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Everything posted by arche_757
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Surely a large earthen berm or grassy knoll would allow a spot or two for a tree or trees of greater circumference? đ§
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This state should have 4-5, maybe even 6+ public tier-one universities given the insanely vast wealth weâve accumulated from oil since 1901. For the record I am a UH grad, and I never wanted to attend UT as hard as that may be for some to believe. I wanted, and welcome any research campuses A&M or UT or Tech or Cal or Oregon, or Florida or anyone wants to build in Houston!!!!!! For me that equals more clients, more potential work, more diversity of thought and more ideas from abroad. As an architect I canât help but think the more the merrier. It keeps me employed and busy. It allows also for greater opportunities for future residents and potential students since weâre now a very large city of 7million and growing. A shame that UH felt so threatened by the proposal. The city and metro region as a whole lost because of it.
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The Womanâs Hospital Of Texas Houston Campus
arche_757 replied to LarryDierker's topic in Texas Medical Center
Great news! As a proud father of two children who were delivered at this hospital - one of which was a premie who was in the NICU for 16 days - this will be a wonderful asset for all who use this hospital. Which in case some of you donât know has patients from all over Texas and neighboring states. Ill bet theyâre shuttling employees from offsite as the parking there can be a problem during regular business hours.- 135 replies
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Sounds much more memorable than my years at the CoArch. The only similarities were the wars (sadly enough). Vietnam for you, and the Iraq war following September 11th for me. Suffice to say the general mood at the college was one of quiet unease /borderline marginal discomfort. Nothing close to the atmosphere you recalled from the years you spent there. People were either skeptical or quietly âokâ with what was happening in the Persian Gulf. Of course there was no draft... so, yeah. And Joe Mashburn had pretty much turned around the CoArch. UH had (at the time) one of the highest rated accredited architectural schools in the country, largely due to him and his staff. I remember some profs who were there to review and approve the accreditation (as it was up for renewal) commented that âwhat UH was doing was something they wanted to emulate back at their own campusâ. I canât recall but I think the schools who sent staff to review our accreditation were: University of Miami, Cornell and some other university. Two of those are well regarded for various reasons. So it was a worthy compliment.
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There is a design laboratory named after him on campus now. It opened shortly before I finished up there. Was the old band annex (or warehouse) adjacent to the CoArch now it is a modeling workshop.
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Iâm as big of a proponent for Houston as any. I donât believe I trashed the town - just placed due criticism upon the firms and developers for being less cutting edge than in decades past; and less forward thinking here locally than they are in other cities. We have a handful of really good developers in town, i canât put Frank Liu in that mix not in a long shot. Not yet. Perhaps some on here can. Good for them. Iâm hoping this project turns out better than is currently advertised, or at the very least is successfully interwoven into the urban fabric. I have to add: Iâm merely stating an opinion - my opinion. Everyone has their own. Many people seem A-ok with this design. Fine. Great. Iâm a curmudgeon, and I want the very best.
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My opinion. But then who is the architect involved on this? Also, this isnât a strip center to repurpose. This is -as others have mentioned- a potentially transformative project. Iâll await further judgment till it has been further developed.
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Exactly Marathon Man. Be bold. The fact theyâre still sitting on this with just the most marginal of expenses to build this out doesnât bode well for its future. I hope Iâm wrong in my pessimistic view of this project. My past experience in both projects Iâve worked on, and ones that pop up in this town tells me otherwise.
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We are each allowed opinions. Mine veers toward the dramatic - at times. This developer had dreams of OMA but an EDI budget (they probably cannot really even afford them!). My point early was that someone better suited to a more transformative development should have this project. Sadly thatâs not how things worked out for this site. And it will be developed into something far less than what it should be. Because. Houston.
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Best outcome now is bankruptcy for these joke developers. They see value in a dumpy building, the true value is in the land. A shame this is what it is. Iâll gladly eat crow if they turn this into something. Anything really beyond what itâs heading toward. But having been disappointed enough with our talentless designers and developers here I wonât be holding my breath. This is probably the biggest disappointment in terms of development of any scale in Houston in quite some time. Thereâs plenty of disappointments elsewhere (Thor Equities buildings are terribly hostile to the street and a waste of space - frankly), but this is the biggest loser. I mean look at the Albert Thomas, yes itâs successful in that it isnât vacant, but that land is FAR more valuable than what it is. This monstrosity will be the same thing minus the interaction with the rest of downtown since it is across the bayou.
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Money talks. No reason a developer couldnât incorporate the Dillardâs into a high rise tower - Water Tower Place in Chicago is one example. It would make sense for the Galleria to expand east and tie into Dillardâs in some capacity here in the future.
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One can hope itâs more than just a Twin Peaks! That said, at what point do we over saturate the market demand for food halls? Ideally the site would eventually become home to a nice mixed use high rise (or two - including Dillardâs). Sadly I think that the market for something like that is unlikely at this time.
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The Suburban Home: Reinvented
arche_757 replied to arche_757's topic in Architects, Developers, Builders, and Designs
Obviously we need to design with a clear mind when it comes to potential for weather. I think we need to design homes with greater resiliency for the weather - any weather.@ -
I am curious what all of you feel are needed elements, and which are unnecessary elements of a suburban home in greater Houston circa 2030. How would that home differ from what it is today? What would you change about the house? yard? street? neighborhood? This is just an open discussion on the suburban home of the future. There is no right or wrong. Assume the following: Houston has continued to grow (9 - 9.5 million), weather is still a major concern, and the urban areas of town are booming..
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Hindsight tells us a little bit more open land would be very good... just sayân
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Kingwood and a few other areas were over developed (sadly) without regard to the 10,000 lbs gorilla staring them in the face: upstream flooding and river management, or lack thereof in event of flooding. This is the same for the areas near the Brazos in Fort Bend, and areas built in the flood pool(s) of Buffalo Bayou. Itâs a shame. Whatâs even worse is that elevating structures another foot or two - at the time - probably wouldnât have been that costly. Now itâs a BIG expense. Not saying that they wouldnât have flooded otherwise during certain extreme events, but Iâll wager quite a few would have been fine. We need a regional flood authority, with regional control and -importantly- oversight of these yokel river authorities. This should be true moving forward state-wise... but Iâm not going to hold my breath.
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Probably so. Would be somewhat separated from the rest of the campus, but perhaps a chance at a distinctive structure? Not that they are necessarily lacking. I imagine a high rise residential project will ultimately end up at that property... ? Which is good I suppose.
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Youâre correct. That said, I believe Galvestonâs intention in implementing the LDR was to define standards which would remove the potential for buildings like the San Luis or maybe even the convention center. They were trying to avoid having developers block entire blocks of low-rise residential, which is technically still possible - albeit much more complicated these days. Folks in Galveston *want* expect to have beachfront views from their scabbed on garage rooftop porches, even if the âstructuresâ are 2-3 blocks north of the commercially zoned Seawall frontage. That and theyâd reaaaly like to avoid any high rise development along most of the Seawall. There are too many Galvestonians that think they deserve some sort of grandfathered in exclusions for their immediate backyard. Which, as a homeowner myself I donât necessarily blame them, but you have to weigh the risks when buying near (1-3 blocks) of a commercial zone. If Johnny Developer comes along and smacks down a 5-floor building on a piece of land which is zoned for such development - what should you expect?
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UH D should buy that land... Theyâve probably looked at it, but the entity that owns it most likely wants $$$! Is Transwestern the owner, or just representing the owner?
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Doesnât appear scaled correctly for a 58 floor tower. Look at the base. That said, if this IS the design: garbage.
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Particularly that 4-phases will be developed in the next 10 years!! 2.5 years each. Pretty aggressive, indeed.
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I must admit the quality of ideas in regard to development has drastically improved over the last 20 years. East River, Station Houston and TMC3 (among others), while different entirely in what they are - are the sort of forward thinking, large, transformative projects Houston was known for decades ago. Those 3 alone will greatly alter the landscape in town. This is an entire new district created in an area where these sort of projects wouldnât have happened with the developers of the 90âs and early 00âs. At all. Midway has - in my opinion - clearly separated itself from anyone not named Hines in this town. Good for them. Better for us.
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I should have added prior to posting that it was a sort of running joke among the architects and engineers who worked on the project. Sarcasm is hard to decipher (and convey) over the interwebâs sometimes.
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I recall speaking to some folks who worked on the project and this was a common theme brought up. Probably was a VE item suggested by the GC before design went public! Iâd have loved to be a fly on that wall.
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I thought I was one of the few! Iâve routinely said weâre at, or over 7,000,000 for the last several months. Pretty impressive! When I started college in 2001 we had about 4.1 million people here in town.
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