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In 1974 the Houston Heights Association (HHA) classified the library as a beautification project. [7] From 1977 to 1980, [ 9 ] an expansion project added a square footage higher than the original size, including 3,000 square feet (280 m 2 ) to the north end, since HPL deemed the existing amount of space held by the library insufficient. [ 7 ]
Memorial Drive runs through the park, heading east to downtown Houston and west to the 610 Loop. A small portion of land west of the 610 Loop bordered by Woodway Drive and Buffalo Bayou is also part of the park. I-10/U.S. 90 borders the park to the north. The park was originally designed by landscape architects Hare & Hare of Kansas City, Missouri.
Four Westlake Park, which was a park of the complex, has 561,065 square feet (52,124.6 m 2). In 2006 an affiliate of GE Pension Trust and Crescent Real Estate Equities Co. sold the building to Falcon Real Estate. As of June 30, 2006, BP occupied more than 90 percent of the building. [4] The WestLake Child Development Center is the on-site daycare.
The Gerald D. Hines Waterwall Park, [1] formerly the Williams Waterwall and the Transco Waterwall, is a multi-story sculptural fountain that sits opposite the south face of Williams Tower in the Uptown District of Houston. The fountain and its surrounding park were built as an architectural amenity to the adjacent tower.
Sign for Lindale Park. Lindale Park is a neighborhood in Houston, Texas. Lindale Park is east of Interstate 45, inside Interstate 610, and north of Downtown Houston. Lindale Park has many bungalows. In 2004 Anjali Athavalley of the Houston Chronicle stated that Lindale Park's popularity was increasing. [1]
Market Square is a public plaza bounded by Travis and Milam streets, and Congress and Preston avenues. Numbered as Block 34 and named "Congress Square" in the original Borden Survey of Houston, it was renamed Market Square after Augustus Allen chose a site for the capitol at the northwest corner of Main Street and Texas Avenue in 1837.
The NEA gave a $100,000 grant, scheduled to be spent at the new park at Palm Center. [10] The university consulted 64-year-old Paulette Wagner, the president of the MacGregor Trails Civic Club in the Riverside Terrace community, for ideas on what to do. [4] In the fall of 2012 a solar-powered kitchen was to be installed in the Palm Center Park.