Development Plat Submittal Requirements
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Office of Neighborhood & Strategic Initiatives
Office of Neighborhood & Strategic Initiatives Campus Newsletter March 2017 Education The University of Houston (UH) College of Education (COE) has been partnering with Houston Independent School District (HISD) since 2015-16 to work in six high-need schools in Third Ward. Blackshear, Hartsfield, Thompson and Foster elementary schools; Cullen Middle School; and Yates High School. The goal is to raise academic achievement and student success while creating a sustainable model that can be replicated nationwide. UH students in teacher preparation, counseling and social work degree programs are assisting the schools' teachers and professional staff and learning from them. Recent New Initiatives My Home Library – This new program allows students at Blackshear elementary and the Cuney Homes public housing project to create a wish list of books for donors who can then provide a child six books for $30. After School Program – COE has partnered with the Cuney Homes and the YMCA to deliver after school and summer programs to children where they live. The 30 participants in the after school program were also provided bicycles from a generous supporter of the program. CHAMP – This mathematics and stem outreach program connects Cullen Middle School students with Natural Science and Mathematics' graduate and undergraduate tutors. Page 1 of 6 College Readiness – UH Honors College students teach SAT preparation and provide mentoring to better prepare Yates High School students for college. Jack Yates High School Mentorship Program by ENACTUS (Entrepreneurial, Action, Us) ENACTUS is a global student organization with chapters at universities in over 35 countries around the world. Under the leadership of professor Jamie Belinne, the BAUER Enactus students established this program in the fall of 2016 as a group project under the BAUER Connecting Bauer to Business Class, GENB 3302. -
Musing the Third Ward at Project Row Houses
MUSING THE THIRD WARD AT PROJECT ROW HOUSES: in 2014, rick lowe was inducted as a macarthur “genius” fellow for his role as founder of project row houses, affirming and raising the international profile of the institution. many have held it up as the model for the burgeoning “social practice” and “creative placemak- ing” movements within the art world, but lowe himself has raised critical questions about those associations. FROM CULTURAL PRACTICE TO COMMUNITY INSTITUTION how then should we talk about project row houses? walter hood and carmen taylor essay a new language to describe the prh model. Potluck meal photograph courtesy PRH. meal photograph Potluck 26 spring PRH campus from Live Oak and Holman streets. Photo by Pete Molick. In his book The New Vision, published in 1938 to inform laymen and artists about the foundation of Bauhaus education, László Moho- ly-Nagy writes, “Everyone is talented. Every healthy man has a deep capacity for bringing to development the creative energies found in his nature, if he is deeply interested in his work.” Moholy-Nagy’s as- sertion that every person has a “deep capacity” to express creativity AT PROJECT ROW HOUSES: encapsulates the value and mission of Project Row Houses (PRH) in the Third Ward of Houston. Stark white row houses adorn two neighborhood blocks, with a wide street separating them from an empty parking lot. When we arrived on a weekday, the street was quiet. There were a few people in the brick administration building on the corner, locat- ed next to the row houses. A teenager sat at a table inside doing homework. -
For Immediate Release: Site Projects Welcomes Rick
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: SITE PROJECTS WELCOMES RICK LOWE, VISIONARY ARTIST AND 2014 MACARTHUR FELLOW, TO NEW HAVEN FOR PUBLIC CONVERSATION SERIES CONTACT: Selby Nimrod Senior Project Manager SITE PROJECTS [email protected] 203.710.4702 NEW HAVEN, MARCH 16, 2016 Site Projects is pleased to announce the upcoming public program, RICK LOWE: IN CONVERSATION, a lecture and event series with Houston, Texas-based artist and 2014 MacArthur Fellow Rick Lowe. Over the course of Lowe’s two-day residency in New Haven this May 12 and 13, Site Projects has arranged four events that are free and open to the public. These include: two artist lectures by Rick Lowe, a community lunch, and a roundtable discussion with New Haven community organizers and artists, which Lowe will moderate. Rick Lowe is the co-founder of Project Row Houses (PRH), a community-based arts and culture non-profit organization in Houston’s northern Third Ward. Its mission is to transform community through the celebration of art and African-American history and culture. PRH is a unique experiment in activating the intersections between art, historic preservation, affordable and innovative housing, community relations and development, neighborhood revitalization, and human empowerment. Lowe’s integrative process is accomplished through a holistic and multifaceted approach to community-building that is referred to as social practice art. In the years since its 1993 inception, PRH has revitalized six blocks of a formerly blighted neighborhood into a vibrant creative beacon for the community. Projects include: renovating small “shotgun” homes built in the 1930s that had fallen into disrepair and repurposing them into studios for visiting artists, providing exhibition spaces for art related to African-American culture, and offering temporary housing for single mothers pursing higher education. -
Landmark Designation Report
CITY OF HOUSTON Archaeological & Historical Commission Department Planning and Development LANDMARK DESIGNATION REPORT LANDMARK NAME: James L. Autry House AGENDA ITEM: IV.d OWNERS: W. Murray Air and Mary B. Air HPO FILE NO: 09L217 APPLICANTS: Same DATE ACCEPTED: Mar-26-09 LOCATION: 5 Courtlandt Place – Courtlandt Place Historic District HAHC HEARING: May-21-09 30-DAY HEARING NOTICE: N/A PC HEARING: May-28-09 SITE INFORMATION The East 50 feet of Lot 23 and West 75 feet of Lot 24, Courtlandt Place subdivision, City of Houston, Harris County, Texas. The site includes a wood-frame and brick two-story residence. TYPE OF APPROVAL REQUESTED: Landmark Designation HISTORY AND SIGNIFICANCE SUMMARY The James L. Autry House was designed by Sanguinet and Staats in 1912. It is an excellent example of Neo-Classical Revival architecture and reflects the elegance and architectural quality common along Courtlandt Place, one of Houston's earliest and most exclusive subdivisions. Established in 1906, Courtlandt Place, a tree-lined, divided boulevard, has maintained its residential integrity despite surrounding commercialism in adjacent blocks, and is designated as both a City of Houston and National Register historic district. James Lockhart Autry was a significant figure in the early days of the Texas oil industry. As an attorney and judge, Autry was a pioneer in the field of oil and gas law. After the discovery of the Spindletop oil field in 1901, Autry helped Joseph Cullinan organize the Texas Fuel Company, now known as Texaco. In partnership with Cullinan and Will Hogg, Autry later formed several other oil companies. -
Project 1: Animating History : a Collaboration
University of Houston Conspiring with Reality School of Architecture + School of Art Graphic Design Program Spring 2016 Project 1: Animating History : A Collaboration University of Houston School of Art, Graphic Design Program (Junior Graphic Design Studio/Associate Professor FionaMcGettigan) University of Houston School of Architecture (Design Studio/Associate Professor Susan Rogers/ Associate Professor Ronnie Self) MIT CoLab, Professors James Buckley and Mary Anne Ocampo On Community Project a paragraph about the observation (see Walter The frenetic pace and physical isolation of con- Animating history is a two-week public art/instal- Hood diary essays). The observational parargraph, temporary life is making it difficult to sustain both lation project collaboration between UH Graphic related images and research should be organized and the ongoing informal interactions and long-term Design and Architecture students with a goal to printed on 11 x 17" and due Thursday for discussion formal organizations that sustain communities. re-animate historic sites in the Emancipation and pin-up. Community is the convivial, day-to-day gath- Economic Development district. ering of people of all ages and kinds to maintain Readings: For Thursday, January 21 family and friendships; transact business; estab- Process — Row Trajectories through the Shotgun House, lish neighborhoods; and join in common purpose. In small teams and a specific site/location, stu- David Brown and William Williams. It provides for several fundamental needs: par- dents will gather research and observations to – Cite 96 – Architecture / Art: Spring 2015 – PRH ticipation, identity, a shared story, and health. It create a visual representation that enhances and (Interview) pp 24-25, Musing the Third Ward at is at the root of what it means to be human, and informs the site’s identity, history and/or hidden Project Row Houses (Walter Hood and Carmen constitutes one of the most critical components of Taylor) pp 26-33. -
Harry Clay Hanszen Ca.1950
Bibliography Primary Sources: The City of Houston. Timeline of Harry Clay Hanszen ca.1950. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. Hanszen, Alice. Alice Hanszen to J. T. McCants, April 5, 1955. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. * Harry C. Hanszen Next of Kin. ca.1950. Document. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. Harry Clay Hanszen ca.1950. Document. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. The Houston Chronicles. “H.C. Hanszen Chosen To Head Of Rice Board.” January 15, 1946. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. * The Houston Chronicle. “Harry C. Hanszen, Houston Oilman, Dies in Kerrville”, 1950, "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. * The Houston Chronicle. “Harry C. Hanszen Named Trustee by Rice Institute”, May 7, 1942. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. The Houston Press. “Harry C. Hanszen Elected As Chairman Of Rice Board.” January 15, 1946. "Hanszen, Harry C.”, Rice University Information File Records 1910-2017, UA361, vertical file, Folder H, Woodson Research Center, Fondren Library, Rice University. -
Seagate Crystal Reports
HOUSTON PLANNING COMMISSION AGENDA NOVEMBER 20, 2008 CITY COUNCIL CHAMBER CITY HALL ANNEX 2:30 P.M. PLANNING COMMISSION MEMBERS Carol Lewis, Ph. D., Chair Mark A. Kilkenny, Vice Chair John W. H. Chiang David Collins Kay Crooker Sonny Garza James R. Jard D. Fred Martinez Robin Reed Richard A. Rice David Robinson Jeff Ross Lee Schlanger Algenita Scott Segars Talmadge Sharp, Sr. Jon Strange Beth Wolff Shaukat Zakaria The Honorable Grady Prestage, P. E., Fort Bend County The Honorable Ed Emmett, Harris County The Honorable Ed Chance, Montgomery County ALTERNATE MEMBERS D. Jesse Hegemier, P. E., Fort Bend County Mark J. Mooney, P. E., Montgomery County Jackie L. Freeman, P. E., Harris County EXOFFICIO MEMBERS M. Marvin Katz Mike Marcotte, P.E. Dawn Ullrich Frank Wilson SECRETARY Marlene L. Gafrick Meeting Policies and Regulations that an issue has been sufficiently discussed and additional speakers are repetitive. Order of Agenda 11. The Commission reserves the right to stop Planning Commission may alter the order of the speakers who are unruly or abusive. agenda to consider variances first, followed by replats requiring a public hearing second and consent agenda Limitations on the Authority of the Planning last. Any contested consent item will be moved to the Commission end of the agenda. By law, the Commission is required to approve Public Participation subdivision and development plats that meet the requirements of Chapter 42 of the Code of Ordinances The public is encouraged to take an active interest in of the City of Houston. The Commission cannot matters that come before the Planning Commission. -
Apr/May/Jun 2015
Texas Institute of Letters April/May/June 2015 Texas Institute of Letters website: http://www.texasinstituteofletters.org/ Nan Cuba and Kathleen Winter Are Chosen Dobie Paisano Fellowships Winners Named Winners of the Dobie Paisano Writing Fellowships for 2015 are Nana Cuba and Kathleen Winter. The fellowships, sponsored by The University of Texas at Austin and the Texas Institute of Letters, allow writers to live and work at the Paisano ranch, J. Frank Dobie’s 254-acre retreat west of Austin. Nan Cuba, recipient of the Jesse Jones Fellowship, is the author of Body and Bread (Engine Books, 2013), winner of the PEN Southwest Award in Fiction and the Texas Institute of Letters Steven Turner Award for Best Work of First Fiction; it was also listed as one of “Ten Titles to Pick Up Now” in O, Oprah’s Magazine, was a “Summer Books” choice from Huffington Post, and the San Antonio Express-News called it one of the “Best Books of 2013.” Cuba co-edited Art at our Doorstep: San Antonio Writers and Artists (Trinity University Press, 2008), and published other work in such places as Antioch Review, Harvard Review, Columbia, and Chicago Tribune’s Printer’s Row. Her story, “Watching Alice Watch,” was one 1 of the Million Writers Award Notable Stories (storySouth), and “When Horses Fly” won the George Nixon Creative Writing Award for Best Prose from the Conference of College Teachers of English. As an investigative journalist, she reported on the causes of extraordinary violence in LIFE, Third Coast, and D Magazine. She received an artist residency at Fundación Valparaiso in Spain and was a finalist for the Humanities Texas Award for Individual Achievement. -
Newsfromfondren
Volume 17, Number 1 Fall 2007 NEWS from FONDREN A LIBRARY NEWSLETTER TO THE RICE UNIVERSITY COMMUNITY Historic Treasures Emerge from Gym Daniel Webster once said, “What and brittle with age, had been stored is valuable is not new…” (Speech in the original field house and moved at Marshfield, Sept. 1, 1848). In the to the new gymnasium around 1950. Woodson Research Center, we are The locations of the discoveries, learning afresh the truth of that state- under the bleachers and in obscure ment as Rice’s rich historical record rooms at the very top of Autry in athletics slowly emerges through Court, suggest a reluctance to throw old, dirty, dusty, oftimes crumbling anything away. One room was above materials recently found in the the restrooms in the stadium, acces- recesses of the gymnasium. sible only by ladder. It took a lot of As renovation plans for the effort to get those boxes into such an athletic facility were finalized, staff out-of-the-way place. Artifacts found realized the need to retain valuable in various offices were likely kept for materials documenting Rice’s athlet- sentimental value or artistic form — ics programs through the years. Uni- trophies dating to 1915, a stuffed owl, versity historian Melissa Kean and a Rice owl decanter. university archivist Lee Pecht devised Responsibility for retaining and implemented a plan to transfer as written records mandated that certain many of the “finds” as possible to the files about sports programs be kept. Woodson Research Center. While However, over time staff retired or Dr. Kean conferred with athletics left Rice, records were inherited and staff to determine priorities and then interrelated files became separated. -
BRAZORIA COUNTY HISTORICAL MUSEUM Collections Reflect the Musical and Cultural Development of Houston Through Departmental
ABOUT ARCHIVISTS OF THE HOUSTON AREA! THE AFRICAN AMERICAN LIBRARY AT THE GREGORY SCHOOL, HOUSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY HARRIS COUNTY ARCHIVES HOUSTON GRAND OPERA ARCHIVES AND RESEARCH CENTER Archivists of the Houston Area (AHA!) was founded in 1998 by four local archivists to 1300 Victor Street, Freedmen’s Town, Houston, TX 77019 11525 Todd Street, Suite 300, Houston, TX 77055 510 Preston Street, Houston, TX 77002 facilitate interaction among area archivists and repositories. AHA! exists to increase 832/393-1440 http://www.thegregoryschool.org 713/274-9683 www.harriscountytx.gov/archives 713/228-0238 www.houstongrandopera.org/archives contact and communication among archivists and those working with records, to Monday-Thursday, 10am-6pm and Saturday, 10am-5pm By appointment only Monday-Friday, 9am-4:30pm, by appointment only provide opportunities for professional development, and to promote archival The collection documents the experience of African American residents, businesses, institutions The County Archives documents the history of the government and the citizens of Harris County The Archives maintains a large collection of material related to the history of the Houston Grand repositories and activities in the greater Houston, Texas area. It fulfills its mission by: and neighborhoods throughout Houston and the surrounding region. as revealed through the county records and donated materials. Opera. Conducting quarterly meetings with programs on archival topics BAYLOR COLLEGE OF MEDICINE ARCHIVES HOUSTON METROPOLITAN RESEARCH CENTER, HOUSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY Planning and promoting Archives Month 713/798-4501 www.bcm.edu Julia Ideson Building, 500 McKinney St., Houston, TX 77002 Providing professional development classes Currently a closed archive. Please call for further information. -
Edwards CITE Questionnaire
2015 CANDIDATE QUESTIONNAIRE P 1 2015 CANDIDATE QUESTIONNAIRE Cite: The Architecture + Design Review of Houston is an award-winning publication of the Rice Design Alliance founded in 1982. Through research, education, and community engagement, Cite strives to improve the quality of life in Houston. With the aim of educating voters on a nonpartisan basis, Cite is asking all mayoral and at large council candidates to respond to the following questions. Please answer questions in 100 words or less by August 17. The entire response will be published as a link from a blog post at OffCite.org that explains the process and summarizes the findings without endorsing any particular answer or candidate. The questions were written and collected in consultation with experts by the following steering committee: Raj Mankad Jen Powis Editor, Cite Environmental Attorney, The Powis Firm, PLLC Rachel Powers Executive Director, Citizens’ Teresa Demchak Environmental Coalition Retired Managing Partner, Goldstein, Demchak, Borgen & Dardarian 2015 CANDIDATE QUESTIONNAIRE P 2 A. YOUR BACKGROUND We would like to know more about how your past experiences have informed your understanding of Houston. 1. Please provide a brief biographical statement (i.e., education and employment background, any elected offices you have held and years held). 100 words or less Amanda is an attorney with Bracewell & Giuliani LLP. In her legal practice, Amanda specializes in public finance matters, representing governmental entities and nonprofit organizations in tax-exempt bond financings. Amanda also provides general counsel advice to governmental entities engaged in urban development as well as to non-profit organizations regarding federal tax exemption issues. -
Freedmen's Town
Freedmen’s Town, Texas: A Lesson in the Failure of Historic Preservation By Tomiko Meeks he struggle to preserve the history Town before its demolition to make Tof Freedmen’s Town in Houston, way for I-45 in 1959. Texas, is entangled in the question- The original boundaries of able systems of urban renewal and Freedmen’s Town according to 1875 development, which inevitably work plat maps included twenty-eight to displace many of the poor African blocks inside of Fourth Ward on the American residents from the commu- southern banks of Buffalo Bayou, nity. For nearly forty years, African north of San Felipe Road, and west Americans have been systematically of the city’s center. Soon Freedmen’s forced from their neighborhood to Town became the center of opportu- make room for new construction nity and advancement for freed slaves. as more people move back into the The community played a critical role city. Freedmen’s Town, because of its in the Black experience in Houston, recognition as a “Historic District,” known throughout Houston’s African on the National Register of Historic American community as the “mother Places, should be immune to such ward.” By 1915, over four hundred actions. Unfortunately, this is not the Black owned businesses existed in case. Political figures, community Freedmen’s Town. The presence of groups, developers, the legal system, these institutions gave the commu- and preservation projects have all nity stability and tells the story of failed on varying levels to protect newfound opportunities for land and the historical value and integrity of homeownership among Blacks.