main comparison I was addressing was the one made to Los Angeles.

    Dallas was mentioned in a group of cities compared to Houston. It was also mentioned in several posts about its "Times Square" vibrancy and larger, busier downtown.

    Dallas and Houston are almost identical in many ways, but downtown life is not one of them. Even a declining Downtown Houston has tons more going on. That's not meant to spark debate. I don't really think it's debatable at all.

  11. Every time I see Houston photos from the '70s, I realize that must have been the best time ever to be in this city. I remember as a kid from Nacogdoches at that time, I would visit my uncle and he'd take me up in the Hyatt Regency or over the 610 bridge and tell me how one day, downtown was going to stretch from the Galleria to Interstate 45. I really think there was a sense of awe throughout the city at how quickly it was becoming a "world city". I think we may have lost that today...at least some of it.

    The media attention, building boom, population explosion, riches and growth all made people feel like they were part of the next Manhattan or LA. I sensed that, even as a kid. I used to remark to my parents how much I liked the fast pace and how exciting the city seemed to a kid from the sticks. Houston was going strong at all levels while most of the rest of the country was mired in a sluggish economy. Houstonians, the media and even a movie or two loved the dichotomy of a redneck town growing into a cosmopolitan city. They also loved to show off the skyline and the expanse of the sprawl.

    Most of all, at about 2,000,000 people in the metro area, Houston just seemed to work a lot better. It was kinda cool to burn up 75-cent gas to drive across fields of construction cranes on pristine, grey freeways.

    The early '80s were cool, too. Radio stations here were great and billboard advertising for them made them seem larger than life. I remember being amazed that there were so many to choose from and they were all so different. I also remember tuning in at about Livingston and listening the whole way down at "professional" radio shows, where the DJs were real performers -- not like the yokels in East Texas. When I was in 7th grade, the cable system in Nacogdoches added KPRC to its lineup, as we had no local NBC affiliate. I actually watched their news, to see big-time reporters doing their thing!

    I also remember every time we would leave to go home. I'd stay perched in the back window of our big GM car and watch until I couldn't see the top of the antenna of One Shell Plaza anymore. That's when I knew I had left. By the time I was a senior in high school, around '86-'87 I used to enjoy picking up a copy of the Houston Post on days I got out of school early to work at a Nacogdoches radio station. I used to listen to tapes of KKBQ FM and pay close attention to John Lander's reports to the Gavin Report (a radio trade mag) for ways to improve my show.

    That year, I made a trip down here with my girlfriend to go to Astroworld. We were 16 and this was the first time we had been out of town together, alone. We spent the day riding rollercoasters, then found a cheap motel on South Main (yikes!) to do what 16-year-olds do when they're not supervised. I remember the clerk smiling at me when I asked if he had an hourly rate available, because I just wanted to rest and take a shower to wake up before driving home to Nacogdoches. I thought I was being pretty smooth. He made me pay for the whole night -- about $20, if I remember right.

    Good times.

  12. DT LA and DT Houston are really quite similar in a lot of ways. Both are very much business centers with very few residents. LA has enjoyed a small renaissance in their DT area around Staples Center, with a lot of dense, mixed use residential/retail popping up around the arena. It's not unlike what's going on in Midtown Houston, just on a larger, denser scale. It's also happening much faster in LA. Figueroa St., which fronts Staples Center is developing very nicely and connects the USC campus, the Staples Center area and the heart of Downtown. Everyone knows that USC in in the middle of a ghetto, and that southwestern DT LA was always fairly poor and underdeveloped, much like Midtown was to Houston.

    I'd say, just as in many cases, we can look to LA for how we will one day develop, as we seem to follow in that city's footsteps on a smaller scale. One point should be noted, though, LA has not done much to develop DT retail or street life in the DT area proper. It's deader than dead seven nights per week.

    As far as large cities with more vibrant DT pedestrian and retail environments, there are plenty of larger and smaller metro areas that fit the bill -- San Francisco, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Boston, Denver, Seattle, Cincinnati and others. DT Houston is more vibrant than, say, Dallas, Salt Lake City, Detroit or Phoenix, but of those, only Dallas seems to constantly crow about how Manhattanized it is.

  13. Once again -- the only person who has made this a gay issue is Craig himself, with his "I'm not gay!" speech. It's as if peeping and soliciting in a public restroom -- which he freely copped to -- was okay, just so long as no one knew he's gay. As soon as that part got out, it was a "witch hunt".

    Well guess what, he wasn't arrested for being gay. Only Idaho newspapers, other Republicans and he seem to care about that point. There's nothing wrong or illegal about being gay (in most states, anyway). So what should we believe? He is a freaky glory-hole perv, and isn't a well-adjusted, law-abiding gay man?

    Okay, I guess I do believe him.

  14. Dal, I wasn't refering to you in either case, and made the mistake of not directing it to the person originally intended for. Just because a post immediately follows yours, doesn't mean that it's directed towards you. It was my assumption that veteran HAIFers would have figured that out by now.

    It wasn't that you merely followed my post. You quoted it.

    It is my assumption that veteran HAIFers would have figured out how to direct their commentary to the intended posters by now.

    No harm done, though.

  15. Is installing a higher-rated garage door or window shutters not an act undertaken by an individual for the purposes of hurricane preparation? Or if you live in a coastal area, having a home on stilts? Or having more insurance coverage than required by your mortgage lender? Isn't it rather short-sighted to limit this discussion to what can or should be done as the hurricane bears down upon you?

    Are you my ex-wife? Because I swear to holy God that she is the only other person I've ever known who liked to argue about nothing as much as you do. You even flip sides of an argument to keep it going. It isn't interesting.

    I have some stockpiling to do...

  16. Storm landing location is also important.

    if it makes landfall South of (or WEST as some people call it) of Galveston, We're going to get the "dirty" side of it. If it goes to the North of (or EAST) of Galveston, we're going to be relatively okay, in Houston Proper.

    That's one way to gauge as to what to do. Again, be informed in the action you take. Being chicken little just makes you into a timewaster.

    Point one -- I am certainly not being a "Chicken Little". I'm not calling for panic. In fact, quite the opposite.

    Point two -- coming into a discussion without first reading the previous posts, then restating a point made by the person you're attempting to "call out" for being a time waster is the height of irony.

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