Dynamic Variation:
Architecture Buff
The Bayou City is full of interesting buildings that reveal its past. Interested in examining Houston through the lens of its buildings? Throughout Downtown and the city's central core, there is an abundance of significant architecture that tells the story of this port and railroad town turned metropolis. Go ahead, take the tour!
Harris County Courthouse
Downtown gems
Long before oil dominated Houston's economy, cotton was king. Architect Eugene Heiner designed a building in 1884 that would serve as the home of the newly formed Houston Cotton Exchange. The classic revival design with Victorian masonry, ornamental stonework, arches and sandstone molding still stands today, though the exchange is long gone. 202 Travis.
Constructed more than a hundred years ago when the county had just 150,000 residents, the 1910 Harris County Courthouse in Downtown has been painstakingly renovated, a $65 million project that restored the building to its previous grandeur. The elegant, two-story courtrooms have been restored with their ornate furnishings and wherever possible original elements, such as the mosaic tile floor, have been brought back. Stairs that led to the main entrances on the second floor were rebuilt along with balconies overlooking the courtrooms. Topping off the inside rotunda is a new stained glass skylight. 301 Fannin.
Considered one of the finest art deco skyscrapers in the Southwest, the JPMorgan Chase Building (formerly Gulf Building, 1929) is a 36-story architectural jewel in the heart of downtown. The building was designed by Alfred C. Finn, Kenneth Franzheim and J.E.R. Carpenter. With its soaring Gothic-inspired frame, the building stood as the tallest structure in Houston until 1963. Inside its ornate lobby is a large banking hall and elaborate frescoes depicting milestones in Texas history. Brochures outlining the characteristics of the building are also available in the lobby facing Main Street. 712 Main.
Houston City Hall
Built during the Great Depression by the Works Progress Administration, Houston City Hall (1938) is a study in the art deco architecture movement. Visitors can admire the restored rotunda with its elaborate inlaid floors and original murals and reliefs.
Pennzoil Place
In the 700-block of Louisiana downtown stand two buildings with a unique relationship to one another. Designed by Philip Johnson and John Burgee, Pennzoil Place (1976) is actually itself two identical trapezoidal towers separated by only a few feet, creating an interesting perspective on angles and a completely different appearance depending on where it's viewed from. The newer Bank of America Center (originally RepublicBank Center 1983) is a Gothic-inspired tower with a defining triple-gabled roofline. The Johnson Burgee duo also designed this skyscraper, and did so in a way that accentuated the structure they had already executed across the street. 700 and 711 Louisiana.
Museum District classics
Classical and ornate, the backbone of the Museum of Fine Arts Houston is the Caroline Weiss Law Building (1924) from architect William Ward Watkin. In 1958, the addition of the Ludwig Mies van der Rohe-designed Cullinan Hall significantly increased the square footage of the museum. Mies designed a second addition to the building, the Brown Pavilion, which opened in 1974. Together with the Audrey Jones Beck Building (2000) this collection of structures house more than 45,000 works of art from antiquity to modern-day. 1001 Bissonnet.
Welder, Strake and Jones halls (1958) form the nucleus of St. Thomas University. Architect Philip Johnson designed these buildings as the "main quad" of the university. The complex undertaking represents Johnson's first attempt at a multi-building project. 3812 Yoakum.
Neo-Byzantine architecture permeates the bucolic, 100-year-old campus of Rice University. But a much newer structure there has made waves in architecture circles. Opened in 2008, the 6,000-square-foot Brochstein Pavilion designed by Thomas Phifer serves as a gathering place for students and faculty with natural lighting, couches and chairs, plasma TVs and floor-to-ceiling windows that look out on a large, trellis-covered plaza. Surrounded by the much older buildings of Rice, Brochstein is a study in melding the old with the new.
Designed by famed Italian architect Renzo Piano and set in a quiet section of Montrose, the building (1987) that houses the Menil Collection is hailed as a masterpiece of modern architecture. In fact peers recently named it the second most significant piece of architecture built in the last three decades worldwide. One remarkable aspect-the horizontal concrete columns along the roofline that funnel natural light into the numerous galleries. Also on the Menil's campus, you'll want to visit the non-denominational Rothko Chapel (1971) and Richmond Hall (1930), which houses a mesmerizing light installation from Dan Flavin. 1515 Sul Ross.
The Menil Collection
Museum DistrictMuseum of Fine Arts, Houston
Museum DistrictContemporary Arts Museum Houston
Museum DistrictBuilding beyond
Houston's first shopping center, designed by architects Stayton Nunn and Milton McGinty, opened in 1937. Today the River Oaks Shopping Center remains a vibrant example of art deco architecture and a bustling retail destination. It was one of the first automobile-oriented retail developments in the United States and was viewed at the time as a model for future development. Portions of the original complex were demolished in 2007, but the bulk of it remains intact, including the River Oaks Theatre, a historic art house movie theatre built in the art deco style that is one of the last of its kind still in operation in the nation. Corner of West Gray and Shepherd.
Significant architecture abounds in the Historic Houston Heights neighborhood. At the turn of the 20th Century, this area emerged as the city's first "suburb", a haven accessible by streetcar for those wishing to live outside the dense city itself. Today, stately Victorian mansions, heralds of a bygone era, line Heights Blvd. and century-old bungalows mix with newer construction on the community's tree-canopied streets. The historic 19th St. commercial district is reminiscent of a small town square, with block after block of gift, antique, home furnishing and other shops set within charming old storefronts.
For more on historic Houston buildings, visit HoustonPreservation.org.
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