BOLD Schedule 2018-6

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

BOLD Schedule 2018-6 CAMP 6 - 2018 San Antonio BOLD Schedule Area Monday July 30, 2018 Tuesday July 31, 2018 Wednesday August 1, 2018 Thursday August 2, 2018 Friday August 3, 2018 Saturday August 4, 2018 Cibolo Creek Elementary, 4:45 AM Messiah Lutheran Church, 9:30 AM Live Oak Shopping Center, 5:00 AM BISD Central Office Athletic Field, 6:00 PM Spring Creek Methodist Church, 8:45 AM Cibolo Creek Elementary, 4:45 AM Boerne Middle School South, 5:15 AM First Baptist Church, 6:45 PM Dog and Pony Grill, 9:00 AM Messiah Lutheran Church, 5:30 PM Dog and Pony Grill, 5:30 AM Messiah Lutheran Church, 6:45 PM BISD Central Office Athletic Field, 6:30 PM First Baptist Church, 6:45 PM Dog and Pony Grill, 5:30 AM Boerne BISD Central Office Athletic Field, 6:30 PM First Baptist Church, 8:00 PM BISD Central Office Athletic Field, 7:40 PM First Baptist Church, 8:00 PM Dog and Pony Grill, 9:00 AM Bulverde Spring Branch Fire & EMS, 5:00 AM Bulverde Bulverde Community Park, 9:30 AM Zion Lutheran Church, 5:00 AM Regional Park, 9:30 AM Zion Lutheran Church, 5:15 PM Zion Lutheran Church, 5:00 AM Castroville Zion Lutheran Church, 6:30 PM Zion Lutheran Church, 5:15 PM Regional Park, 9:30 AM Walmart, 4:45 AM Word of Life Church, 5:15 PM Word of Life Church, 6:05 AM Cibolo Word of Life Church, 4:50 AM Word of Life Church, 6:30 PM Schlather Park, 6:30 PM Walmart, 4:45 AM Converse Copperfield Elementary 5:00 AM The Den, 4:45 AM La Vernia La Vernia Chamber of Commerce Hall (Event Ctr), 8:30 AM La Vernia Chamber of Commerce Hall (Event Ctr), 4:30 PM La Vernia Chamber of Commerce Hall (Event Ctr), 4:30 PM Marion State Bank, 4:45 AM Marion St. John Lutheran Church, 6:30 PM Marion State Bank, 4:45 AM Ingram Park Mall, 5:00 AM Ingram Park Mall, 5:00 AM Ingram Park Mall, 6:10 AM Ingram Park Mall, 6:10 AM Misty Brook Nature Park, 5:45 PM Misty Brook Nature Park, 5:45 PM Medical Center Misty Brook Nature Park, 7:00 PM Misty Brook Nature Park, 7:00 PM Slim Chickens, 5:00 AM Woods Cycle Country, 5:00 AM Gruene Harley-Davidson, 5:15 AM Woods Cycle Country, 5:00 AM Fischer Park, 9:00 AM Gruene Harley-Davidson, 5:15 AM Freiheit Elementary, 4:30 PM Woods Cycle Country, 6:15 AM Tree of Life Church, 5:15 PM McKenna Children's, 5:30 AM Freiheit Elementary, 4:30 PM Freiheit Elementary, 5:45 PM Christ Our King Church, 9:00 AM New Braunfels Freiheit Elementary, 5:45 PM Tree of Life Church, 6:30 PM Canyon High School, 6:15 PM Woods Cycle Country, 6:15 AM Cypress Bend Park, 7:00 PM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 4:45 AM Valley Ranch Amenity Center, 4:45 AM Crossroads Baptist Church, 4:50 AM Walmart Neighborhood Market Ellison, 4:50 AM Indian Springs Elementary, 5:00 AM Northwest Church of Christ, 5:00 AM Bandera Pointe Lowe's, 5:15 AM Fresenius Kidney Care Alamo Ranch, 5:15 AM CT Church, 5:30 AM Fortress Church, 5:30 AM Full Spectrum Emergency Room at The Rim, 5:30 AM Woodlawn Lake Park, 5:45 AM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 6:00 AM Walmart Neighborhood Market 1560, 4:30 AM Valley Ranch Amenity Center, 6:00 AM Acadiana Cafe, 4:45 AM The Well, 8:00 AM Alamo Ranch Lowe's, 4:45 AM Raymond Rimkus Park, 8:30 AM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 4:45 AM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 8:30 AM Lowes at 1604 and Blanco, 5:00 AM Helotes Natural Area Park, 9:00 AM St. David's Episcopal School, 5:00 AM Raymond Russell Park, 9:30 AM Metzger Middle School, 5:15 AM Brooks Greenline, 4:30 PM Bigz Burger Joint 151, 5:30 AM Sundance Trails, 4:30 PM Brooks City Base, 5:30 AM Oscar Perez Memorial Park, 4:45 PM Alamo Ranch Lowe's, 6:00 AM Helotes Natural Area Park, 5:00 PM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 6:00 AM Bonnie Conner Park, 5:15 PM St. David's Episcopal School, 6:15 AM Cibolo Canyons Amenity Center, 5:15 PM Los Encinos Hill Country Estate, 8:00 AM Home Goods, 5:00 AM Concepcion Park, 5:15 PM Culebra Creek Park, 8:30 AM Westover Hills Assembly of God, 5:00 AM Gilbert Garza Park, 5:15 PM Lockwood Park, 8:30 AM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 4:45 AM Dominion Ridge, 5:15 AM Trinity Church, 5:15 PM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 8:30 AM BurgerFi Huebner, 5:00 AM Specht Elementary, 5:30 AM Northwest Assembly of God, 5:30 PM Nani Falcone Park, 9 AM Rolling Oaks Mall, 5:00 AM Hardberger Park West, 8:45 AM St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church, 5:30 PM Los Encinos Hill Country Estate, 9:15 AM The Bend Sports Bar, 5:00 AM BioBridge Global, 5:00 PM Brooks Greenline, 5:45 PM Acadiana Cafe, 4:45 AM Stillwater Ranch Community Park, 9:15 AM Alamo Heights Junior High School, 5:30 AM City Church Bandera Road, 5:00 PM Culebra Creek Park, 5:45 PM City Church Bandera Road, 4:45 AM Lockwood Park, 9:45 AM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 6:00 AM Culebra Creek Park, 5:15 PM Sundance Trails, 6:00 PM Leon Valley Baptist Church, 4:45 AM Stillwater Ranch Community Park, 4:45 PM The Bend Sports Bar, 6:15 AM Specht Elementary, 5:15 PM Wagner High School, 6:00 PM CJCLife Church, 5:00 AM North East Sports Park, 5:15 PM Raymond Rimkus Park, 8:30 AM St. George Maronite Church, 5:15 PM Helotes Natural Area Park, 6:15 PM HEB Alon Market, 5:00 AM Pearsall Park, 5:15 PM Rolling Oaks Mall, 8:30 AM USAA University Park, 5:15 PM Oscar Perez Memorial Park, 6:15 PM HEB Plus Potranco, 5:00 AM RSM, 5:15 PM St. Matthew Sports Complex, 8:30 AM San Pedro Springs Park, 5:30 PM Bonnie Conner Park, 6:30 PM HEB Stone Oak, 5:00 AM San Pedro Springs Park, 5:30 PM Alamo Heights United Methodist Church, 5:00 PM Bonnie Conner Park, 6:00 PM Cibolo Canyon Amenity Center, 6:30 PM Hemisfair, 5:00 AM Stillwater Ranch Community Park, 6:00 PM Saint Brigids Church, 5:15 PM BioBridge Global, 6:15 PM Concepcion Park, 6:30 PM San Pedro Presbyterian Church, 5:00 AM Wagner High School, 6:00 PM Trinity United Methodist Church, 5:15 PM City Church Bandera Road, 6:15 PM Gilbert Garza Park, 6:30 PM Dominion Ridge, 5:15 AM Judson IDEA Public School, 6:30 PM Woodlawn Park, 5:15 PM Lions Field, 6:30 PM Trinity Church, 6:30 PM Metzger Middle School, 5:15 AM Judson Middle School, 6:30 PM Fortress Church, 5:45 PM Culebra Creek Park, 6:30 PM Woodlawn Park, 6:30 PM University United Methodist Church, 5:15 AM Pearsall Park, 6:30 PM Alamo Heights United Methodist Church, 6:15 PM Specht Elementary, 6:30 PM Northwest Assembly of God, 6:45 PM Central Market, 5:30 AM RSM, 6:30 PM Magnolia Pancake Haus, 6:15 PM St. George Maronite Church, 6:30 PM St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church, 6:45 PM Trinity United Methodist Church, 5:30 AM Woodlawn Park, 6:30 PM Saint Brigids Church, 6:30 PM USAA University Park, 6:30 PM Brooks Greenline, 7:00 PM HEB Alon Market, 6:10 AM San Pedro Springs Park, 6:45 PM Trinity United Methodist Church, 6:30 PM San Pedro Springs Park, 6:45 PM Culebra Creek Park, 7:00 PM Hemisfair, 6:10 AM Villages of Westcreek Community Park, 7:00 PM Fortress Church, 7:00 PM Holy Spirit Church, 7:00 PM San Pedro Presbyterian Church, 7:00 PM Nani Falcone Park, 9 AM San Antonio Wagner High School, 7:15 PM Magnolia Pancake Haus, 7:30 PM Bonnie Conner Park, 7:15 PM Wagner High School, 7:15 PM McAllister Park Multi-Use Fields, 9:30 AM Lowe's on 3009, 5:00 AM Niemietz Park, 4:15 PM The Crossvine, 5:00 AM Pickrell Park, 7:00 AM Niemietz Park, 6:00 PM The Crossvine, 6:15 AM Schertz River City Community Church, 7:00 PM Pickrell Park, 6:30 PM Pickrell Park, 9:30 AM Lowe's on 3009, 5:00 AM Rodriguez Elementary, 4:30 PM Rodriguez Elementary, 5:15 AM Rodriguez Elementary, 5:45 PM Rodriguez Elementary, 4:30 PM Koennecke Elementary, 5:00 PM Seguin Koennecke Elementary, 6:15 PM Koennecke Elementary, 6:15 PM Rodriguez Elementary, 5:45 PM Koennecke Elementary, 6:15 PM South San Antonio Brooks Greenline, 5:00 AM Spring Branch Northeast Lakeview College, 5:00 AM Universal City Park, 8:30 AM Kitty Hawk Middle School, 5:15 PM Universal City Salinas Elementary, 4:00 PM Kitty Hawk Middle School, 4:50 AM Salinas Elementary, 6:00 PM Kitty Hawk Middle School, 6:30 PM UTSA United Texas Credit Union, 5:30 PM Windcrest United Methodist Church, 6:00 PM Windcrest Windcrest United Methodist Church, 5:00 AM Windcrest United Methodist Church, 7:15 PM.
Recommended publications
  • San Antonio San Antonio, Texas
    What’s ® The Cultural Landscape Foundation ™ Out There connecting people to places tclf.org San Antonio San Antonio, Texas Welcome to What’s Out There San Antonio, San Pedro Springs Park, among the oldest public parks in organized by The Cultural Landscape Foundation the country, and the works of Dionicio Rodriguez, prolificfaux (TCLF) in collaboration with the City of San Antonio bois sculptor, further illuminate the city’s unique landscape legacy. Historic districts such as La Villita and King William Parks & Recreation and a committee of local speak to San Antonio’s immigrant past, while the East Side experts, with generous support from national and Cemeteries and Ellis Alley Enclave highlight its significant local partners. African American heritage. This guidebook provides photographs and details of 36 This guidebook is a complement to TCLF’s digital What’s Out examples of the city's incredible landscape legacy. Its There San Antonio Guide (tclf.org/san-antonio), an interactive publication is timed to coincide with the celebration of San online platform that includes the enclosed essays plus many Antonio's Tricentennial and with What’s Out There Weekend others, as well as overarching narratives, maps, historic San Antonio, November 10-11, 2018, a weekend of free, photographs, and biographical profiles. The guide is one of expert-led tours. several online compendia of urban landscapes, dovetailing with TCLF’s web-based What’s Out There, the nation’s most From the establishment of the San Antonio missions in the comprehensive searchable database of historic designed st eighteenth century, to the 21 -century Mission and Museum landscapes.
    [Show full text]
  • San Antonio, Texas
    L<>$VJ£ 3 J? itSStxi* 'A ^OUvEfjii^ "of TH^ |d V ;U>a V_i\ UA &AN ANTON a tt r^-si+. * r For Your Home Entertainment COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONES EDISON PHONOGRAPHS ¥ * VICTOR TALKING MACHINES t f "We Have em All. Also The Largest Selection of Records for all Machines in the City. Souvenirs of San Antonio Post Cards, Books, Stationery, Cigars, Tobaccos and Pipes. The most complete line of Daily Papers and Magazines (from all parts of the world) in the city. WE TAKE SUBSCRIPTIONS FOR ANYTHING IN PRINT, Louis Book Store, <TWO STORES) fgtl^g; ft 3 1 -4* SOUVENIR up The Picturesque Alamo City SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS PRESENTED TO THE VISITORS TO SAN ANTONIO 1907 Through the Courtesy of the San Antonio Traction Com pans N. B.—The publishers of this book take pleasure in recommending the advertisers whose cards appear herein as thoroughly reliable in all respects, and it is due to their liberal patronage that the publishers are able to distribute these books free to patrons of the Observation Cars. i-rn-no a nirmTv* n «»• i EBERS & WUR1 Z, Publishers, SAN ANTONIO. TEXAS. "We were not here to assist in the defense of the Alamo, but we are here as factors to build up and develop 'The Alamo City' and the\Great Southwest." Investment in Real Estate net from 7 to 15% interest. Residences—Anything from a cottage to a palace. Building Sites on the Heights or down town, close in, from $300 per lot up. Acreage in the suburbs from $30 to $100 per acre.
    [Show full text]
  • R1 R2 R3 R4 R5 R6
    _ o F b k c : M r A i / ] … ~ u Bicycle Cultural Eco- Eco/Reuse Green Historical Museum/ Major Public Notable Organic / Renewable Salvaged Scenic Streetcar Vegetarian/ Water Rental Site information Building Business Feature Institution Transport Stop Tree Natural Food Energy Materials Walking Transit Natural Cafe Feature GREEN MAP KEY University of the u4 i3 A 3 Incarnate Word W. HILDEBRAND _ Bicycle Rentals o12 r2 1 Blue Star Complex 1414 S. Alamo E. HILDEBRAND 2 Charles A. James Co. 329 N. Main Ave. S W. HOLLYWOOD o Cultural Sites B A E N L 1 Carver Community Cultural Center 226 N. Hackberry K LYNWOOD P Alamo E N D A BUSHNELL Stadium 2 Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center 1300 Guadalupe R P O S H 3 San Antonio College 1300 San Pedro O O 4 University of Texas at San Antonio (downtown campus) K Trinity 501 W. Durango University W. KINGS HWY 5 Southwest School of Art & Craft 300 Augusta o 11 6 Southwest School of Art & Craft Annex 1201 Navarro SUMMIT Brackenridge 7 Art Pace 445 N. Main Park 8 Say Si 1518 S. Alamo r Notable Trees FUNSTON 9 Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico 1 Cypress Trees alongW. MU RiverwalkLBERRY E. MULBERRY 600 HemisFair Park H 2 Mountain Laurel (Texas Champion) N O . 10 Instituto De Mexicano (Casa Mexicana) M 4301 Broadway • Univ. of the Incarnate WordW A A 600 HemisFair Park R I N W3. MA TreeGNOLIA of Heaven (Texas Champion) D 11 Trinity University 1 Trinity Place Madison near Beauregard • King William District E. MAGNOLIA 12 University of the Incarnate Word 4301 Broadway 4 Chilean Wine Palm W5.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction Part 1
    Introduction Part 1 The Brackenridge Park Landscape A Condensed History Imagine a clear, cold river originating from a deep, gushing artesian spring, not trickling, but rushing, chasing itself through prairie grassland. It forges a winding path that stretches southeasterly, like a ribbon unraveling for nearly 250 miles. Life blooms and bursts in many forms along this river’s upper banks for thousands upon thousands of years, until eventually, a city grows. The Brackenridge Park landscape was once a stomping ground for mammoths and other prehistoric life. It was part of a ritual migratory route for Indigenous Americans. It is the origin of one of this country’s earliest democratized water systems, executed through a Spanish system of acequias and built by Indigenous people to irrigate and provide potable water to the Spanish missions (1719 – 1724), and eventually to provide water to secular settlements for almost one hundred years (1770s–1850s). It is the site of early industrial development in the form of limestone quarries that first built up the city (1850s – 1880). It is the site of a Civil War Confederate tannery and sawmill where enslaved people labored (1863 – 1865) and the site of a cement company, which, by the hands of workers, further contributed to the building up of San Antonio (1880 – 1908). This landscape then became a grand, shady, scenic driving park and a river swimming hole that attracted locals and tourists from around the country (1899) (figures 1 and 2). It became the grounds for a charming display of buildings that melded German architectural styles of “half-timbering or rock-and-mortar methods”1 with native limestone materials that resulted in distinctly local buildings and structures that still dot the park and the city.
    [Show full text]
  • The Public Theater of San Antonio Executive Artistic Director
    The Public Theater of San Antonio Executive Artistic Director San Antonio’s Theater for All Organization The Public Theater of San Antonio (The Public) is San Antonio’s largest producing theater, currently celebrating its 109th consecutive year of production. Its mission is to produce professional live theater that inspires, educates, and connects communities. The Public presents high-quality theatrical productions year-round and is an important artistic leader in the City of San Antonio’s cultural landscape. Its stated goal is to be a ‘Theater for All,’ where residents of San Antonio can all feel welcome in the space and comfortable engaging with the artists and the art. The Public’s direction moving forward is to maintain and improve upon its role as San Antonio’s flagship theater while creating a stronger collaborative and supportive culture, both internally and with the San Antonio community. The Public’s history traces back to 1912 when Sara Barton Bindley, a resident of San Antonio, established the San Antonio Dramatic Club. The early years of the twentieth century saw the emergence of the little theater movement in the United States. As the movement flourished across the nation, civic leaders of San Antonio formally incorporated as the Little Theater Production Company of San Antonio in 1927, updated legally to the San Antonio Little Theatre, Inc. in 1962. During the early years under the direction of Carl Glick, the productions were held across the city in places like the Menger Hotel and Beethoven Hall. The organization’s leadership eventually petitioned the City for a permanent location and on January 22, 1930, the San Pedro Playhouse opened as the first city-built, city- funded theater in the United States.
    [Show full text]
  • The Alamo, 11, 16, 17, 181-205 the Aftermath, 201-2 the Complex
    INDEX The Alamo, 11, 16, 17, 181-205 Rentals, 62-64 The aftermath, 201-2 Registration, 492 The complex, 186-87 Vehicle inspection, 493 The defenders, 187-94 Ayres, Atlee B., architect, 19, 38, The film by John Wayne, 99, 91, 238, 240, 224, 225 Ayres, Robert, architect, son, 91, The library, 187 238, 240, 269 The monument, 202-5 The Price of Freedom, film, 68, Banking, 474, 494 224-25 Bars & clubs, 173-79 The 13-day siege, 194-200 Battle for Hill 881 South, memorial, Alamodome, 395-96 274, 363-65 Alamo Heights, 35-36 Bexar County, 29 Alamo Village, Brackettville, 224 Bexar County Courthouse, 206-9 Amtrak, 58-59 Bicycling, 399-400 Anna, Gen. Santa, see Santa Bits & pieces, 543-44 Anna, Gen. Antonio Lopez Blue Star Art Complex, 39, 419 de Bonham, James B., 187-88 Apartments, 539-42 Book & music stores, 384-88 Art galleries, 344-54 Brentano’s, downtown, 386 ArtPace, 345-47 Borglum, John Gutzon, Mount Blue Star Art Complex, 347 Rushmore sculptor, 91, 276, Coppini Academy of Fine Arts, 343, 366 347-48 Bowen’s Island, 269-70 Parchman Stremmel Galleries, Bowie, Col. James, 188-89, 254, 352 Bowling, 400 Art in public places, 354-70 Brackenridge, George Downtown, 354-65 Washington, 35, 218, 261, Outside of downtown, 365-70 276-77 Austin, Moses, 12, 212-13, 354-56 Brackenridge Park, 35, 261, 275- Stephen F., 12, 13, 77 Automobile, 57-58, 491-94 Buckhorn Saloon & Museum, Accidents, 493-94 324-26 Driver’s license, 492-93 Bus service, 58, Insurance, 491-92 Butt, Florence Thornton, H-E-B Private car, 64-68 stores, 20 545 546 MARMAC GUIDE TO SAN ANTONIO Cameron, Ralph, architect, 96, Daughters of the Republic of 255 Texas, 185-86, 187 Canary Islands Descendants Daycare, 499-501 Museum, 326 De Cos, Gen.
    [Show full text]
  • Renewing the Source
    Prepared by The Trust for Public Land Center for City Park Excellence Washington, D.C. Written by Peter Harnik June 1, 2004 Renewing the Source The redesign of a San Antonio park reconciiles citizens from opposite sides of the tracks The Alamo may be more famous and the Riverwalk more visited, but the most venerable spot in the most authentic city in Texas is San Pedro Springs Park. The origin of the park is a spring from time immemorial, but this isn’t a dusty “historical” park: a few feet away is a modern, groundbreaking landscape incorporating the city’s most popular swimming facility. San Pedro’s vibrant history plays off all the forces push- ing and pulling today’s San Antonio, including geology, hydrology, race, class and the poli- tics of park renovation. “Renewing a Historic Park” San Antonio is an anomaly in Texas. It’s big (America’s ninth largest city, with more than Landscape Architecture a million residents) but it’s a world away from Dallas’ gleaming skyscrapers, Houston’s June 2004 miles of mcmansions or Austin’s go-go technology pavilions. With roots reaching back to Spanish conquistadors, Catholic missionaries and native Coahuitecan hunters, San Antonio, surprisingly, retains many of its old downtown buildings (thanks to façade ease- ments); it’s kept a number of the old Spanish irrigation acequias (including one in San Pedro Park); and the world-famous Riverwalk is, from many angles, so quaint it feels downright European. As for San Pedro Springs Park, historic is almost too mild a word for it.
    [Show full text]
  • AMEDD Center & School Welcomes Volpe, Bids Farewell to Rubenstein
    FORT SAM HOUSTON EASTER SUNRISE SERVICE APRIL 8 APRIL 5, 2012 6:30 a.m. VOL. 54, NO. 14 Outside Gift Chapel A PUBLICATION OF THE 502nd AIR BASE WING – JOINT BASE SAN ANTONIO – FORT SAM HOUSTON AMEDD Center & School welcomes Volpe, bids farewell to Rubenstein By Esther Garcia to say farewell to Ruben- more than the two distin- AMEDDC&S Public Affairs Office stein, who commanded the guished leaders who are AMEDDC&S for two years. here with us today, Maj. Maj. Gen. Philip Volpe “Sam Houston once said Gen. David Rubenstein officially took command a leader is someone who and Maj. Gen. Phil Volpe,” of the U.S. Army Medi- helps improve the lives of Horoho added. cal Department Center other people or improve The Army surgeon gener- and School from outgoing the system they live un- al said under Rubenstein’s commanding general Maj. der,” said Lt. Gen. Patricia command, the AMEDDC&S Gen. David Rubenstein dur- Horoho, Army Surgeon earned four full accredita- ing a change of command General and commanding tions from military and ceremony at MacArthur general for the U.S. Army civilian evaluation teams Parade field March 27. Medical Command and host providing the quality of its Fort Sam Houston lead- for the ceremony. team work and garnering ers, family, and friends “Army Medicine continu- positive national attention. from the San Antonio ously aims to improve life “An inspirational and community gathered at for all its beneficiaries and visionary leader, David Photo by Deyanira Romo Rossell MacArthur Pavilion to meet I can’t think of any Army Gabrielle Simmons stops to load her basket with eggs she collected at the annual Easter and welcome Volpe and leaders that epitomize this See AMEDDCS, P11 Egg Hunt on Joint Base San Antonio - Fort Sam Houston March 31 at Fort Sam Hous- ton’s Dodd Field.
    [Show full text]
  • San-Antonio-300-Years-Of-History.Pdf
    Copyright © 2020 by Texas State Historical Association All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions,” at the address below. Texas State Historical Association 3001 Lake Austin Blvd. Suite 3.116 Austin, TX 78703 www.tshaonline.org IMAGE USE DISCLAIMER All copyrighted materials included within the Handbook of Texas Online are in accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107 related to Copyright and “Fair Use” for Non-Profit educational institutions, which permits the Texas State Historical Association (TSHA), to utilize copyrighted materials to further scholarship, education, and inform the public. The TSHA makes every effort to conform to the principles of fair use and to comply with copyright law. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. Dear Texas History Community, Texas has a special place in history and in the minds of people throughout the world. Texas symbols such as the Alamo, oil wells, and even the shape of the state, as well as the men and women who worked on farms and ranches and who built cities convey a sense of independence, self-reliance, hard work, and courage.
    [Show full text]
  • SAN ANTONIO’S FIRST GREEN MAP PRACTICAL GUIDE for GREENER LIVING Downtown SAN ANTONIO Green Map
    SAN ANTONIO’S FIRST GREEN MAP PRACTICAL GUIDE FOR GREENER LIVING downtown SAN ANTONIO green map San Antonio sits at the confluence of four distinct ecological zones: the Edwards Plateau, the South Texas Plains, the Post Oak Savanna and the Blackland Prairie. Nowhere else in Texas – and perhaps the U.S. – does this conjunction of eco-zones occur. The Green Map System (GMS) was AIA San Antonio has developed the first printed Green Map in Texas to developed in 1995 with the intent of both celebrate our unique setting and promote the sustainable aspects creating a user-friendly tool for environ- of our city for the AIA 2007 National Convention and Design Expo, mental mapmaking worldwide. It has “Growing Beyond Green.” In keeping with the theme, this map is intended succeeded, and it is through the GMS Green Map icons and easily adaptable to develop and grow along with San Antonio and will help to cultivate mapmakers tools that our city and 345 a more livable and economically vital community by acting as a practical other locations in more than 45 countries guide to greener living. have been able to easily share their Currently, the San Antonio Green Map focuses on downtown cultural eco-cultural resources with others. attractions and parks, and illustrates pleasant walking and biking routes For more information on creating green for visitors to enjoy while visiting these sites. The map also highlights maps for your hometown or to view the green building and adaptive use projects in the area. And finally, as an San Antonio Green Map, please visit www.greenmap.com.
    [Show full text]
  • Jackson Flats 615 Vance Jackson Road | San Antonio, TX 78201
    Jackson Flats 615 Vance Jackson Road | San Antonio, TX 78201 OFFERING SUMMARY Unit Mix Summary Total Rentable Effective Effective Total Effective Market Market Total Market Unit Type No. of Units Rentable SF SF Rent/Unit Rent/SF Rent Rent/Unit Rent/SF Rent Potential A1 - 1BR/1.0BA 12 750 9,000 $706 $0.94 $8,475 $775 $1.03 $9,300 B1 - 2BR/1.0BA 12 950 11,400 $931 $0.98 $11,175 $1,000 $1.05 $12,000 Totals / Wtd. 24 850 20,400 $819 $0.96 $19,650 $888 $1.04 $21,300 Averages Recently Renovated Apartment Building with Contemporary Finishes B1 - 2BR/1.0BA A1 - 1BR/1.0BA $1,200 50%Jackson Flats is a 24-unit apartment building 50%located just seven miles north of downtown San Antonio and just south of the South Texas Medical Center. The property has recently undergone significant renovations and capex upgrades. Exterior renovations$1,000 include a $1,000 $931 new pitched metal roof, full exterior paint, all new railings, one new boiler, significant upgrades to landscaping and irrigation and all $775 new exterior lighting. Approximately two thirds of the unit$800 interiors have been renovated to modern finishes including stainless steel appliances, upgraded flooring, granite countertops, contemporary kitchen$706 backsplashes and lighting installations. Upward Trending Performance with Additional$600 Opportunities for Revenue Growth As current ownership continues with unit enhancements,$400 rental income at Jackson Flats has continued in an upward trend as units are renovated and leased at higher rates. A new owner will have an opportunity to finish out renovations and capture rental increases in remaining units.
    [Show full text]
  • A Survey of Archaeological, Architectural and Historical Sites On
    Volume 1979 Article 10 1979 A Survey of Archaeological, Architectural and Historical Sites on the San Antonio River from Olmos Dam to South Alamo Street and on San Pedro Creek from San Pedro Park to Guadalupe Street Anne A. Fox Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita Part of the American Material Culture Commons, Archaeological Anthropology Commons, Environmental Studies Commons, Other American Studies Commons, Other Arts and Humanities Commons, Other History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons, and the United States History Commons Tell us how this article helped you. Cite this Record Fox, Anne A. (1979) "A Survey of Archaeological, Architectural and Historical Sites on the San Antonio River from Olmos Dam to South Alamo Street and on San Pedro Creek from San Pedro Park to Guadalupe Street," Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State: Vol. 1979, Article 10. https://doi.org/10.21112/ita.1979.1.10 ISSN: 2475-9333 Available at: https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1979/iss1/10 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Center for Regional Heritage Research at SFA ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State by an authorized editor of SFA ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Survey of Archaeological, Architectural and Historical Sites on the San Antonio River from Olmos Dam to South Alamo Street and on San Pedro Creek from San Pedro Park to Guadalupe Street Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 License This article is available in Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State: https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1979/iss1/10 A SURVEY OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL, ARCHITECTURAL AND HISTORICAL SITES ON THE SAN ANTONIO RIVER FROM OLMOS DAM TO SOUTH ALAMO STREET AND ON SAN PEDRO CREEK FROM SAN PEDRO PARK TO GUADALUPE STREET Anne A.
    [Show full text]