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Designers share the must-have finds—from lamps to artwork—they never pass up at this online yard sale.
Market Square lies within the Main Street Market Square District, so designated by the City of Houston in 1997 and listed by the National Register of Historic Places in 1983. Three nineteenth-century buildings face Market Square: the Kennedy Bakery Building at 813 Congress Avenue, the home of La Carafe; the Fox-Kuhlman Building at 305–307 ...
Second-hand shopping is a budgetary and environmentally-friendly practice, but it can cost you a lot of time. You could still come up short after scouring the aisles of thrift stores for hours,...
The Hofheinz family, Roy and his three children (Roy Jr., Fred, and Dene), shared ownership of the park. [14] Hofheinz hosted a press preview in May 1968; Leonard Traube wrote the park "has a beautifully realized continuity and layout calculated to move traffic in such a way as to make practical the policy of a single gate admission for virtually everything on the grounds", [21] referring to ...
The 15-acre (6.1 ha) park cost $31 million and took approximately eight years to complete, officially opening in December 2014. [4] The gardens consist of the Arid Garden, the Celebration Garden, the Family Garden, the Rose Garden and the Woodland Garden. [1] The park includes a 30-foot (9.1 m) Garden Mount. [5]
Hermann Park is a 445-acre (180-hectare) urban park in Houston, Texas, situated at the southern end of the Museum District. The park is located to the immediate north end of the MD Anderson Cancer Center at Texas Medical Center and Brays Bayou, east of Rice University, and slightly west of the Third Ward.
Josh Harkinson of the Houston Press said "unmatched shingles and cracked parking lots" present in the complex "suggest Houston." [2] He explained that the complex's buildings "could form almost any decaying and ersatz apartment complex in the city" except that the flag of South Vietnam planted in the complex's courtyard and a large yellow placard labeled "Thai Xuan Village" give the appearance ...
Marine Pfc. James Anderson Jr.’s decision in the Vietnamese jungle on Feb. 28, 1967, is the reason a ship, a barracks, a dining hall, a park and a street all have borne his name.