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Downtown Houston 2036 Master Plan


MontroseNeighborhoodCafe

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you realize this "news" has been known in the market for 3 years, right? 

nope but thanks for informing me. i wonder why people didnt realize sooner that the 1/1/2014 thing meant space in the building was going up for lease then? ah well, its good to know they are smaller spaces and not the whole tower.

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  • 8 months later...

Exceptional analysis! The infographics were to notch. The visuals of the possible streetscapes or possbilities for what these new spaces could look like was very lazy, and underwhelming. Sometimes I'm disappointed by these surveys in terms of what could be possible and their own interpretations of these kinds of interventions. Why not throw in a design of a midrise you came up with yourself or a park space that you came up with yourself. That brings home to those reading possibilties that can actually happen. Simply showing stock images of other precendents only illustrates further what we don't have and what was possible in those places. Of course those images are important to give as examples which were good examples to give, but instead of just giving them to the people so they can simply glance over them give them to architects or designers to reinterpret and to re-imagine them in the context of Houston which is a very different city than most. Plus some of those photoshop visuals were pretty.....blahhhhh.

 

This is just a healthy critique of the amazing hard work they must have done for this. The appendix is what really steals the show for me in how it details each streets conditions, typologies, and visual impacts on a level that no survey done on downtown has done yet.

 

This will certainly help others in their further analysis of this once blighted part of downtown which is finally getting the attention it deserves....even though it is slow as malasses lol.

Edited by Luminare
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  • 4 months later...

Notes from meeting today in order of importance to me:

 

1) 4,199 units under the Downtown Living Initiative have been publicly approved. Two more are proposed and would bring the total to 4,750 leaving only 250 units to go under the 5,000 unit cap

 

2) No plans or discussion to bring a major grocer to downtown. They expect this to come after residential base is built. Prior year discussions included an urban Target with a grocery component

 

3) Bob Eury, the Downtown District Executive Director, is flying to New York tonight and may bring back "big news"

 

4) 2015 downtown district budget is $15mm

 

5) There is $4.2bn of investment underway or proposed in downtown

 

6) New branding - Downtown: Something Big is Up
 

7) They have put in 3 (?) porta potties to aid sanitation efforts

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#3 is probably related to a retail store. What big brand retail store is based in NYC?

 

The Downtown District seemed downbeat on retail during their presentation. Said they were working on it but not as much progress as other areas. They quickly went through things like the Dallas Street widening and other improvements - not sure that project is even funded. 

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I've got a question about the Downtown Living Initiative, and I guess this is as good as any a place to post it... after a development is approved for however many units, are they "required" to build it? I mean obviously the city can't force them to start construction, but is there a penalty if they don't build, or do the units just get subtracted from the 5000 if they cancel the project? I don't think there have been any examples of this yet, but I feel like it could become an issue once more are started/finished.

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The Downtown District seemed downbeat on retail during their presentation. Said they were working on it but not as much progress as other areas. They quickly went through things like the Dallas Street widening and other improvements - not sure that project is even funded.

Thought this would be funded via the downtown projected 2015 budget
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  • 2 years later...

Congrats to Downtown for winning swamplot's 2016 neighborhood of the year. Downtown also won in 2014 (Swamplot did not do neighborhood of the year in 2015). The neighborhood has come a long way with residential, bars, restaurants, lodging, convention center improvements and office and 2017 will finally show it all off with the Super Bowl. 

 

http://swamplot.com/the-swamplot-awards-for-houston-real-estate-2016-the-winners/2016-12-30/

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Wait till people really start filling all of those downtown residences and the whole atmosphere of downtown will never be the same.

It will be a vibrant mecca for the young and empty nesters. Its a great time for downtown. It deserves to be the neighborhood of the year.

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  • 2 months later...

If decision makers aren't already reading HAIF, let your voice be heard about your opinions on downtown and take their survey!

 

http://www.plandowntownhou.com/participate.html

 

One of the things I liked is giving us the chance to map out our routes via foot, driving etc and showing which are our favorite streets and blocks.

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If you didn't have a chance to hear it KUHT/ 88.7 had Bob Eury on from Houston Central /Downtown district taking calls and discussing this new plan. He directed people to the survey and spoke to the initiative and ongoing projects to improve downtowns atmosphere.

If you go to Kuht 88.7 you can pull up the interview by simply looking at 3/13/17 archives Houston Matters downtown.

I worked as a stake holder representative on early consulting for lighting, landscaping, street parking, signage  and the pedestrian realm with Bob and Guy Hagsette on the Cotswold project. I really enjoyed getting the opportunity to work as a group in helping to offer insight into such a successful redevelopment of downtowns Historical east west cross streets. I can remember when they started planting the trees and now they're all so large. That area looks and feels so different and pedestrian friendly now. It makes you realize that if you want you can help make a difference in this city if you take the time. Thats why its important for all of us with such strong opinions about how this downtown should evolve that its important for all of us to take the survey.

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23 hours ago, cspwal said:

I put a marker down on the Days Inn: "Ugly needs to be demolished"

I did also. Hopefully if enough of us mark it they will do something about it. It sure cant hurt if everyone marks it as a avoidance area.

Take the survey.

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Way to go kbates2. I hope everyone will take it. I had a terrible time using the trail marker and Im sure my routes looked like a drunken soldier, but I really took advantage of the comment sections for each question. I highly recommend all HAIFERS take the survey. Its your chance to make a difference. Don't miss this chance to let them know how you feel.

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  • 4 months later...

Forgive me if there is already a thread for this.

 

HOUSTON ASPIRES TO BOOST ITS WORLD CLASS STATUS WITH PLAN HOUSTON

 

This months Texas Architect, Florence Tang writes about the Houston Downtown Management District's announcement of Plan Houston.

A plan to improve livability in downtown  and to redefine areas for development  is being developed

They will be holding public meetings and hope to have a draft for their proposal by the end of 2017. 

It sounds like a good opportunity for anyone truly interested in how downtown grows. Here's your chance.

I hope this includes room for organic growth and not a sterile environment designed like the Domain.

I always look forward to getting my Texas Architect. It's always a very good read and informative.

 

 

Edited by bobruss
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This seems like something that should have happened 10 or 20 years ago. One would think by now that downtown is at a point where it doesn't need visionary plans to encourage development. As far as suggesting development guidelines, it is for the most part too late to save Texas Avenue from driveways and curb cuts, or Main Street from being lined with parking garages. But maybe it will do some good?

 

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1 hour ago, H-Town Man said:

This seems like something that should have happened 10 or 20 years ago. One would think by now that downtown is at a point where it doesn't need visionary plans to encourage development. As far as suggesting development guidelines, it is for the most part too late to save Texas Avenue from driveways and curb cuts, or Main Street from being lined with parking garages. But maybe it will do some good?

 

 

There was a plan (and it was implemented pretty successfully) developed 13 years ago called the "Houston Downtown Development Framework." It called for increased public space and additional residents and aided in the development of Discovery Green and the Downtown Living Initiative (subsidies for 5,000 apartment units).

 

I'm hopeful that this plan will call for and achieve additional parks and public spaces and integrate some of the various patches of downtown. Also hopeful it will have the city partner with private developers to develop a grocery store and more residential. 

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  • 3 months later...

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