Archive for April, 2011

Fast Company names Houston City of the Year

April 20th, 2011

Houston has been named 2011 City of the Year by Fast Company magazine.

In the issue due on newsstands April 26, the publication features the Bayou City as an excellent place for innovation, technology and design. The magazine cover proclaims: “Hey Houston! You’re No. 1.”

Allegra-Jo Lagani, Fast Company’s managing editor, said the City of the Year is picked internally based on a number of factors.

“This year, it was Houston that seemed to keep popping up over and over again,” said Lagani. “In our estimation, Houston came out as a city to watch.”

Houston was selected this year, she said, because of its beautiful appearance. All the things that are important to the magazine are found in the city, she added.

The magazine feature includes an interview with Mayor Annise Parker. In addition, 10 creative Houstonians share where they seek ideas in their hometown.


Space City snubbed: It’s no space shuttle for Houston

April 14th, 2011

Houston, we have a problem. In a decision that was disappointing — if not surprising — Space City was bypassed as a destination for all of the soon-to-be-retired space shuttles.

On Tuesday, the 30th anniversary of the space shuttle program, NASA administrator Charles Bolden announced from Florida that Houston — despite being the home of the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, which houses mission control and the astronaut training facilities — will not get any of the shuttles.

After having to sit through an announcement that included a long video on the history of the space program narrated by William Shatner and a live cut-in from the international space station, the news only got gloomy for Houston.

With shuttle Discovery already set to be displayed at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C., over 20 museums and other centers were competing to house space shuttles Endeavour and Atlantis as well as shuttle prototype Enterprise, which never went to space.
 
Endeavour and Atlantis are headed to California (the California Science Center) and Florida (the Kennedy Space Center) respectively. The Enterprise will go to the Intrepid Sea-Air Space Museum in New York.
 
The fight for the shuttles turned out to be extremely competitive with organizations from New York to Seattle to Dayton, Ohio submitting proposals and renderings of potential space shuttle exhibits and displays.

After a slow start to its own campaign, Houston got in the mix with a Bring the Shuttle Home rally in front of City Hall on April 6 which featured strong words of support from local politicians as well as the widows of astronauts who died in the Challenger and Columbia disasters.

But it turned out to make little difference.

“It’s been a rough day,” Bolden said in the middle of his announcement.

Not as rough as it’s been for Houston.

“This is certainly disappointing, but not entirely unexpected as the Administration has been hinting that Houston would not be a winner in this political competition,” Mayor Annise Parker said in a statement. “I am disappointed for Houston, the JSC family and the survivors of the Columbia and Challenger missions who paid the ultimate price for the advancement of space exploration.

“There was no other city with our history of human space flight or more deserving of a retiring orbiter. It is unfortunate that political calculations have prevailed in the final decision.”


Skyscrapers buck the recession: Hines plans another new office tower for downtown Houston

April 5th, 2011

The Hines real estate organization, which has built 23 skyscrapers in downtown Houston, is planning another one.

The project, if it comes together as planned, would result in a major office building on Main Street, catty-cornered from the historic Rice Hotel building.

Hines would not proceed unless a major office tenant has been signed, but the developer has been in serious discussions with significant corporations looking for downtown space. Some people in the real estate community say this could be the real deal — a big tenant ready to make a commitment and kick off another Hines downtown project  — and soon.

The development site is bounded by Main, Texas, Fannin and Capitol. Years ago, a McDonald’s outlet was located there, but it was torn down and another developer proposed to build a condo tower. Hines took control of the ownership of the block several years ago and it is mostly used as a surface parking lot today.

Architect Retained

Mark Cover, chief executive officer of Hines’ southwest region, says an architect has been retained and a schematic design of the new building has been finished.

Hines is not prepared at this preliminary stage to name all of the parties involved or disclose details about the negotiations underway, of course.

Cover says that, yes, it is possible that groundbreaking could occur later this year. Skyscrapers take about two years to construct, so it would be 2013 before the new tower is completed.

The office vacancy rate has been rising in downtown. At year-end, Houston’s prime Class A buildings in downtown were 7.29 percent vacant, up from 6.1 percent vacancy rate a year earlier, according to the CB Richard Ellis real estate firm. Several energy firms, such as Shell and Devon Energy, are expected to vacate big chunks of downtown space.

But at the same time, other energy-related companies are looking to expand in downtown and one of those companies would likely be the lead tenant in the new Hines tower.

New buildings, designed with energy efficiency and sustainability in mind, are in high demand.

“We really believe that the marketplace is differentiating between new generation buildings and 35-year-old (plus or minus) buildings,” Cover says.

Block 69

Hines has just completed the 46-story BG Group Place tower at 811 Main Street, just two blocks south of the site of the proposed new building. The BG Group Place, on top of other prior improvements, validated Main Street as a prime corporate address.

A few weeks ago, Hines President and CEO Jeff Hines told CultureMap that Main Street is the preferred location for new office projects today.

“If we do the next building, that’s where we would go,” Hines said.

With the new BG Group Place tower opening and the Hess Tower building nearing completion near Discovery Green, some were anticipating it could be many years before another new building was started in downtown Houston.

But Hines said the timetable for the next addition to Houston’s skyline could be fast-paced.

“I think it could be surprisingly quick,” Hines said in an exclusive interview. “We’re seeing a real upsurge in activity. We’ve talked to quite a few large tenants. It’s hard to say because we’ve just come through some hard times. But I think it could be surprisingly quick that we could we see a new building.”

The new Hines project is proposed for a block of land known as “Block 69.” Developing an office tower there would certainly be good news for the nearby Rice Lofts and the Magnolia Hotel at 1100 Texas Ave.

“Block 69” also would have great access to the Metro light rail, the Theater District and Minute Maid Park. Plus, for those who haven’t visited lately, Main Street is more pedestrian-friendly and feels safer at night.

“While we would certainly look at other sites, we believe that the change on Main Street brought about by 1000 Main, BG Group Place and public infrastructure, has made Block 69 one of the most logical and desirable locations downtown,” Cover says.