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WestGrayGuy

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3 hours ago, Houston19514 said:

Kinder High School for the Performing and Visual Arts

Nancy and Rich Kinder Building at MFAH

Kinder Lake @ Discovery Green

Kinder Institute at Rice University

 

I was thinking more along the lines of a road being renamed. I'm sure there's some road named after a confederate supporter that still needs renamed.

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18 hours ago, samagon said:

I was thinking more along the lines of a road being renamed. I'm sure there's some road named after a confederate supporter that still needs renamed.

The lower pedestrian only section of buffalo bayou has a "Kinder Footpath". Not quite a road, but it's a start ..

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"The remaining city investments include a $19.5 million Hispanic History Research Center on Navigation, a $17.4 million capital improvement project with trails on Lockwood Drive, and $10 million for affordable housing."

 

Wow, that might be my favorite part of the whole thing. Trails on Lockwood?!?!

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13 hours ago, 004n063 said:

"The remaining city investments include a $19.5 million Hispanic History Research Center on Navigation, a $17.4 million capital improvement project with trails on Lockwood Drive, and $10 million for affordable housing."

 

Wow, that might be my favorite part of the whole thing. Trails on Lockwood?!?!

Much needed too. I've hiked that trail to at least Marron Park. It gets so spotty in a few areas. Would definitely be a lasting transformation if implemented.

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13 hours ago, 004n063 said:

"The remaining city investments include a $19.5 million Hispanic History Research Center on Navigation, a $17.4 million capital improvement project with trails on Lockwood Drive, and $10 million for affordable housing."

 

Wow, that might be my favorite part of the whole thing. Trails on Lockwood?!?!

I love this as well. they better sync up with Metro on their BRT to make sure there's alignment.

I was talking to a friend last night about EE near the bayou.

between this and East River, both will be nearing completion in 10 years. I told him to get in now, in 10 years the area will be unrecognizable and not anywhere nearly as affordable.

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1 hour ago, samagon said:

I love this as well. they better sync up with Metro on their BRT to make sure there's alignment.

I was talking to a friend last night about EE near the bayou.

between this and East River, both will be nearing completion in 10 years. I told him to get in now, in 10 years the area will be unrecognizable and not anywhere nearly as affordable.

Absolutely. Bullish on that whole area going forward. Not optimistic as a whole on real estate next few years, but long term, if I have money on the sidelines I would definitely throw some into East End.

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On 9/27/2022 at 4:05 PM, samagon said:

I was thinking more along the lines of a road being renamed. I'm sure there's some road named after a confederate supporter that still needs renamed.

Avenida De Las Americas is a mouthful. Could rename it to Richard Kinder Blvd.

Or you rename the Downtown portion of Dallas Street too to avoid confusion with W Dallas St. But that might more work with changing addresses than renaming ADLA. 

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2 hours ago, tigereye said:

Avenida De Las Americas is a mouthful. Could rename it to Richard Kinder Blvd.

Or you rename the Downtown portion of Dallas Street too to avoid confusion with W Dallas St. But that might more work with changing addresses than renaming ADLA. 

Given our current zeitgeist, I don't think renaming a road from Spanish to honor a white guy is going to fly.

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Purchased a home off Lockwood and Harrisburg in summer of 2020 and have been waiting for this to kick off! I too might be most excited for Lockwood to be repaved and have green bike lanes added to connect to the bayou trails. 🥳

Edited by pm91
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  • The title was changed to Buffalo Bayou Pics
  • 3 months later...

Brookings has a nice write-up on the Buffalo Bayou Partnership:
How Houston is connecting two disinvested neighborhoods to green space and amenities

"A concentrated effort is now underway to connect the Greater East End and Fifth Ward neighborhoods to the city’s critical natural asset, and provide residents with the many amenities that have long been available west of downtown. This blog tells the story of this journey, through the lens of my place governance organization, Buffalo Bayou Partnership (BBP)..."

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7 hours ago, bobruss said:

That water looks pretty nice and the color almost resembles green.

We haven't had much rain, so there's not a lot of silt in the water. The next time it rains, it will be brown again.

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On 3/12/2023 at 8:49 AM, Ross said:

We haven't had much rain, so there's not a lot of silt in the water. The next time it rains, it will be brown again.

yep, check it out tomorrow morning, it's a shame the rain can't wait another day, with tomorrow being St. Patrick's day, we need green bayous!

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It seems to me that the Burnett area around San Jacinto Monument, or even the Braes/Buffalo confluence around Brady's Island/Harrisburg, would have been much better siting regarding the intesity of development that we now see from Houston.

The Allen's Landing location seemed fine in the past when the city was much smaller and low intensity. But now? The heavy skyscrapers and freeways just seem so overhwelming for how narrow the bayou is farther west. I think the intensity of development and resultant alterations in run off ecology leads to far less days of clearer bayou water as depicted in @hindesky's post above.

Take, for instance, the Brazos River southwest of Houston: that is a much larger watershed across the state, and a much stronger/faster current, so I'd expect stronger sediment suspension naturally. In contrast, the slower, gentler Buffalo Bayou would lead to less energy for sediment suspension, so the water was probably clearer until changes in runoff from Houston's sheer growth: I would imagine that the bayou was consistently clearer in the past, either blue-green like those photos above in open areas, or stain-glass tea-colored "blackwater" when through thicker forested areas like around Memorial (due to tannins from pines and other such trees).
 

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  • 3 weeks later...
On 9/30/2022 at 2:41 PM, tigereye said:

Avenida De Las Americas is a mouthful. Could rename it to Richard Kinder Blvd.

Or you rename the Downtown portion of Dallas Street too to avoid confusion with W Dallas St. But that might more work with changing addresses than renaming ADLA. 

Changing both Dallas Streets would enable people to be less perplexed to find a Dallas Street in Houston. Or a Houston Street in Dallas...

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