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Lakes of Parkway is a gated community in western Houston, Texas, also the most southern community in the Energy Corridor. [1] It has 888 lots. [ 2 ] Peggy O'Hare of the Houston Chronicle stated in 2002 that the houses were "upscale".
The Energy Corridor is a business district in Houston, Texas, located on the west side of the metropolitan area between Beltway 8 and the Grand Parkway.The district straddles a 7-mile (11 km) stretch of Interstate 10 (the Katy Freeway) from Kirkwood Road westward to Barker Cypress Road and extends south along Eldridge Parkway to Briar Forest Drive.
The community is within the Eldridge/West Oaks Super Neighborhood (SN17). [4] Harris Health System (formerly Harris County Hospital District) designated Valbona Health Center (formerly People's Health Center) in Greater Sharpstown for ZIP code 77077. The nearest public hospital is Ben Taub General Hospital in the Texas Medical Center.
Cypress Ridge High School is a public secondary school located in unincorporated Harris County, Texas, near Houston. [2] [3] It was established in 2002 as Cypress-Fairbanks Independent School District High School #7. Cypress Ridge provides the deaf education program for Cy Fair ISD and surrounding school districts. It serves Lakes on Eldridge ...
Parkway Villages is a 577-lot, [1] 224-acre (91 ha) subdivision in western Houston, Texas. [2] It is located north of Lakes of Parkway , the former Barnhardt land tract. [ 3 ] It was the first single family housing development by Sueba USA, [ 4 ] a subsidiary of Süba Freie Baugesellschaft .
Spring Branch is a district in west-northwest Harris County, Texas, United States, roughly bordered by Tanner Road and Hempstead Road to the north, Beltway 8 to the west, Interstate 10 to the south, and the 610 Loop to the east; it is almost entirely within the city of Houston. [4]
A 2010 census concluded just over 49,000 people resided in the district, with a projected 52,500 residents in 2015. The census showed that the population was 49.3% white, 9.8% black, 1.1% Asian, and 39.8% other ethnicities, with 77.8% being of Hispanic origin (any race).
New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 0-671-61101-1. New York Times (February 20, 1973). "Houston Space Center Is Named for Johnson". The New York Times. p. 19. Nixon, Richard M. (February 19, 1973). "50 – Statement About Signing a Bill Designating the Manned Spacecraft Center in Houston, Texas, as the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center"