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Downtown Houston 2036 Master Plan


MontroseNeighborhoodCafe

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Altering the façade, design, or shape in anyway is changing history. I would say it is comparable to changing the history textbooks in the classrooms, And then the students accepting that as what really happened.

 

I agree with you Montrose1100 on wanting to keep the facade the same. Not to get off topic but your argument about history books isn't very good. History books in public schools do not reflect real history. How we still hail Christopher Columbus as a national hero who deserves his own day is beyond me. For a man who raped, pillaged and robbed natives, our children really get the cheery history about a heinous individual. For that, history books should be changed to show multiple views because they only reflect the view of the individual or groups of individuals that write and edit them.

 

As much as I love Pennzoil Place I don't feel it's owner is obligated to keep the exterior the same. Yes it is his property and those who wish it to stay the same can voice their content in hopes that they will change their minds. However since it isn't a historic landmark they can do whatever they wish to it. I doubt the facade will change, it was just a mere observation I was voicing about the image.

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I agree with you Montrose1100 on wanting to keep the facade the same. Not to get off topic but your argument about history books isn't very good. History books in public schools do not reflect real history. How we still hail Christopher Columbus as a national hero who deserves his own day is beyond me. For a man who raped, pillaged and robbed natives, our children really get the cheery history about a heinous individual. For that, history books should be changed to show multiple views because they only reflect the view of the individual or groups of individuals that write and edit them.

As much as I love Pennzoil Place I don't feel it's owner is obligated to keep the exterior the same. Yes it is his property and those who wish it to stay the same can voice their content in hopes that they will change their minds. However since it isn't a historic landmark they can do whatever they wish to it. I doubt the facade will change, it was just a mere observation I was voicing about the image.

Well I was talking about how unrealistic they have become, and they still are continuing to get worse.
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I agree with you Montrose1100 on wanting to keep the facade the same. Not to get off topic but your argument about history books isn't very good. History books in public schools do not reflect real history. How we still hail Christopher Columbus as a national hero who deserves his own day is beyond me. For a man who raped, pillaged and robbed natives, our children really get the cheery history about a heinous individual. For that, history books should be changed to show multiple views because they only reflect the view of the individual or groups of individuals that write and edit them.

 

As much as I love Pennzoil Place I don't feel it's owner is obligated to keep the exterior the same. Yes it is his property and those who wish it to stay the same can voice their content in hopes that they will change their minds. However since it isn't a historic landmark they can do whatever they wish to it. I doubt the facade will change, it was just a mere observation I was voicing about the image.

 

It's pretty interesting when you compare texas history in texas and texas history in Mexico. In Mexico they say Sam Houston is a traitor because he basically left the guys at the Alamo out to die, who were waiting for him. Here he has his own statue and is a hero.

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Sure and such buildings are generally designated as national landmarks. Seems like a stretch to me to put this building at that level.

 

It's one of the most architecturally significant American skyscrapers of the late 20th century. Ada Louise Huxtable, architecture critic for the NY Times, said at the time that it had the biggest impact on a city's skyline since the Empire State Building was built. It shows up in most architecture textbooks that show the history of skyscrapers. It is widely regarded as the building that "broke the rectangular box," i.e. put an end to the era of simple rectangular prism skyscrapers, and ushered in the era of "sky-sculpture" towers.

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So, is your argument that if the community, whoever that is, decides the building is worth more to them than to the owner, the owner ought to bow to the desires of the community without compensation?

 

This has already been decided. In the late 70's, a developer wanted to build an office tower literally through the roof of Grand Central Station in New York, and effectively turn the grand waiting hall into the elevator lobby of his tower. There was a public outcry, and the city passed a landmark law preserving the structure as is. The developer whined that they couldn't stop his development without compensating him monetarily. The case went to the Supreme Court, which ruled in the city's favor.

 

Hence, this is settled case law with Supreme Court precedent. The question then is not whether we as a city could potentially stop any alteration to the building, but why we would waste time arguing about whether we have the right to or not.

 

The proposal:

 

byard1.jpg

 

As it looks today:

 

grand-central-terminal-new-york.jpg

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"So basically, Grand Central Station is exactly the same as Buc-ee's."

 

Not sure if he meant that.   However, I wonder if the attitude is like this:  GCS is (nowadays, at least) an appendage of evil big gubberment.  Buc-ee's is a Texas-proud private enterprise, therefore their stores are superior in every way.

 

I'm exaggerating for effect, of course.  And I like Buc-ee's as well as GCS.  Just in different ways.  

 

I just think that, even as a nation of free individuals dedicated to honoring property rights, we still retain the right to try to convince our neighbors to cooperate in such a way that we retain a few things of value for future generations.  

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"So basically, Grand Central Station is exactly the same as Buc-ee's."

 

Not sure if he meant that.   However, I wonder if the attitude is like this:  GCS is (nowadays, at least) an appendage of evil big gubberment.  Buc-ee's is a Texas-proud private enterprise, therefore their stores are superior in every way.

 

I'm exaggerating for effect, of course.  And I like Buc-ee's as well as GCS.  Just in different ways.  

 

I just think that, even as a nation of free individuals dedicated to honoring property rights, we still retain the right to try to convince our neighbors to cooperate in such a way that we retain a few things of value for future generations.  

 

 

Not sure how carefully you read my post, but I don't think you understood what I said.

Edited by H-Town Man
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Johnson designed a few great buildings, and a few that do nothing for me, like the AT&T building, One Detroit, and the Crystal Cathedral. But I also think that on another scale, the Bucee's designers have done an outstanding job of taking a ubiquitous structure of our lives and making it better and more useful. I am a firm believer that function is more important than form, and while it's nice to have a great form, it shouldn't override function. That's why so many buildings in the Middle East are a pain to live or work in - the outside looks great, but the possible floor plans are not good at all.

 

As for Penn Central V NYC, in the end, it looks like Penn Central got what they wanted, which was for someone else to take over running GCS.

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Johnson designed a few great buildings, and a few that do nothing for me, like the AT&T building, One Detroit, and the Crystal Cathedral. But I also think that on another scale, the Bucee's designers have done an outstanding job of taking a ubiquitous structure of our lives and making it better and more useful. I am a firm believer that function is more important than form, and while it's nice to have a great form, it shouldn't override function. That's why so many buildings in the Middle East are a pain to live or work in - the outside looks great, but the possible floor plans are not good at all.

 

As for Penn Central V NYC, in the end, it looks like Penn Central got what they wanted, which was for someone else to take over running GCS.

 

If function is your main criterion, then you could say that a Porta-Potty is great architecture.

 

Pennzoil Place is not personally my favorite building in Houston (although it's up there), nor my favorite Johnson building. But looked at impersonally, it has done more than any other building to put Houston on the map as a city where cutting edge architecture happens. In the years following that building's construction, architects were looking at us the way nowadays they look at Dubai and Hong Kong, and the way they looked at Chicago in the late 60's. For a time, the architectural world said, "What is Houston going to do next?"

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Guest Jackwood

What do you mean "nothing"? We have established beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Pennzoil building is to be redesigned to look like a Buc-ee's. And that it is none of our business.  :P

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What do you mean "nothing"? We have established beyond a shadow of a doubt that the Pennzoil building is to be redesigned to look like a Buc-ee's. And that it is none of our business. :P

A Bucees inside the loop would be great. One downtown even better!

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Heres an awesome PDF Urbannizer found highlighting many of the projects going on and proposed in the downtown area, ranging from tunneling i45 and 59, and building grand boulevards above them to building new parks in the Southern portion of downtown and adding Green Ways connecting parks and popular areas. lots of new signage will be added for pedestrians and they are working on better connecting downtown with the surrounding areas.

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/54482015/CHI%20Breakfast%20Presentation%20for%20publication.pdf

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Pennzoil Place is not personally my favorite building in Houston (although it's up there), nor my favorite Johnson building. But looked at impersonally, it has done more than any other building to put Houston on the map as a city where cutting edge architecture happens. In the years following that building's construction, architects were looking at us the way nowadays they look at Dubai and Hong Kong, and the way they looked at Chicago in the late 60's. For a time, the architectural world said, "What is Houston going to do next?"

For those of us who didn't live in Houston during those years, I think that is an excellent point to be aware of.

 

We lost that position, not only in minds elsewhere in the world, but own own.  Perhaps there are various metaphors that fit:  "fifteen minutes of fame", "merry-go-round", etc.

 

I don't believe in the notion of living in the past.  But ... we should remember our past ... and let that help inspire us to be the best that we can be, given the resources we have at hand.  Better than degenerating into obscurity, consoled by fleeting status symbols.  

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  • 2 weeks later...

Time to face the music the demand is in North & West - I personally would like to see all the buildings proposed DT go up and have tenants but I think the reality is only a few will get built. I know there is another thread - what are the chances... Hope I am wrong. I had to drive out to Gessner & I-10 today for an early morning meeting that would be brutal to do twice a day.

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