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Museum Medical Tower 1213 Hermann
MUSEUM MEDICAL TOWER 1213 HERMANN NEW RESTAURANT | 4,450 SF + PATIO 69 45 HOUSTON 10 THE HEIGHTS The Heights 16 mins River Oaks 12 mins MEMORIAL West U 12 mins RICE MILITARY Memorial 22 mins 45 The Galleria 14 mins TANGLEWOOD DOWNTOWN RIVER OAKS 527 Tanglewood 14 mins 4,450 SF + Patio EAST MONTROSEMUSEUM UPTOWN 59 MEDICAL DOWNTOWN The Medical Center 7 mins 69 TOWER 1213 HERMANN MIDTOWN 610 AFTON OAKS UPPER KIRBY Hobby Airport 16 mins MUSEUM DISTRICT IAH 30 mins Sugar Land 27 mins BELLAIRE 288 Port of Houston 17 mins WEST UNIVERSITY 90 SOUTHGATE Baybrook 24 mins Katy 35 mins Cypress 32 mins 610 The Woodlands 36 mins Kingwood 37 mins 69 45 LOCAL 10 THE HEIGHTS 1 Mile 3 Miles 5 Miles MEMORIAL POPULATION RICE MILITARY 2019 21,677 199,900 469,667 2024 24,145 219,979 513,325 45 DAYTIME POPULATION TANGLEWOOD DOWNTOWN RIVER OAKS 527 2019 67,258 599,315 960,102 4,450 SF + Patio EAST Workers 58,911 516,939 757,969 MONTROSEMUSEUM UPTOWN 59 MEDICAL DOWNTOWN 69 TOWER 1213 HERMANN MIDTOWN MEDIAN HOME VALUE 610 AFTON OAKS UPPER KIRBY 1 MILE 2019 $477,885 $448,094 $408,837 MUSEUM DISTRICT 2024 $484,321 $466,165 $433,422 BELLAIRE 288 AVERAGE HH INCOME 2019 $115,726 $114,254 $115,132 WEST UNIVERSITY 90 3 MILES 2024 $129,841 $126,405 $127,377 SOUTHGATE 610 5 MILES LOCALE BAYOU CITY NEARBY ATTRACTIONS ARTS & CULTURE 4TH 5TH Annual Festivals & Events: • Chevron Houston Marathon Most populous city Largest metro • Mardi Gras! Galveston Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo broke paid attendance • Bayou City Art Festival 7M 1.28M records in 2015 with • BP MS 150 -
Artist-Planner Collaborations Lessons Learned from the Arts and Culture Ecosystems of Three Sun Belt Cities for a New Model of Inclusive Planning
Artist-Planner Collaborations Lessons learned from the arts and culture ecosystems of three Sun Belt cities for a new model of inclusive planning. Photo by Mike Petrucci on Unsplash Building Better Cities Building Better Lives June 2019 Report contributors: Grant Patterson and Leah Binkovitz Rice University Kinder Institute for Urban Research 6100 Main Street, MS-208, Houston, TX 77005 For more information, contact [email protected] or 713-348-4132. Copyright © 2019 by Rice Kinder Institute for Urban Research All rights reserved. Recommended citation: Patterson, Grant and Leah Binkovitz. Artist-Planner Collaborations: Lessons learned from the arts and culture ecosystems of three Sun Belt cities for a new model of inclusive planning. Report. Kinder Institute for Urban Research, Rice University. Houston, TX: Kinder Institute for Urban Research, 2019. TABLE OF CONTENTS Table of Contents 2 Executive Summary 4 Introduction 6 Case Studies 8 Emerging Themes 16 Arts and Culture within Complete Communities 18 Employing Artist-Planner Collaboration in Complete Communities 20 Conclusion 22 Citations Artist-Planner Collaborations Lessons learned from the arts and culture ecosystems of three Sun Belt cities for a new model of inclusive planning. 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Executive Summary ibrant arts and culture offerings attract visitors from around the region and Vbeyond, provide gathering spaces and encourage social interaction and collective action. Furthermore, they facilitate the celebration of unique places through historic preservation, public art, cultural festivals and other community-rooted creative activities. In Houston and other cities, cultural planners are working to proactively and comprehensively plan for the impact that the arts and culture can have on their cities and neighborhoods, strategize how to promote and expand those impacts and engage with diverse stakeholders to envision the future of arts and culture moving forward. -
30Th Anniversary of the Center for Public History
VOLUME 12 • NUMBER 2 • SPRING 2015 HISTORY MATTERS 30th Anniversary of the Center for Public History Teaching and Collection Training and Research Preservation and Study Dissemination and Promotion CPH Collaboration and Partnerships Innovation Outreach Published by Welcome Wilson Houston History Collaborative LETTER FROM THE EDITOR 28½ Years Marty Melosi was the Lone for excellence in the fields of African American history and Ranger of public history in our energy/environmental history—and to have generated new region. Thirty years ago he came knowledge about these issues as they affected the Houston to the University of Houston to region, broadly defined. establish and build the Center Around the turn of the century, the Houston Public for Public History (CPH). I have Library announced that it would stop publishing the been his Tonto for 28 ½ of those Houston Review of History and Culture after twenty years. years. Together with many others, CPH decided to take on this journal rather than see it die. we have built a sturdy outpost of We created the Houston History Project (HHP) to house history in a region long neglectful the magazine (now Houston History), the UH-Oral History of its past. of Houston, and the Houston History Archives. The HHP “Public history” includes his- became the dam used to manage the torrent of regional his- Joseph A. Pratt torical research and training for tory pouring out of CPH. careers outside of writing and teaching academic history. Establishing the HHP has been challenging work. We In practice, I have defined it as historical projects that look changed the format, focus, and tone of the magazine to interesting and fun. -
For Sale Or Lease GREENBRIAR DR
For Sale or Lease GREENBRIAR DR. 4007 ±1 acre available US 59 & GREENBRIAR, HOUSTON, TX WN H NTO OUST W ON DO S SHEPHERD DR 69 FOR MORE INFORMATION: Simmi Jaggi Managing Director 713 888 4098 [email protected] Elizabeth Clampitt Senior Vice President 713 888 4075 [email protected] GREENBRIAR DR West Dallas Street BUFFALO BAYOU Waugh Drive Texas Avenue MEMORIAL DR. Lamar Street Canal Street Montrose Boulevard Robin Street Walker Street Preston Street Willowick Road PARK ALLEN PKWY Rusk Street RIVER OAKS Lamar Street West Gray Street Gray Street Clay Street Kirby Drive Inwood Drive Brazos Street Houston RIVER OAKS Bell Street Welch Street Harrisburg Boulevard Dunlavy Street NEIGHBORS Commonwealth Street Bailey Street RIVER OAKS SHOPPING CENTER San Felipe Street W DALLAS ST. MIDTOWN Polk Street Woodhead Street 45 San Felipe Street Hazard Street Taft Street Avalon Place Jackson Street Reba Drive Sampson Street Caroline Street Claremont Lane EADO DOWNTOWN Main Street Pierce Street Westheimer Road Greenbriar Street Crawford Street Timmons Lane W GRAY ST. Tuam Street Spur 527 Austin Street Hamilton Street Graustark Street Chartres Street Leeland Street West Alabama Street Alabama Street Edloe Street Street Edloe Edloe Sauer Street UPPER KIRBY MONTROSE Emancipation Avenue Richmond Avenue McGowen Street GREENBRIAR DR. 4007 Main Street Cullen Boulevard Blodgett Street GREENWAY Holman Street I 69 PLAZA I 45 Banks Street East Alabama Avenue Wichita Street Elgin Street SHEPHERD DR. Westpark Drive Rosedale Street Cleburne Street BAGBY ST. RIVER OAKS RICE/MUSEUM DISTRICTMandell Street Hutchins Street Parkway Drive Wheeler Street MONTROSE MIDTOWN South Shepherd Drive Buffalo Speedway Bissonnet Street Sunset Boulevard Scott Street Sunset Boulevard Tierwester Street La Branch Street MIDTOWN Binz Street WESTHEIMER RD. -
Minority Percentages at Participating Newspapers
Minority Percentages at Participating Newspapers Asian Native Asian Native Am. Black Hisp Am. Total Am. Black Hisp Am. Total ALABAMA The Anniston Star........................................................3.0 3.0 0.0 0.0 6.1 Free Lance, Hollister ...................................................0.0 0.0 12.5 0.0 12.5 The News-Courier, Athens...........................................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Lake County Record-Bee, Lakeport...............................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 The Birmingham News................................................0.7 16.7 0.7 0.0 18.1 The Lompoc Record..................................................20.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 The Decatur Daily........................................................0.0 8.6 0.0 0.0 8.6 Press-Telegram, Long Beach .......................................7.0 4.2 16.9 0.0 28.2 Dothan Eagle..............................................................0.0 4.3 0.0 0.0 4.3 Los Angeles Times......................................................8.5 3.4 6.4 0.2 18.6 Enterprise Ledger........................................................0.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 Madera Tribune...........................................................0.0 0.0 37.5 0.0 37.5 TimesDaily, Florence...................................................0.0 3.4 0.0 0.0 3.4 Appeal-Democrat, Marysville.......................................4.2 0.0 8.3 0.0 12.5 The Gadsden Times.....................................................0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Merced Sun-Star.........................................................5.0 -
Robert Hodge | Destroy and Rebuild
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE MEDIA CONTACT ALWAYS FRESH Connie McAllister Director of Community Engagement ALWAYS FREE Tel 713 284 8255 [email protected] The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is pleased to present Destroy and Rebuild, a solo exhibition featuring work by Houston- based artist Robert Hodge. Robert Hodge: Destroy and Rebuild October 3, 2014 – January 4, 2015 Opening Reception Friday, October 3 | 6:30-9PM Artist Walk-Through Friday, October 3 | 7PM HOUSTON, TX (September 25, 2014)— Robert Hodge, The Great Electric Show and Dance, 2013. Mixed media on The Contemporary Arts Museum reclaimed paper. 41 x 54 inches. Courtesy the artist Houston is pleased to present work by Houston-based artist Robert Hodge. A musician and visual artist, Hodge has been involved in the city's art scene since the late 1990s. His practice has expanded to include site-specific sculpture that provides communities with a place to gather and interact. Robert Hodge: Destroy and Rebuild features fifteen paintings from the past two years, more than half of which were created specifically for this presentation. It is the artist’s first solo museum exhibition. As a visual artist, Hodge has been in pursuit of the recovery of cultural and political icons that have been lost to a fast-paced and ever-changing society. Trained in printmaking, Hodge has used strategies employed by graphic designers to convey his messages to combat social and political amnesia. Over the past five years, the artist has literally taken the paper—billboards, posters, post bills—that clutters the streets of his neighborhood in Houston's historic Third Ward and has converted it into material for his own work. -
Children's Museum of Houston Organizational Profile the Mission
Children’s Museum of Houston Organizational Profile The Mission and History of the Children’s Museum The Museum transforms communities through innovative, child-centered learning, achieving this goal by 1) fostering the development of the region’s significant child population; 2) increasing and supporting parents’ engagement in their children’s learning; 3) providing learning experiences that reinforce and supplement school classroom instruction; 4) reducing the effects of poverty on learning; 5) serving a multicultural, multilingual population; and 6) promoting workforce preparedness through the development of 21st century learning skills. CMH was founded in 1980 by parents responding to a community-wide need for interdisciplinary and participatory educational exhibits and programs for children from birth through twelve. The first exhibit was presented in 1984, with operations initiated at a leased facility in 1985. A $10 million capital campaign raised the funds needed to open the Museum’s permanent home in Houston’s Museum District in 1992. A second capital/endowment campaign raised $35 million to enlarge the Museum’s facilities and expand programming regionally and nationally, with expansion completed in 2009 featuring thirteen new exhibits, an enhanced Parent Resource Library that serves as a Houston Public Library branch, and the outreach resources of the Institute for Family Learning. A third capital campaign raised $4 million for a sister museum opened in Fort Bend in 2016. An additional $3 million has been raised since 20145 to grow the endowment’s corpus. The Museum at 1500 Binz The Museum hosts thirteen exhibits, a branch of the Houston Public Library, a performing arts series, and bilingual programming that changes with every WonderWeek theme. -
Bibliography
Tseng Kwong Chi - Bibliography ARTIST MONOGRAPHS Tseng Kwong Chi: Self-Portraits 1979-1989, exhibition catalogue with texts by Lilly Wei, Dan Cameron, Kenny Scharf and Muna Tseng, Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, NY, 2008. Tseng Kwong Chi: Self-Portraits 1979-1989, exhibition catalogue with texts by Lilly Wei, Dan Cameron, Kenny Scharf and Muna Tseng, Ben Brown Fine Arts, London, England, 2008. Tseng Kwong Chi, Ambiguous Ambassador, monograph of 95 photographs from the Expeditionary Self-Portraits Series, with texts by Dan Cameron, Richard Martin and Grady T. Turner, Nazraeli Press/JGS, 2005. A Retrospective, Improbable Pilgrim: The Photographs of Tseng Kwong Chi, essay by Amy Ingrid Schlegel, Philadelphia Art Alliance, 2002. Tseng Kwong Chi: The Expeditionary Works, essay by Barry Blinderman, Houston Center for Photography, Houston, TX, 1992. Tseng Kwong Chi, foreword by Richard Martin, Art Random, Kyoto Shoin, 1990. Art in Transit, New York Subway Drawings by Keith Haring, introduction by Henry Geldzahler and text by Keith Haring, Harmony Books, Crown Publishers,1984. SELECTED BOOKS AND CATALOGUES 2009 Kenny Scharf, by Richard Marshall, Ann Magnuson,The Paul Kasmin Gallery, Rizzoli, 2009 2008 Keith Haring, by Jeffrey Deitch, Julia Gruen, Suzanne Geiss, Kenny Scharf, George Condo, Rizzoli, 2008 Self and Other: Portraits from Asia and Europe, edited by Kenji Yoshida and Brian Durrans, Asahi Shimbun, Osaka, Japan, 2008 pp. 246. The American Tornado: Art in Power 1949-2008 by Germano Celant, Skira, Italy 2008 The Keith Haring Retrospective, Skira, Italy, 2008. 2007 Studio in the Street, Street in the Studio, Brattleboro Museum & Art Center, Vermont, 2007. The Jean-Michel Basquiat Show, Skira, Italy, 2007. -
We Call It Privilege, They Call It Freedom to Smear Sylvan MEYER
1eman• orts December 1965 What Good is a Baby? ROBERT C. TOTH We Call it Privilege, They Call it Freedom to Smear SYLvAN MEYER The Journalist and the Educator c. A. McKNIGHT The Chandlers ofLos Angeles: The World of Otis, Norman and 13ulf MITCHELL GORDON 2 NIEMAN REPORTS was to enroll. I returned to North Carolina, too late to en ter Davidson, and got a job for a year as a cub reporter on my hometown newspaper. NiemanRe:ports I followed through on my plan of study and majored in Spanish. Each summer, I returned to the newspaper. At the VOL. XIX, NO. 4 DECEMBER 1965 end of four years, the tug of war was over. Journalism had won, teaching had lost. Had it not been for that hurricane, Louis M. Lyons, Editor, 1947-64 I am quite certain that I would be holding forth in some Dwight E. Sargent Mary Ann Pratt college classroom today. I may not be the only man whose Editor Managing Editor career was changed by the winds of a hurricane, but I am the only one I know. Editorial Board of the Society of Nieman Fellows Throughout the years I have quieted any doubts about Robert W. Brown Weldon B. James Rock Hill Evening Herald Louisville Courier-J oumal the rightness of my choice by telling myself that, after all, Millard C. Browne Edwin A. Lahey journalism is essentially an educational function. And I Buffalo News Knight Newspapers have salved my conscience by giving much of my life to William B. Dickinson Robert Lasch causes, boards and agencies that have had as their objective Philadelphia Bulletin St. -
Houston, Texas October 18-20, 2019
2019 Annual Chapter Meeting Houston, Texas October 18-20, 2019 Please join us at the ARLIS/NA Texas-Mexico Chapter fall meeting in Houston, Texas, October 18 – 20, 2019! This year’s conference will provide opportunities for chapter members to visit Houston art libraries and museums and catch up with fellow TXMX colleagues. The weekend’s tours and activities will be centered in the vibrant and diverse Houston Museum District. Continuing in its 4th year, the chapter Research Roundtable presents a great opportunity to hear about research and projects undertaken at chapter members’ institutions. Registration Registration is now open through October 4th! Visit the EventBrite page to register: 2019 Texas-Mexico Chapter Meeting EventBrite Registration Rates: • Registration (US Residents): $40.00 • Registration (Mexico Residents, Students, and Retirees): $30.00 The registration rate for US residents does not include 2020 chapter membership dues. Individuals may join or renew both chapter and national memberships using the new bundled option via the ARLIS/NA membership* page. The registration rate for Mexico residents, students, and retirees includes 2020 chapter membership dues. Individuals may join or renew national membership via the ARLIS/NA membership* page. *The ARLIS/NA membership platform’s join, renew, and update profile functions are temporarily unavailable, but will be restored soon. Accommodations We do not have an official hotel for this meeting, so attendees should arrange accommodations on their own. Below is a list of hotels within a reasonable distance from all event venues. Hotel ZaZa, Houston Museum District, 5701 Main St, Houston, TX 77005-1824 Wyndham Houston, Medical Center Hotel and Suites, 6800 Main St, Houston, TX 77030 Modern B&B, 4003 Hazard St, Houston, 77098 Extended Stay America, Houston Medical Center, 1301 S. -
Curriculum Vitae
CURRICULUM VITAE STEPHEN LOUIS KLINEBERG Professor of Sociology and Founding-Director of the Kinder Institute for Urban Research Department of Sociology, MS-28 Rice University 1401 Calumet, Unit #511 6100 Main Street Houston, Texas 77004 Houston, Texas 77005 713-665-2010 Office: 307 Sewall Hall Tel: 713-348-3484 Cell: 713-397-8521 Fax: 713-348-5296 Email: [email protected] Web: kinder.rice.edu Date and Place of Birth: 12 March 1940 New York City, New York Education: Haverford College 1957–1961 B.A. in Psychology The University of Paris 1962–1963 “Diplôme d’Études Supérieures en Psychopathologie” Harvard University 1961–1966 Ph.D. in Social Psychology (Dissertation: “The Structure of the Psychological Future: A Developmental Study”) Positions: Teaching Fellow, then Instructor; Department of Social Relations, Harvard University (1963–1966) Assistant Professor of Social Psychology; Department of Sociology, Princeton University (1966–1972) Associate Professor (tenured, 1974); Department of Sociology, Rice University (1972–1985) Professor; Department of Sociology, Rice University (1985–Present) Founding–Director, the Kinder Institute for Urban Research, Rice University (2010–Present) Courses Taught: Conceptions of Human Nature Environmental Sociology Social Change Sociological Research Methods Houston: The Sociology of a City Advanced Research Seminar: Annual Intellectual Foundations of the Social Sciences “Kinder Houston Area Survey” Honors and Awards: Elected to Phi Beta Kappa at Haverford College (1961). B.A. awarded with “High Honors in Psychology,” Haverford College (1961). Woodrow Wilson Fellowship (1961–1962). Stephen L. Klineberg—Vita (December 2017) Page 2 Alliance Française Scholarship (1962–1963). “Diplôme d’Études Supérieures” awarded with “Mention: Bien,” University of Paris (1963). -
Protected Landmark Designation Report
CITY OF HOUSTON Archaeological & Historical Commission Planning and Development Department PROTECTED LANDMARK DESIGNATION REPORT LANDMARK NAME: The Angelo and Lillian Minella House AGENDA ITEM: IV OWNER: Ben Koush HPO FILE NO.: 06PL20 APPLICANT: Ben Koush DATE ACCEPTED: Feb-13-06 LOCATION: 6328 Brookside Drive – Simms Woods Addition HAHC HEARING DATE: Feb-23-06 30-DAY HEARING NOTICE: N/A PC HEARING: Mar-02-06 SITE INFORMATION Lot 12, Block 6, Simms Woods Addition, City of Houston, Harris County, Texas. The site includes a historic one-story, concrete block residence and concrete block garage. TYPE OF APPROVAL REQUESTED: Protected Landmark Designation for residence and garage. HISTORY AND SIGNIFICANCE SUMMARY The Minella House is a significant example of modern, residential architecture as it evolved in mid- twentieth century Houston. It is significant because of its unusual all masonry construction, contemporary design by Houston architect, Allen R. Williams, Jr. It is an example of the Century Built Homes, variations on a standark design, of which the Minella House seemed to be most fully resolved. Its owners, Angelo and Lillian Minella, owned and operated a plumbing supply company in the East End for decades. HISTORY AND SIGNIFICANCE Lillian and Angelo Minella were originally from the Boston area. Minella worked as a plumber at 366-374 Washington Street in the 1930s in the Brighton Center, Massachusetts commercial area, which had a large Italian-American population.i As late as 1942 Angelo and Lillian were listed in the Essex County City Directory as living on Stanwood Avenue in Gloucester, Massachusetts.ii The Minellas probably left for Texas shortly thereafter.