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  #841  
Old Posted Aug 21, 2007, 3:40 PM
Cory Cory is offline
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Originally Posted by kingkirbythegreat View Post
Is this thing going to have ground floor retail?

Nope but with that said, this looks a lot better than I thought. I thought we would get the same stucco midrises that we see all over the city like Ventana or something. This project and the Belle Meade(sp?) at River Oaks on Westhimer, the same company, are nice projects.
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  #842  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 12:17 AM
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Lots of new stuff at Rice is getting ready to come out of the ground besides the Collaborative Research Center.

McMurtry College will be the 10th and largest of Rice's undergrdaute colleges. It is scheduled to open in 2010 with around 380 students.


Duncan College will be the 11th residential college and it too will open in 2010 with 324 beds. This will be a gold-certified LEED project. Kudos to Rice!


Rice is also about to begin construction on the Shakespeare Graduate House Apartments. This 4 story building located on the corner of Morningside @ Shakespeare will house 238 graduate students.
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  #843  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 12:25 AM
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Rice is really growing!
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  #844  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 6:37 AM
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Boom

Aight people, here we go...

Main Place will be the name for the new Hines office development at 811 Main. The bldg. will rise 46 stories above ground and reach 630 feet tall. It will contain 1,000,000 square feet of space and be LEED certified-silver.


In related downtown news, The Discovery Tower development will take up two blocks with a parking garage on one block and a 30 story office tower with ground floor retail on the other block. Trammell Crow intends to break ground in January 2008. Gensler will design the building and it too will be LEED certified. Located at LaBranch @ McKinney, it will contain 871,000 square feet of rentable space.

Finally, the long rumored 6 Houston Center project is starting to leak initial details. The building will be 29 floors and have just shy of 584,000 square feet. HKS Architects out of Dallas will be the architectural firm on record. Ground breaking is set for February 2008.

All 3 buildings are projected to open in 2010.
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  #845  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 1:31 PM
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Nice. Here is a larger rendering:



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  #846  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 1:51 PM
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Chron article:

An article from the Houston Chronicle:

Hines project hits home
The Houston-based developer's 46-story office tower is one of four being planned for downtown


By NANCY SARNOFF
Copyright 2007 Houston Chronicle


Hines, the Houston-based firm that develops real estate across the globe, is planning its newest building in the heart of its hometown.

The new project, to be called MainPlace, will be a 46-story, 1 million-square-foot office building at 811 Main St. between Walker and Rusk, the company said Tuesday.

The modern glass tower will replace a series of worn-out structures, including the Montagu Hotel, situated on "one of the most blighted blocks in downtown," the company said.

"We believe there will be a tremendous outpouring of improvement on adjacent blocks," said Mark Cover, an executive vice president with Hines.

Plans call for the building to be completed by late 2010.

As the company begins to prepare its site this week for construction, at least three other developers are moving forward with plans for their own top-class office towers.

While none of the firms has secured a main tenant for any of the buildings — once considered a prerequisite to breaking ground — each has expressed confidence in its abilities to do so.

"There's certainly enough demand to fill more than one building," said Matt Khourie, president of the U.S. central region for Trammell Crow Co., which said it will break ground early next year on a 30-story tower near Discovery Green, downtown's new park. "Whether there's enough to fill all four buildings, the market's going to have to dictate that."

Expressing doubt

Some experts have doubts.

Given the recent credit crunch that has made it more expensive for companies to borrow money, "I think that some of these plans are being floated probably somewhat prematurely," said Ralph Howard, CEO of the Houston-based Situs Cos., a real estate consulting firm. "I would think if you had to speculate today, not all of those will get off the ground as soon as they were anticipated to."

Still, developers said downtown office buildings are running out of space, creating pent-up demand.

The vacancy rate for top-of-the-market buildings here has risen to 91.4 percent, according to CB Richard Ellis.

Trammell Crow said it will start construction in January on its two-block development at La Branch and McKinney, bordering Discovery Green.

Playing off the name of the park, the company's Discovery Tower will have 871,000 square feet of space. A parking garage will be built on an adjacent block to the north.

Designed by Gensler to attain a rating from the U.S. Green Building Council, the project will have retail space on the ground floor and is expected to have a sky bridge connecting it to another building with tunnel access.

"We really feel Discovery Green is going to be a difference-maker for downtown, just like Millennium Park in Chicago and Bryant Park in New York," Khourie said.

Downtown advantage

Despite Houston's strong economy, David Wolff, founder of Houston-based real estate firm Wolff Cos., isn't convinced that all four towers will be built, but developers with strong downtown tenant bases will have an advantage.

Paul Layne of Brookfield Properties said his firm has been meeting with companies that could be tenants in its proposed tower near its Allen Center complex.

And Crescent Real Estate Equities Co., the Fort Worth firm that was recently acquired by affiliates of Morgan Stanley Real Estate, is also moving forward with plans for a new tower at the Houston Center project on the east end of downtown.

The proposed 29-story building, designed by HKS of Dallas and to be named 6 Houston Center, will have 583,582 square feet of rentable space, said Joseph Pitchford, a vice president of Crescent.

Groundbreaking will occur in February with completion expected in the first quarter of 2010, Pitchford said.

While the national economy will be modestly affected by the tightening of credit, overall demand for energy and commodities will continue to rise, putting Houston in a strong position, Hines' Cover said.

The company is even looking into the future beyond MainPlace.

Hines is locking up a second location on Main Street, between Texas and Capitol, where it's considering another office building.

"It's a great opportunity, whether it's this cycle or the next," said John Mooz, a vice president for the company.

Meanwhile, its current focus is on MainPlace, which will be the company's "most sustainable effort in the city."

Going green

Hines said the building will be pre-certified by the U.S. Green Building Council with a silver rating through the group's Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design — Core and Shell program. The council awards points to buildings with features such as air-cleaning systems, individual temperature controls, recycled building materials and purified water systems.

The tower will be clad in horizontal sunshades of glass and aluminum that will wrap around the buildings' curved north and south facades. The west facade will be shaded from evening sunlight by vertical glass fins, which will soar 630 feet from Main Street's sidewalk to the building's crown.

It will also have a recessed "sky garden" on one of the top floors and a parking garage with a "green" or landscaped roof.

"We want to make sure this building serves as a benchmark of what urban architecture should be," said Jon Pickard of Pickard Chilton, the building's architect.

Rental rates will be in the low $30-per-square-foot range, Cover said. Hines wouldn't reveal the project cost.

Spurring more projects

The company said it believes the project will spur further redevelopment in that part of downtown.

Wolff, who is also chairman of the city's transit authority, said the rail line has started paying off in terms of development along Main Street, which was not a "good business address" before the transit improvements.

"It was a very unattractive street, and it really divided downtown," he said. "Now it's the center of downtown instead of being a divider between east and west."

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/...s/5073679.html
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  #847  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 1:57 PM
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I just read the article online. I like it, its really nice. I love the color and the design. Very awesome...

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  #848  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 2:34 PM
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Some renderings from the Chron:










Last edited by Trae; Aug 22, 2007 at 3:07 PM.
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  #849  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 6:58 PM
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Main Place looks great! Houston already has some of the best looking towers downtown than most cities could dream of and this one will certainly be a nice addition.
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  #850  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 8:14 PM
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Discovery Tower rendering from the Chron:

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  #851  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 8:16 PM
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This is going to look great..........I wish there was a drawing of the proposed 1500 smith street....even though it will blcok my view out my office window
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  #852  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 8:16 PM
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Discovery Tower & Main Place look amazing!!
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  #853  
Old Posted Aug 24, 2007, 2:26 PM
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The Alkek Patient Tower at MD Anderson Cancer Center will add 9 floors to the original 12 story tower. Construction will begin this fall. Over 200,000 square feet will be added and when finalized, there will be 867 beds in the new 21 story tower.

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  #854  
Old Posted Aug 24, 2007, 9:31 PM
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i often wonder how Houston would look if we combined all of our "downtowns" (downtown, med center, greenway, greenspoint, and the galleria).....would be pretty impressive!
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  #855  
Old Posted Aug 25, 2007, 1:46 AM
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It is absolutely amazing..and huge! Driving from 610 E to 288 north (look left) and the view is spectacular...from that angle you can see almost a continuous skyline.
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  #856  
Old Posted Aug 26, 2007, 4:43 PM
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Nancy finally says something about Turnberry's big temporary building.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/...f/5082989.html
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  #857  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2007, 12:37 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by kingkirbythegreat View Post
Nancy finally says something about Turnberry's big temporary building.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/...f/5082989.html
She's always been a little behind the curve.
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  #858  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2007, 4:50 PM
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I caught a little blurb in the Chronicle this morning about a possible tower in midtown...

Quality Infusion Care and Greenberg + Company plan to break ground soon on the 3800 block of Main. The tower is HUGE for midtown standards. 20 floors and 500,000 square feet. Apparently, 65% of the space is pre-leased which means this one is very likely.

I searched briefly to find a rendering but didn't find one.
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  #859  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2007, 4:57 PM
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That's great! I would love for Midtown to get a tall skyline all of its own.
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  #860  
Old Posted Aug 27, 2007, 5:09 PM
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Hmm this is news to me. A new tower would look nice in Midtown. Hopefully there will be some more info out soon...

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