Texas Ghost Towns Come Alive in an Intriguing Traveling Photo Exhibit texasmonthly.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from texasmonthly.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A publicly traded and locally based real estate investment trust was recently part of a major merger in the commercial real estate industry.
Supermarket News reported that grocery-anchored shopping center owner Kimco Realty Corp. would acquire Weingarten Realty Investors, a Houston-based company with its headquarters in the Shady Acres area, in a $3.87 billion deal. The transaction creates one of the nationâs largest public owner-operators of open-air, grocery-anchored shopping centers and mixed-use properties.
Their combined portfolio will include 559 such shopping centers and developments â many of them in Houston and the surrounding area â and encompass about 100 million square feet of leasable area.
Texas on his mind: Remembering the literary legacy of Larry McMurtry ricethresher.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ricethresher.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Houston is, in fact, the unofficial capital of Texas. And we don t care who disagrees. Chron 6 hrs ago
Put some respect on Houston s name and culture.
Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick was upset on Tuesday, lashing out at Harris County (and the media) for their opposition to Senate Bill 7, which would limit early voting hours, eliminate drive-thru voting and largely limit mail-in voting.
Sure, at the time, no one could have predicted how important Houston would become to not only the Bayou City but the rest of the world, but still.
In 2012, Houston literally topped Forbes list of America s Coolest Cities. The list was based on a number of factors, including cost of living, unemployment rates, net migration and recreational opportunities.
April 5, 2021
Juan A Lozano
HOUSTON (AP) A historic Houston theatre that director Richard Linklater called his “film school” and that for decades was the place to catch hard-to-find independent and foreign films has closed for good like many theatres and other businesses, a victim of the coronavirus pandemic.
After nearly 82 years in business, the River Oaks Theatre turned off its projectors last month, depriving the nation’s fourth-largest city of an institution where everyone from rappers to suburban kids and cinephiles formed friendships, fell in love and found community. Its loss has left more than just an empty building behind.