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Aris At Market Square: 32-Story High-Rise At 409 Travis St.


Mab

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Didn't HISD already own the HSPVA block?

 

Given all of the strangeness that seems to happen around which downtown blocks got developed and which did not this go 'round, it doesn't surprise me that HISD might have focused on selling the existing HSPVA campus land and elect not to explore past whatever idea they already had for the downtown block. But that one is much different from UHD's property, there are two other undeveloped surface lot blocks still left very near the new HSPVA.

 

I could imagine someone buying UHD out and facilitating further expansion north of I-10 if something significant developed along the Bayou.  If they would also buy the jails, that would be awesome.

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(@ adr) Most likely not in the next 5 years, maybe 10. But when the value of the land as vacant is worth more than the value as improved with garage, plus demolition costs, plus the soft cost involved in getting everyone together, it will be gone.

 

There was a big townhome community that sold a couple years back on Post Oak Park Drive and has now been scraped, due to continued appreciation of the land values in the area. Took some work to get everyone together on it. A lot of the older folks liked their townhomes.

 

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17 hours ago, Nate99 said:

Didn't HISD already own the HSPVA block?

Yeah HISD has owned it since before they were HISD - it was the location of the original Houston Academy which was renamed Sam Houston High School.  http://www.houstonisd.org/domain/1875

That school moved to a new campus at Tidwell and Irvington in 1955, and the downtown building turned into an admin building until it was demolished in 1970.

 

Quote

Until the 1950s the block bordered by Austin, Capitol, Caroline, and Rusk in Downtown Houston housed the institutions that make up what is now Sam Houston High School. Houston Academy was there in the 1850s. In 1894 Central High School was built. J.R. Gonzales of the Houston Chronicle said that the school was "[d]escribed as one of the finest high schools in this part of the country" and "also attracted negative attention for its incredible cost." The school had a price tag of $80,000, $1.9 million in 2010 dollars. In March 1919 the school burned down. A new Sam Houston opened two years later.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Houston_Math,_Science,_and_Technology_Center

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