Renovations / Restoration

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Renovations / Restoration Renovations / Restoration 1600 Smith Street Venture, Garage Modifications / Houston, Texas Aetna Realty Investors, Bank One Center Renovation / Houston, Texas Air Liquide America Corporation, Office Remodel / Houston, Texas Alley Theater, Renovations / Houston, Texas American General Realty / Houston, Texas Wortham Tower Roof Replacement Multiple Office Exterior Renovation Life Building Floor Renovations Wortham Tower Lobby Renovations Cafeteria Renovations Amoco Production Company Building Renovations / New Orleans, Louisiana Westlake Park Office Renovations / Houston, Texas Apache Corporation, Demolition and Renovations / Houston, Texas Archdiocese of Galveston, Houston, Saint Michael’s Catholic Church Renovation / Houston, Texas Arthur Anderson & Co. / Houston, Texas Remodel 23rd Floor, Southwest Corner Remodeling in Bank of the Southwest Building Baker Botts, One Shell Plaza Renovations / Houston, Texas Bank One Center (Originally Bank of the Southwest) / Houston, Texas Baylor College of Medicine / Houston, Texas Gross Anatomy Lab Renovations Morgue Classroom Renovations Various Renovation Projects Bell and Murphy, Four Oaks East Renovation / Houston, Texas Casino America, Inc., Superdome Skybox Renovation / Lake Charles, Louisiana Chevron Real Estate Management Company Westbelt Public Area Renovations / Houston, Texas Chevron Place Level 20 Interior Renovations / New Orleans, Louisiana City of Houston, Upper Brays Regional Waste Water Treatment Planet Renovation / Houston, Texas Clayton Library Friends, Clayton House Renovation / Houston, Texas CNG Producing Company, Tenet Renovation / Houston, Texas Compaq Computer Corporation, Cypress Facility Renovation / Houston, Texas ConocoPhillips, Central Campus Renovation / Houston, Texas Contemporary Arts Museum, Renovations / Houston, Texas Coronado Club / Houston, Texas Entry Remodel Building Renovation Bar Renovation Criterion Investment Management, Tenent Renovation / Houston, Texas Dean Witter Reynolds, Interior Tenet Renovation / Houston, Texas Dresser/Cullen Venture, Kellogg Tower Plaza Renovation / Houston, Texas Driscoll Foundation, Children’s Hospital Expansion and Renovation / Corpus Christi, Texas Renovations / Restoration (Cont’d) Emde Company, 1201 Louisiana Central Plant Renovations / Houston, Texas EOG Resources, Inc. / Houston, Texas Federal Land Bank Building Level 2 Renovation Ground Level Renovation Exxon Corporation, Level A Print Shop Renovation / Houston, Texas Farm & home Savings Association, West Gray Branch Remodeling Project / Houston, Texas Fayez Sarofim Corporation, Two Houston Center Remodel / Houston, Texas Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Level 4 Renovation / Dallas, Texas Federated Department Stores, Garage Remodel / Houston, Texas First City National Bank / Houston, Texas First City Gulfgate Remodeling Additional Remodeling First Presbyterian Church of Houston / Houston, Texas Pastor’s Suite Renovation The Lancaster Center Additions and Renovations Nursery Renovations Playground Renovations Friendswood Development Company, Greenspoint 3 and 4 Renovations / Houston, Texas Grace Presbyterian Church, Additions and Renovations / Houston, Texas Houston Biotechnology, Inc. Woodlands Office Renovations / Houston, Texas Houston Lighting and Power Company / Houston, Texas South Houston Service Center Renovations Beatty Service Center Renovations First Floor Renovations Houston Trust Company, Office Renovation / Houston, Texas Jones Hall Foundation / Houston, Texas Jones Hall Green Room Renovation Site Renovation Kent Electronics, Interior Build-out and REnovation / Houston, Texas Kerr-McGee, Level 1 Interior Renovations / Houston, Texas Kirby Fashion Building, Building Additions and Renovations / Houston, Texas Kress S.H. Company, Cafeteria Renovations / Houston, Texas Main Bank, Remodel / Houston, Texas Memorial Drive Presbyterian Church / Houston, Texas Sanctuary Renovation Chapel Renovation Phase II Additions and Renovations Staff Lounge Renovation Menil Collection, Exterior Wall Renovation / Houston, Texas Museum of Fine Arts Houston / Houston, Texas Rienzi Renovation Bayou Bend Restoration New Orleans Riverwalk Associates, New Orleans Riverwalk Renovation / New Orleans, Louisiana Renovations / Restoration (Cont’d) Nicholas/Applegate, Renovation and Expansion / Houston, Texas Otis Elevator Co., Office Renovation / Houston, Texas Petroleum Club of Houston, Levels 43 and 44 Renovations / Houston, Texas Premisys Real Estate Services, Poydras Plaza Mall Renovations / New Orleans, Louisiana Presbyterian School, Miscellaneous Renovations / Houston, Texas Prudential Insurance Co. / Houston and Dallas, Texas Level 39 Public Space Renovation Brookhollow II Interior Renovations Renaissance Tower Renovation Refco Poyfras Hotel Venture / New Orleans, Louisiana Hyatt Ballroom Structural Renovations Hyatt Regency Ballroom Renovations Rice University / Houston, Texas Physics Building Renovation Lovett Hall Restoration Herring Hall Auditorium Huff House Renovation Wiess House Renovations and Additions River Oaks Baptist Church, Sanctuary Renovation / Houston, Texas Rouse Company / Arkansas; Houston, Texas; New Orleans, Louisiana Northwest Arkansas Mall Renovations Northwest Mall Renovation Oakwood Mall Renovations South Main Baptist Church, Additions and Renovations / Houston, Texas Saint John’s School / Houston, Texas Lower School Renovation Winston Building Renovation Saint Lukes Episcopal Health System / Houston, Texas 4th Floor Pharmacy Renovation Level 1 Corridor Renovation Saint Paul’s United Methodist Church Jones Building Addition and Renovation Texas Children’s Hospital, 200+ Projects / Houston, Texas The Woodland’s Corporation, Grogan’s Mill Entrance Renovation / Houston, Texas Trinity Lutheran Church, Additions and Renovations / Houston, Texas.
Recommended publications
  • SC17/TG08: Task Group on Completion/Workover Risers (17G)
    SC17/TG08: Task Group on Completion/Workover Risers (17G) December 11, 2015 Chair Brian Skeels FMC Technologies Ph: 281 591-4333 Manufacturer 5875 N. Sam Houston Pkwy W. Fax: 281 405-4643 Houston, Texas 77086 [email protected] Co-Chairs Tony Muff FMC Technologies Ph: 47 3328-8865 Manufacturer Box 1012 Fax: 47 3228-6750 N-3601, Kongsberg [email protected] Norway Ray Stawaisz Chevron Corporation Ph: 832 854-3225 Operator-User 1500 Louisiana Street Fax: 832 854-3210 Room 12-092B [email protected] Houston, Texas 77002 Member Joe Scranton AlTiSS Technologies Ph: 832 288-5972 Contractor 3838 N. Sam Houston Pkwy, 430 Fax: 281 265-2818 Houston,Texas 77583 [email protected] Gary Rytlewski Retired - Schlumberger Ph: 832 573-6738 Consultant 4757 Oakmont Court League City, Texas 77573 [email protected] Brian Saucier Ph:713 817-6051 Consultant 95 Robindale Circle Fax: Conroe, Texas 77384 [email protected] Jim Miller Chevron Corporation Ph: 832 854-4811 Operator-User 1600 Smith Street, Fax: 832 854-3210 Room 33094A [email protected] Houston, Texas 77002 Richard Cummings Chevron Corporation Ph: 713 754-3196 Operator-User 1600 Smith Street, Fax: 832 854-3210 Room 33094C [email protected] Houston, Texas 77002 Paul Deacon Expro Group Ph: 44 1224-225-856 Contractor Lion House Fax: 44 1224-225-868 Dyce Avenue [email protected] Aberdeen, Scotland AB21 0LQ United Kingdom Jamie Walker Expro Group Ph: 44 1224-225-788 Contractor Lion House Fax: 44 1224-225-868 Dyce Avenue [email protected] Aberdeen, Scotland AB21 0LQ United Kingdom Finn Kirkemo Statoil Ph: 47-9012-7901 Operator-User Martinshaugen 30, Fax: 3408, Tranby [email protected] Norway Send updates to [email protected] 1 SC17/TG08: Task Group on Completion/Workover Risers (17G) December 11, 2015 Member Lorents Reinås Statoil Ph: 47-9115-3047 Operator-User Forus Øst, H2 Fax: 4035, Stavanger [email protected] Norway Tore Geir Wernø Statoil Ph: 47 9522-5568 Operator-User Forus Øst, H2 Fax: 4035, Stavanger [email protected] Norway Mirick Cox ExxonMobil Production Co.
    [Show full text]
  • Walking Tour – Houston Building Stones Revised 10/2008 Neal Immega – N [email protected] Houston Gem and Mineral Society, Houston Geologic Society
    Walking Tour – Houston Building Stones Revised 10/2008 Neal Immega – [email protected] Houston Gem and Mineral Society, Houston Geologic Society Start at Main Street Metro North Bound (NB) on the east side of the map ‘HoustonBuildingStones WalkingTour.gif. You need to do this tour during business hours when you can get into the buildings. The whole tour takes about 90 minutes. IBC Bank – 1001 McKinney - Just inside the bld is a lobby faced with a limestone made of stoney bryozoa. Age unknown Jesse Jones Building – JPMorgan Chase 712 Main St. – built in the old style with lots of decorative stone. Outside is scored Indiana limestone. Interior has marble and colored travertine (a flowstone deposit). Esperson Building 808 Travis, 815 Walker Town Mountain Granite from Austin, Bedford oolite, marble and serpentine (Verde Antique) http://uts.cc.utexas.edu/~rmr/tmg.html http://www.vermontmarbleandgranite.com/marble/vermont_verde_ant.htm Granite Building with Texas Star decoration – No name. Enter on the McKinney side. Back lighted onyx in escalator lobby. Basement has a Cretaceous rudist limestone and a Paleozoic stromatoporoid limestone. Wells Fargo Bank Building – flame cut poikilitic granite as pavement, zoned feldspars on the outside wall. Dynegy – 1400 Smith St. Black facing stone is a basic rock from Norway called Larvikite. http://www.toyen.uio.no/geomus/nettutstillinger/Osloriften/larvikitt-eng.html One Shell Plaza - 900 Louisiana Italian travertine. (Travertino Romano) Deposited by algae in freshwater hot springs. An inexpensive stone but a poor choice for an exterior stone. http://www.iltravertino.com/pagine/thecompany.html Houston City Hall – 901 Bagby Walls are Austin Stone (Cordova Shell) containing fossil shells.
    [Show full text]
  • 35 Years of One Shell Plaza
    iiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII =IIB ••••••••••••••••••iiiiiiiiiini i ........ aasS§| iiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIBIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII /flffllfllfff IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII fllllllflllll firfiffiifin IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIRII /ifffiffifiii llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll fiifiiifiini "?ffiiiifiii 1111111111111111111111111111111 »lfffifilllii nmmun «lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll i«»ni llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll s llllllllllmmmllllllllmll IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIHimillllll ^IIIIEPIIIll till Ellililllllll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll Ss lllllllllllllllllllllllltlllllll railllllllllBl^llllJIIll I '0^4 CITE 67 : SUMMER 2006 25 35 Years of One Shell Plaza Once the world's tallest concrete building, One Shell Plaza still has lessons to teach INTERVIEW W I T H J O S E P H C O L A C O BY W I L L I A M F. S T E R N A N D C H R I S T O F S P I E L E R When it wus finished m Il>7l, One Shell tin this project, research that has served beams welded together at very, very close the post modern movement came about. Plaza was the world's tallest concrete the industry well over many, many years. S[\K nig. I he World 11.ufe i enter had Before that we had basically a Miesi.m- building. The 7IS-foot, 50-story build- And then when I moved ro Houston in columns that were three-feet-four-inches type design, which some call International ing, which fills the block bounded by I4f>^, the building was just about fin- on center on the outside and a very deep Style, buildings were fairly regular. They Louisiana. Smith. Walker, and McKinney. ished. For the last 3.5 years, I have been spandrel beam. F.ssenrially, you could were rectangular, ihey prcttv much went was also Gerald D.
    [Show full text]
  • Offering Summary Investment Overview
    HOUSTON DOWNTOWN OFFERING SUMMARY INVESTMENT OVERVIEW HFF is pleased to offer on an exclusive basis the opportunity to acquire the fee-simple interest in the 350-room Doubletree Downtown Houston (“Property” or “Hotel”), prominently situated within Allen Center – an institutional-quality mixed-use office/retail/hotel complex – in the Houston CBD. The Hotel is strategically located near many of Houston’s top demand drivers including the George R. Brown Convention Center, Minute Maid Park (home of the Houston Astros), Toyota Center (home of the Houston Rockets) and over 51 million square feet of office space within a 1-mile radius. Many of the Fortune 500 companies located in Houston are within blocks of the Property, including Deloitte, Chevron and KBR. The Property is being offered fully unencumbered from both brand and management, presenting the next owner with a completely blank slate. With an irreplaceable location within Houston’s CBD core and strong in-place cash flow, the DoubleTree offers investors a unique, unencumbered opportunity with tremendous upside potential. INVESTMENT HIGHLIGHTS UNIQUE DOWNTOWN HOUSTON LOCATION The Property boasts an enviable location within Allen Center in Houston’s CBD, benefiting from downtown’s diversified demand base – not only corporate but also convention, sports, leisure, culture, medical, university/ education – and pedestrian friendly environment. This ideal mix of demand drivers has allowed the CBD to TWO ALLEN CENTER 1 MILLION SF continually outperform Houston’s overall market, as well as the
    [Show full text]
  • Quarterly Market Overview 2017 Third Quarter
    Quarterly Market Overview For more information, please contact: David Mendel, Public Relations Manager 2017 Third Quarter Phone: 713.629.1900 ext. 258 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE E‐mail: [email protected] HOUSTON’S OFFICE MARKET RECOVERY SLOW, INDUSTRIAL DEMAND REMAINS HIGH HOUSTON — (October 18, 2017) — Houston’s commercial real estate market is optimistic after grappling with Hurricane Harvey amid the continued energy recovery, according to quarterly market research compiled by Commercial Gateway, the commercial division of the Houston Association of Realtors (HAR). For office space, direct negative net absorption of 39,995 square feet was recorded; Class A and C showed positive absorption of 246,119 square feet and 18,230 square feet, respectively, while Class B reported negative absorption of 304,344 square feet. Move-ins at 609 Main including four different firms who preleased space in the new building accounted for almost 263,000 square feet of the Class A positive absorption. Year-to-date overall totals are positive for the year primarily due to the first quarter occupancy of 600,000 square feet by BHP Billiton in its new headquarters building, although the firm is leaving behind more than 320,000 square feet that is currently on the sublease market. Space left behind by various firms occupying new properties along with sublease spaces converting to direct space will continue to affect the vacancy rate. The current 16.7% direct vacancy rate is unchanged from last quarter, but up from the 15.5% recorded during the same quarter in 2016. Class A space overall is 16.0% vacant, Class B is 19.1% vacant and Class C is 11.4% vacant.
    [Show full text]
  • Shell to Houston
    n August 1969, Shell Oil Company tions prompted Shell to examine the idea The company’s Texas-sized move Iannounced plans to move most of its of moving much its operations to another took nearly a year beginning in November administrative offi ces from New York City city. During eighteen months of study aided 1969. Shell’s method of moving individual to Houston. “Shell to Move 1,000 Workers by the Stanford Research Institute, Shell offi ces only lost one working day at the Here” read the banner headline across the collected data on a half-dozen cities but end of each week. Each Thursday evening, front page of the Houston Chronicle the day eventually narrowed the list to two, Dallas equipment was loaded up in cross-country after the announcement. The fi nal number and Houston. Both cities had low costs- moving trucks. By the following Monday was closer to 1,400, and the success of the of-living, room for growth, and a Sunbelt afternoon, 1,620 miles away in Houston, move encouraged the company to consoli- ambience. And they were located in the the equipment was unloaded and arranged. date others parts of its operations in the city. Central Time Zone, making intra-company Employees reported for work Tuesday The move bolstered the Bayou City’s morning. Shell offered to transfer and emergence as a center of gravity for Shell. absorb moving costs for practically all Houston had been a Shell town for many operating headquarters personnel from top decades. It had a major refi nery in Deer Shell managers to fi le clerks and secretaries.
    [Show full text]
  • 'The Outstanding Building of the Year' Award!
    The Newsletter for Pennzoil Place Tenants 1st & 2nd Quarter 2016 Issue Iconic Pennzoil Place Wins Local ‘The Outstanding Building of the Year’ Award! ennzoil Place is the proud winner of the 2015/2016 PHouston Building Owners and Managers Association (BOMA) The Outstanding Building of the Year (TOBY) Award in the Over One Million From The Manager The From Square Feet Category. Members of hat a great time the hard working Transwestern prop- for Pennzoil Place! erty management team received the For those that may prestigious award at the Houston TOBY W not know, in January we won Award dinner in January. Houston BOMA’s local TOBY (The Outstanding Building of Each year, the TOBY is awarded to the the Year) Award! This was only highest scoring building in each of possible through the efforts in 15 categories, beginning at the local tenant programs, community level. The categories consist of five team. Judges are introduced to the score of 85, Pennzoil Place easily outreach, energy reduction, square footage awards ranging from building’s energy efficient systems, received these coveted bonus points. and environmental initiatives, under 100,000 square feet to over tenant amenities, and environmentally with great success; along with a Congratulations to the Transwestern lot of work and help from many one million square feet, along with friendly features during the tour. Pennzoil Place management team vendors and our great Pennzoil categories for medical, corporate, Among other prerequisites, each for garnering the TOBY Award. The Place tenants! A special thanks historic, low-rise and mid-rise subur- competing building must bench- team worked hard to prepare for the goes out to all team members ban office park, government, reno- mark energy usage through the EPA competition while completing dai- who contributed to winning this vated, retail, industrial office park, and year’s TOBY Award and making ENERGY STAR® website.
    [Show full text]
  • Houston's Office Market Weakens Over the Quarter and Braces Itself Moving
    Research & Forecast Report HOUSTON | OFFICE Q1 2020 Houston’s office market weakens over the quarter and braces itself moving forward amid $20 oil Lisa Bridges Director of Market Research | Houston Commentary by Patrick Duffy MCR Market Indicators Annual Quarterly Quarterly Colliers generally uses this space to discuss the trends we see Relative to prior period Change Change Forecast* in market data and in conversations we have with our clients, prospects and friendly competitors. We take that data and attempt VACANCY to project activity going forward. The bulk of the first quarter was, NET ABSORPTION for all practical purposes, pre-COVID. Net “move-in” data, as well as new leases signed, were likely unimpacted for Q1 based on the DELIVERIES virus or only marginally impacted. Our industry has a lead time of UNDER CONSTRUCTION at least 4-6 months before a lease is signed or space made ready for occupancy. The real impact of this COVID crisis will not present *Projected in the data until later in Q2. Inertia will carry us for a few more weeks. The world is focused on the COVID driven economic slowdown. Houston has two issues to watch – COVID and a collapse in oil prices. The oil issue is driven by Saudi Arabia and Russia failing to reach an agreement on production and by the severe decline of oil and gas demand driven by the COVID shutdown. Oil has been Summary Statistics Houston Office Market Q1 2019 Q4 2019 Q1 2020 in the low 20’s since the collision of these two events. The Energy Information Administration is projecting that supply will continue to Vacancy Rate 19.4% 19.8% 20.0% outpace demand for the balance of this year by approximately 10MM barrels per day.
    [Show full text]
  • Tallest Buildings Constructed in 1970-1980
    This PDF was downloaded from The Skyscraper Center on 2018/01/11 UTC For the most up to date version, please visit http://skyscrapercenter.com Building List All Regions, All Companies, 200m+, 1970-1980 Completed Architecturally Topped Structurally Topped Under On Never Proposed Vision Demolished Out Out Construction Hold Completed # Building Name City Height (m) Height (ft) Floors Completed Material Use 1 Willis Tower Chicago 442.1 1,451 108 1974 steel office 2 Aon Center Chicago 346.3 1,136 83 1973 steel office 3 First Canadian Place Toronto 298.1 978 72 1975 steel office 4 601 Lexington New York City 278.9 915 63 1977 steel office 5 Water Tower Place Chicago 261.9 859 74 1976 concrete residential / hotel / retail 6 Aon Center Los Angeles 261.5 858 62 1974 steel office 7 Transamerica Pyramid Center San Francisco 260 853 48 1972 composite office 8 U.S. Steel Tower Pittsburgh 256.3 841 64 1970 steel office 9 IDS Center Minneapolis 241.4 792 55 1973 composite office 10 200 Clarendon Boston 240.8 790 62 1976 steel office 11 Sunshine 60 Tower Tokyo 240 787 60 1978 composite office 12 Commerce Court West Toronto 239 784 57 1973 composite office 13 Enterprise Plaza Houston 230.4 756 55 1980 composite office 14 One Penn Plaza New York City 228.6 750 57 1972 steel office 15 1251 Avenue of the Americas New York City 228.6 750 54 1972 steel office 16 MLC Centre Sydney 228 748 60 1977 concrete office 17 One Astor Plaza New York City 227.1 745 54 1972 composite office 18 One Liberty Plaza New York City 226.5 743 54 1972 steel office 19 Parque Central
    [Show full text]
  • Renovation / Restoration Experience
    Renovation / Restoration Experience 1600 Smith Street Venture, Garage Modifications / Houston, Texas Aetna Realty Investors / Houston, Texas Bank One Center Renovation Air Liquide America Corporation / Houston, Texas Office Remoel Alley Theater / Houston, Texas Renovation Hurricane Harvey Renovation Flood Mitigation American General Realty / Houston, Texas Wortham Tower Roof Replacement Multiple Office Exterior Renovation Life Building Floor Renovations Wortham Tower Lobby Renovations Cafeteria Renovations Amoco Production Company Building Renovations / New Orleans, Louisiana Westlake Park Office Renovations / Houston, Texas Apache Corporation / Houston, Texas Demolition and Renovations Arthur Anderson & Co. / Houston, Texas Remodel 23rd Floor, Southwest Corner Remodeling in Bank of the Southwest Building Baker Botts, One Shell Plaza Renovations / Houston, Texas Bank One Center (Originally Bank of the Southwest) / Houston, Texas Baylor College of Medicine / Houston, Texas Gross Anatomy Lab Renovations Morgue Classroom Renovations Various Renovation Projects Bell and Murphy, Four Oaks East Renovation / Houston, Texas Casino America, Inc., Superdome Skybox Renovation / Lake Charles, Louisiana Chevron Real Estate Management Company Westbelt Public Area Renovations / Houston, Texas Chevron Place Level 20 Interior Renovations / New Orleans, Louisiana Christ Church Cathedral / Houston, Texas Renovation and Restoration City of Houston, Upper Brays Regional Waste Water Treatment Planet Renovation / Houston,
    [Show full text]
  • Page 1 of 35
    Page 1 of 22 RAILROAD COMMISSION OF TEXAS OVERSIGHT AND SAFETY DIVISION 09/09/2021 3:26 PM PIPELINE SAFETY OPERATOR ADDRESS LIST SEARCH CRITERIA: System Type: Hazardous Liquid; County: All; P5 Company ID Operator Contact Person Contact Phone Numbers Miles of Pipeline Number AIR PRODUCTS LLC Francesco Maione, Phone:610-481-1304 7358 009371 President, Americas 24 Hour: 240.86 , Operations Fax: ALON USA, LP Richard Stockton, Sr. Phone:(432) 213-0339 5852 200 E. Refinery Rd 015098 Manager, Refinery 24 Hour:(800) 343-7298 176.08 Big Spring, TX 79720 Operations Fax:(432) 263-9366 ALTUS MIDSTREAM PIPELINE Phone:(432) 242-8356 LP Bryan Graham, Director, 9835 015754 24 Hour:(832) 444-7239 113.44 303 Veterans Airpark Lane Midstream Ops and VP Fax: Midland, TX 79705 AMP NGL PIPELINES, LLC Matthew Cunningham, VP Phone:(469) 213-3294 9802 3811 Turtle Creed Blvd., Suite 770 020466 of Engineering and 24 Hour:(833) 780-8917 99.01 Dallas, TX 75219 Operations Fax: ANDERSON OIL LTD. Phone:(361) 881-8600 5801 P. O. Box 2524 022499 Kevin Anderson, President 24 Hour:(361) 881-8600 0.50 Corpus Christi, TX 78403 Fax:(361) 881-8660 APACHE CORPORATION Phone:(713) 296-6856 Jessica Jackson, Senior 1767 2000 Post Oak Blvd, suite 100 027200 24 Hour:(888) 257-6840 53.31 V.P. EH&S Houston, TX 77056 Fax:(214) 435-9994 ASCEND PERFORMANCE MAT TX INC. Phone:(281) 228-4844 Phil McDivitt, 9135 1010 Travis Stree, Suite 900 033896 24 Hour:(865) 514-8380 123.26 President/CEO C/o Ascend Performance Materials Fax: Houston, TX 77002 AUTERRA OPERATING, LLC Phone: 0552 037775 , 24 Hour: 25.57 , Fax: BASA RESOURCES, INC.
    [Show full text]
  • Houston's Office Market Closes out 2018 with Positive Net Absorption
    Research & Forecast Report HOUSTON | OFFICE Q4 2018 Houston’s office market closes out 2018 with positive net absorption Lisa Bridges Director of Market Research | Houston Houston’s office market continues to take baby steps towards filling vacant space emptied during the energy downturn. In Q4 2018, the market posted positive absorption of 1.9 million SF, a substantial Market Indicators Annual Quarterly Quarterly increase from the negative 0.4 million SF of absorption recorded Relative to prior period Change Change Forecast* one year ago. Leasing activity remained steady over the quarter at VACANCY 3.5M SF pushing the year-end total to 14M SF. Houston’s overall vacancy rate fell slightly from 20.6% to 20.0% over the quarter, NET ABSORPTION but it is still well above Houston’s 5-year average vacancy rate of NEW CONSTRUCTION 16.4%. UNDER CONSTRUCTION Construction activity decreased in Q4 2018 from 3.2M SF to 2.5M SF as several new buildings were delivered. HP’s and ABS’s new *Projected CityPlace buildings in The Woodlands submarket delivered during Q4 2018. Houston’s job growth increased by 3.7% over the year, according to recent data released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. The Houston MSA created 114,400 jobs (not seasonally adjusted) between November 2017 and November 2018, growing faster than Summary Statistics the U.S. during the same time period. Employment sectors with the Houston Office Market Q4 2017 Q3 2018 Q4 2018 most substantial growth include support activities for mining which Vacancy Rate 19.9% 20.6% 20.0% grew by 11.7% over the year, construction increased by 10.8% and durable goods manufacturing was up by 9.0% over the year.
    [Show full text]