Houston Realtor sings praises of Greater Eastwood s past and future
Photo by Ashley Cid
Photo by Anne Marie Darcy Lil Danny Speedo s Go Fly a Kite Lounge is a top-notch dive bar.
Photo courtesy of Roy Mata Smither Park is full of art installations.
Photo by Ashley Cid
Photo courtesy of Sanford Clydus Bledsoe III Bohemeo s Cafe is a great start to the day.
Photo by Ashley Cid
Photo courtesy of Beau Schlugen Visit the original Ninfa s on Navigation.
Photo by Ashley Cid When
Jonathan Williamson first moved to Greater Eastwood, he had a feeling that the neighborhood would eventually grow in popularity. And indeed it has, becoming a haven for community-minded folks and charming small businesses.
On the corner of Cullen and Gray, just a short distance from Polk, sits a trailer converted into a standing food truck. The smell of fresh baked bread wafts through the air as the ever-present reminder that the Leeland Baking building is about a block away. Two vertical lights frame the window of the trailer illuminating the surrounding parking lot and revealing a painting on the side of the food truck of cartoon pig.
The pig, licking its lips while staring at a plate of food, dons a blue shirt with the words “Team Keto” written across his chest. The whole set up is very easy to drive past but to do so would be passing up on almost two and a half decades worth of a family’s dedication to Houston.