
Skyline District of Downtown at
night

Sign for Downtown Houston
Downtown Houston is the
largest business district of
Houston
, Texas
, United States
.
Downtown Houston contains the headquarters of many prominent
companies. There is an extensive network of pedestrian
tunnels and skywalks
connecting the buildings of the district. The tunnel system is home
to many fast food restaurants, shops and services.
Most of the residential units in downtown are conversions of older
buildings into modern loft spaces. The lofts are located around the
performance halls of the theatre district and near Main Street in
the Historic District.
Downtown will be adding another 346 apartment
units in the 2000s and 2010s with the development of Marvey
Finger's One Park
Place
.
Developers have invested more than 4 billion
USD in the last decade to transform
downtown into an active city center with residential housing, a
nightlife scene and new transportation. The Cotswold Project, a $62
million project started in 1998, has helped to rebuild the streets
and transform 90 downtown blocks into a pedestrian-friendly
environment by adding greenery, trees and public art. The
resurgence of downtown is the result of careful urban planning and
local foresight. The baseball, basketball, and hockey teams have
moved into downtown facilities. January 1, 2004 marked the opening
of the "new" Main Street, a plaza with many eateries, bars and
nightclubs, which brings many visitors to a newly renovated
locale.
History

Marker in Downtown Houston
commemorating the foundation of Houston by the Allen Brothers

Marker on the Harris County Annex 2
Building in Downtown Houston, indicating the site where Sam Houston
lived from 1837 to 1838
Downtown Houston was the original founding point of the city of
Houston. After the
Texas
Revolution, two New York real estate promoters,
John Kirby Allen and
Augustus Chapman Allen purchased
6,642 acres (27 km²) of land T. F. L. Parrot (
John Austin's widow) for $9,428. The Allen
brothers first landed in the area where the White Oak Bayou and
Buffalo Bayou meet, a spot now known as Allen's Landing.
Gail Borden, Jr., a city planner, laid out
wide streets for the town — this prevented gridlock that plague
many other urban downtown areas.
The city was granted incorporation by the state legislature on June
5, 1837. Houston was made as the temporary capital of Texas. In
1840, the town was divided into four wards, each with different
functions in the community. The wards are no longer political
divisions, but their names are still used to refer to certain
areas. By 1906 what is now Downtown was divided between the six
wards.

Old Market Square Park
Downtown's growth can be attributed to two major factors.
The first
arose after the Galveston Hurricane of 1900
, when investors began seeking a location close to
the ports of Southwest Texas, but apparently free of the dangerous
hurricanes that frequently struck Galveston and other port
cities. Houston became a wise choice, as only the most
powerful storms were able to reach the city. The second came a year
later with the 1901 discovery of oil at spindletop, just south of
Beaumont. Shipping and oil industries began flocking to east Texas,
many settling in Houston. From that point forward the area grew
substantially, as many skyscrapers were constructed, including the
city's tallest buildings. In the 1980s, however, economic recession
canceled some projects and caused others to be scaled back, such as
the
Bank of the Southwest
Tower.
Areas
which are, as of 2009, considered to be a part of Downtown Houston
were once considered to be within the Third
Ward
and the Fourth Ward communities; the
construction of Interstate 45 in the 1950s separated the areas from
their former communities and placed them in Downtown.
Additional freeway construction in the 1960s and 1970s formed the
current boundaries of Downtown. Originally Downtown was the most
important retail area of Houston. Suburban retail construction in
the 1970s and 1980s reduced Downtown's importance in terms of
retail activity. By 1987 many of the office buildings in Downtown
Houston were owned by non-U.S. real estate figures. The
Texas Legislature established the Downtown
Houston Management District in 1995. In 1996 Peter S. Carlsen and
Dale E. Smith of the
Houston Business Journal said
that "the obvious and emerging trend of 1996 was the resurgence" of
Downtown, citing several developments that contributed to the
revitalization of the central business district.
The arrival of major industry also saw the advent of skyscrapers in
Houston. The building boom of the 1970s and 1980s saw the erection
of major buildings, many of them ranking as the tallest in the
state and the nation.
Composition
Downtown Houston is a 1,178-acre, 108-square-mile area bounded by
Interstate 45,
U.S. Highway
59, and
Interstate 10. Several
areas exist in Downtown Houston. They include:
Downtown Houston is in close proximity to the
Sixth Ward,
Houston Heights, and the
Houston Museum District.
Architecture
In the 1960s, downtown comprised a modest collection of mid-rise
office structures, but has since grown into one of the largest
skylines in the United States. In 1960, the
central business district
had 10 million square feet (930,000 m²) of office space,
increasing to about 16 million square feet (1,500,000 m²) in
1970. Downtown Houston was on the threshold of a boom in 1970 with
8.7 million square feet (800,000 m²) of office space planned
or under construction and huge projects being launched by
real estate developers.
The largest proposed
development was the 32-block Houston Center
. Only a small part of the original proposal
was ultimately constructed. Other large projects included the
Cullen Center, Allen Center, and towers for
Shell Oil Company.
The surge of
skyscrapers mirrored the skyscraper booms in other cities, such as
Los
Angeles
and Dallas
.
Houston experienced another downtown construction spurt in the
1970s with the energy industry boom.
The first
major skyscraper to be constructed in
Houston was the 50-floor, 218 m (714 ft) One Shell
Plaza
in 1971. A succession of skyscrapers were built
throughout the 1970s, culminating with Houston's tallest
skyscraper, the 75-floor, 305 m (1,002 ft) JPMorgan
Chase Tower
(formerly the Texas Commerce Tower), which was
completed in 1982. In 2002, it was the tallest structure in
Texas, ninth-tallest building in the United States and the 23rd
tallest skyscraper in the
world.
In 1983, the
71-floor, 296 m (970 ft) Wells Fargo Plaza
was completed, which became the second-tallest
building in Houston and Texas, and 11th-tallest in the
country. Skyscraper construction in downtown Houston came to
an end in the mid-1980s with the collapse of Houston's energy
industry and the resulting economic recession.
When the 53-floor,
232 m Texaco Heritage
Plaza
was completed in 1987, it appeared that no more
skyscrapers would be constructed for a while.
Twelve years later, the Houston-based
Enron Corporation began construction of a
40-floor skyscraper in 1999 (which was completed in 2002) with the
company collapsing in one of the most dramatic corporate failures
in the history of the United States only two years later. Chevron
bought this building to set up a regional upstream energy
headquarters and in late 2006 announced further consolidation of
employees downtown from satellite suburban buildings and even Ca.
and La. offices by leasing the original Enron building across the
street. Both buildings are connected by a second-floor unique
walk-across, air-conditioned circular skybridge with 3 points of
connection to both office buildings and a large parking deck. Other
smaller office structures were built in the 2000–2003 period. As of
September 2007, downtown Houston had over 40 million square feet
(3,787,147 m²) of office space, including over 29 million
square feet (1,861,704 m²) of class A office space.
Notable buildings
Notable buildings that form Houston's downtown skyline:
- The Sweeney, Coombs &
Fredericks building is a late Victorian commercial building
with a 3-story corner turret and Eastlake decorative elements that
was designed by George E. Dickey in 1889. Evidence indicates that
the 1889 construction may have been a renovation of an 1861
structure built by William A. Van Alstyne and purchased in 1882 by
John Jasper Sweeney and Edward L. Coombs. Gus Fredericks joined the
Sweeney and Coombs Jewelry firm before 1889. The building is
located on the corner of Main Street and Congress Street at 301
Main Street. Sweeney is a jewelry firm which is still in business.
It is one of the very very few Victorian structures in the Bayou
City.
- The
Gulf
Building
, now called the JPMorgan Chase building, is one of
the preeminent Art Deco skyscrapers in the southern United States
. Completed in 1929, it remained the tallest building in Houston until
1963, when the Exxon Building
surpassed it in height.
- The
Esperson Buildings
, 'Neils' built in 1927 and 'Mellie' in 1942, were
modeled with Italian
architecture.
- The Houston City Hall was
started in 1938 and completed in 1939. The original building is an
excellent example of the Art Deco Era. In
front of City Hall is the George Hermann Square.
- One Shell Plaza
was, at its completion in 1971, the tallest
building in Houston. It stands tall, and when the antenna
tower on its top is included, the height of One Shell Plaza is
.
- Houston Public Library's
Central Library, consists of two separate buildings: the Julia Ideson Building (1926) and the Jesse H. Jones
Building (1976).
- The Houston Industries
Building, formerly known simply as the 1100 Milam Building, was
built in 1973. It went through major renovatedions in 1996.
- Pennzoil Place
, designed by Philip
Johnson,built in 1976, is Houston most award winning skyscraper
known for its innovative design. Johnson's forward thinking
brought about a new era in skyscraper design.
- The
First City
Tower
was built in 1981.
- The
JPMorgan
Chase Tower
, designed by I.M.
Pei built in 1981 and formerly the Texas Commerce
Tower, is the tallest in Houston and the second tallest in the
United
States
west of the Mississippi River.
- The Chevron Tower,
formerly the Gulf Tower, was built in 1982.
- The
Bank of
America Center
, formerly the RepublicBank Center and the
NationsBank center, designed by Philip
Johnson was built in 1983.
- The Enron Center North, also
the Four Allen Center, was also built in 1983.
- The
Wells Fargo
Bank Plaza
, formerly the Allied Bank Plaza and First
Interstate Center, also built in 1983 is the second tallest
building in the Houston Area.
- The
Heritage
Plaza
was completed in 1987.
- The
Enron Center
South
, also the Enron II, designed by Cesar Pelli was completed in 2002. (Note:
Enron went bankrupt before the building's
completion and was sold soon after it was completed for about half
of its $200 million construction cost).
- The
Hobby Center for the Performing
Arts
was started in 2000 and completed in
2002.
- The Lyric Centre is filled with
lawyers, but is named for its adjacency to the many performing arts
venues in Houston's Theater District.
Economy
Downtown has more than 150,000 workers employed by 3,500
businesses. The Downtown District's fact sheet says that
projections estimated that the employee population would grow by
about 1.4 percent per year. Major employers include
Chevron,
Continental Airlines,
JPMorgan Chase, and
Shell Oil Company.Downtown Houston has
between 35 and 40 percent of the Class A office locations of the
business districts in Houston.
In 1986 the Downtown Houston occupancy rate of Class A office space
was 81.4 percent. The Downtown Houston business occupancy rate of
all office space increased from 75.8 percent at the end of 1987 to
75.8 percent at the end of 1988. In the early 1990s Downtown
Houston still had over 20% vacant office space. Preliminary data
for the year 1996 stated that around one dozen companies relocated
to Downtown during that year, bringing 2,800 jobs and filling
670,000 square feet of space.
By 2000 demand for Downtown office space increased and construction
of office buildings resumed. Debbie Wilson, an office broker for
Crescent Real Estate Equities, said in 2001 that many energy
trading firms have offices in Downtown Houston because Downtown has
many backup sources of electrical power and telecommunications
resources. Nancy Sarnoff of the
Houston Business Journal said
in 2001 that the decline of
Enron was
"shifting the direction of the downtown office market from one of
the strongest in the country to an area of uncertainty." The
cutbacks by firms such as
Dynegy, in addition
to the fall of Enron, caused the occupancy rate of Downtown Houston
buildings to decrease. The occupancy rate of Houston's Class A
office space decreased to 84.1 in 2003 from 97.3 less than two
years previously. In 2003 the types of firms with operations in
Downtown Houston typically were accounting firms, energy firms, and
law firms. Typically newer buildings had higher occupancy rates
than older buildings. In 2004 the real estate firm Cresa Partners
stated that the vacancy rate in Downtown Houston's class A office
space was almost 20%. In 2009 10% of Downtown Houston's office
space was vacant.
Companies headquartered in Downtown
Halliburton's corporate office is in 5 Houston
Center
. In 2001 Halliburton canceled a move to
redevelop land in
Westchase to
house employees; real estate figures associated with Downtown
Houston approved of the news. Nancy Sarnoff of the
Houston Business Journal said
that it made more sense for the company to lease existing space
instead of constructing new office space in times of economic
downturns. By 2012 Halliburton plans to close its Downtown Office,
move its headquarters to northern Houston, and consolidate
operations at its northern Houston and
Westchase facilities.
Continental Airlines is headquartered
in Continental
Center I
. At one point
ExpressJet Airlines was headquartered in
Continental's complex.
In September 1997 Continental Airlines
announced that it would consolidate its Houston headquarters in the
Continental Center complex; previously its headquarters were in the
America
Tower
in Neartown. The airline scheduled to
move its employees in stages beginning in July 1998 and ending in
January 1999.
Bob Lanier,
Mayor of Houston, said that he was
"tickled to death" by the airline's move to relocate to Downtown
Houston. Hotel operators in Downtown reacted favorably, predicting
that the move would cause an increase in occupancy rates in their
hotels. In 2008 Continental renewed its lease for around in
Continental Center I. Before the lease renewal, rumors spread
stating that the airline would relocate its headquarters to office
space outside of Downtown. Steven Biegel, the senior vice president
of Studley Inc. and a representative of office building tenants,
said that if Continental's space went vacant, the vacancy would not
have had a significant impact in the Downtown Houston submarket as
there is not an abundance of available space, and the empty
property would be likely that another potential tenant would occupy
it. Jennifer Dawson of the
Houston Business Journal said
that if Continental Airlines left Continental Center I, the
development of Brookfield Properties's new office tower would have
been delayed.
Calpine has its headquarters in the Calpine
Center
. Dynegy is
headquartered in the Wells Fargo Plaza
building. KBR's
corporate headquarters are in the KBR Tower; the KBR Heritage
Federal Credit Union is headquartered from this office.
Shell Oil Company, a subsidiary of
Royal Dutch Shell, is
headquartered in One Shell
Plaza
. CenterPoint
Energy is headquartered in the
CenterPoint Energy Tower.
Reliant Energy is headquartered at 1000 Main
Street.
Waste
Management, Inc is headquartered in First City Tower
. El Paso
Corporation has headquarters in 1001 Louisiana Street. The
Houston Chronicle is
headquartered in Downtown. The North American Energy Standards
Board (NAESB), a representative organization for the oil and gas
industry, is headquartered in Downtown Houston. The previous
incarnation, the Gas Industry Standards Board (GISB), was
headquartered in Downtown in 1999.
Companies with operations in Downtown
Hess
Corporation
has exploration and production operations in
One Allen
Center
. Total S.A. has
United States offices in the Total Plaza.
ExxonMobil has Exploration and Producing
Operations business headquarters at the ExxonMobil
Building
. Qatar Airways
operates an office within Two Allen Center
; it also has a storefront in the Houston Pavilions.
Former economic operations
Prior to its collapse in 2001,
Enron was
headquartered in Downtown. In 2005
Federated Department Stores
announced that it will close
Foley's 1,200
employee headquarters in Downtown Houston.
Diplomatic missions
The
Consulate-General
of the United Kingdom is located in Wells Fargo Plaza, while
the Consulate-General of
Japan is located in Two Houston Center
. The
Consulate-General of
Switzerland, which resided in Downtown Houston, closed in
2006.
Other venues
Downtown Houston has two major league sports venues.
Minute Maid
Park
(formerly Enron Field), which opened in 2000, is
home to the MLB Astros and the Toyota Center
home to the NBA Rockets, WNBA Comets (who have
since moved to Reliant
Arena
in nearby Reliant Park
), and AHL Aeros opened in 2003. If
negotiations with the city are successful, the new
Houston Dynamo stadium should open in time
for the MLS 2009 Season.

The Wortham Theater Center
The Downtown
Houston Theatre
District is one of the largest in the country as measured by
the number of theater seats. Houston is one of only five cities in
the United States with permanent professional resident companies in
all of the major performing art disciplines of opera, ballet,
music, and theater.
Venues in the theater district include the
Wortham
Center
(opera and ballet), the Alley Theatre
(theater), the Hobby Center (resident and traveling
musical theater, concerts, events), the Verizon Wireless Theater (concerts and
events) and Jones
Hall
(symphony).
The
George
R.
Brown Convention Center
, with its of flexible exhibit, meeting, and
registration space and adjacent hotel, is frequently used for
conventions, trade shows, and community meetings.
Hotels and accommodations
In comparison to other major cities, Houston has relatively few
hotel rooms downtown, partly because downtown Houston is not a
large leisure travel market.
There are approximately 5,000 hotel rooms in
downtown Houston
.
Major hotels in downtown Houston are:
The following are boutique hotels that are located mostly in the
northeast section of downtown:
- The Lancaster
- Inn at the Ballpark
- Magnolia Hotel
- Hotel Icon
- Alden Houston
(formerly the Sam Houston Hotel)
Retail
Downtown
Houston is home to the flagship Macy's
(former
Foley's) Department Store (founded in 1900),
which moved to its current location in 1947. It has 10
levels and it occupies an entire Houston square city block.
In 2006
this store, along with all other Foley's stores, was renamed
Macy's
. This is the only freestanding middle-market
department store in a central business district in the
Southern United States.
The Shops
in Houston Center, located within the Houston Center
complex, is an enclosed shopping mall. It houses ninety stores
and the building itself straddles two city blocks.
The
Houston Pavilions is a major
project currently under construction Downtown.
This project comes
from the same developers of the Denver
Pavilions in Denver
; spanning
three square blocks, however, Houston Pavilions is said to be
larger.
The
Houston Downtown
Tunnel System is also home to many shops and restaurants.
Transportation
Metropolitan
Transit Authority of Harris County, Texas (METRO) operates
Houston's public transportation.
Downtown Houston is served by five
light rail stations on METRORail's Red Line: Downtown
Transit Center
, Bell
, Main Street Square
, Preston
, and . METRO operates several bus lines
through Downtown.
There are a number of taxi cabs that can be hailed from the street,
twenty-one taxi stands, or at the various hotels. Trips within
downtown have a flat rate of $6
United States dollars by cab.
Government
Local government

Fire Station 8 Downtown
Two city council districts, District H and District I, cover
portions of Downtown. As of 2008
Mayor
Pro-Tem Adrian Garcia and James G. Rodriguez, respectively,
represent the two districts.
Houston Fire Department
Station 8 Downtown at 1919 Louisiana Street serves the central
business district. The station is in Fire District 8. Fire Station
1, which was located at 410 Bagby Street, closed in 2001. The
community is within the
Houston Police Department's
Central Patrol Division, headquartered at 61 Riesner.
The
Houston Downtown Management District is headquartered in Suite 1650
at 2 Houston Center at 909 Fannin Street; 2 Houston Center is a
part of the Houston
Center
complex.
County, federal and state representation

Mickey Leland Federal Building

Houston Post Office
Downtown is divided between Harris County Precinct 1 and Harris
County Precinct 2. As of 2008 Jerry Eversole heads the precinct. As
of 2008 El Franco Lee heads Precinct 1. As of 2008 Sylvia R. Garcia
heads Precinct 2.
Much of Downtown is located in
District 147 of
the
Texas House of
Representatives. As of 2008,
Garnet F. Coleman represents the district. Some of
Downtown is located in
District 148 of
the
Texas House of
Representatives. As of 2008,
Jessica
Farrar represents the district. Downtown is within
District 13 of the
Texas Senate; as of 2008
Rodney Ellis represents that district.
Downtown Houston is in
Texas's 18th congressional
district . As of 2008 its representative is
Sheila Jackson Lee. The
United States Postal Service
operates the 16-acre Houston Post Office at 401 Franklin Street. In
February 2009 the U.S. Postal Service announced that it was going
to sell the Houston Post Office. The party buying the facility is
required to build a replacement facility. As of October 2009 the
sale was still pending. Regional offices of U.S. government
agencies are located at the Mickey Leland Federal Building at 1919
Smith Street. The 22 story building, with a 6-story parking garage,
was designated an
Energy Star efficient
building in 2000.
Parks and recreation
Sam Houston Park, on the western
edge of downtown between McKinney and Dallas/Allen Parkway, is home
to the Houston Heritage Society and a collection of historic
buildings and homes from around Houston.
Tranquility Park, bound by Rusk,
Smith, Walker, and Bagby, uses open green spaces and a series of
interconnected fountains to commemorate NASA's landing on the
moon's Sea of Tranquility.
Market Square, between
Travis, Milam, Preston, and Congress, preserves the block formerly
covered by Houston's open air market which fronted the old City
Hall.
Allen's Landing, on Buffalo Bayou at
Smith and Preston, commemorates the landing site of the Allen
Brothers, founders of the City of Houston.
Sesquicentennial Park, across
Buffalo Bayou from Allen's Landing, contains a statue of George
H.W. Bush, Houstonian and 41st President of United States.
Main Street Square, a pedestrian mall with a reflection pool and
fountains on the MetroRail line between Lamar and Dallas.
Root Memorial Square, a one-block park across La Branch St from the
Toyota Center.
Sisters of Charity Park, a quiet area in St. Joseph's Medical
Center in the southeast corner of downtown.
Discovery
Green
, west of the George R. Brown Convention
Center, officially opened on
April 13, 2008
with a Family Day event. The park has underground parking, an
amphitheater, two restaurants, a dog run, a jogging trail around
the park, a great Lawn, an interactive fountain and more.
Harris County Precinct One operates the two acre Quebedeaux Park at
1115 Congress Street. The park includes a stage area, picnic
tables, and benches. The park surrounds the Harris County Family
Law Center.
The Downtown
YMCA is located at 1600 Louisiana
Street. The 120,000 square foot Tellepsen Family Downtown YMCA at
808 Pease Street will open in 2010, and the previous YMCA facility
will close. The Tellepsen facility will include a center for
teenagers, a wellness center for females, a child watch area, a
community meeting space, a chapel, group exercise rooms, and a
racquetball court. The groundbreaking ceremony occurred on January
7, 2009. The new facility will not have dormitories for homeless
that exist in the current YMCA facility. The Downtown YMCA had
provided dormitory space for around 100 years.
Court system
The Majority of the County court systems are located in Downtown
within a five block area bounded by Franklin, San Jacinto,
Caroline, and Congress Streets including the following:
- Harris County Justice Of the Peace
- Harris County Civil Courts
- Harris County Family Courts
- Harris County Juvenile Courts
- Harris County Criminal Courts
All are located around a central surface parking lot, that will
eventually be turned into a
Plaza and has been
nicknamed "Justice Square".
Along with Harris County's facilities, there are several Constable
courts and support facilities nearby.
Corrections
The Harris County jail facilities are in northern Downtown on the
north side of the Buffalo Bayou. The 1200 Jail, the 1307 Jail,
(originally a TDCJ facility, leased by the county), and the 701
Jail (formed from existing warehouse storage space) are on the same
site.
Kegans Unit, located in Downtown, is a
Texas Department of
Criminal Justice state jail for men. It is adjacent to the
county facilities on the north side of the Buffalo Bayou.
The
South
Texas Intermediate Sanction Facility Unit, a parole confinement
facility for males operated by Global Expertise in
Outsourcing, is in Downtown Houston, west of Minute Maid
Park
.
Education
Colleges and universities
Downtown Houston contains several institutions of higher learning.
The
University of
Houston–Downtown (UHD) is located at northern end of Downtown.
UHD is
distinct and separate from the University of Houston
(UH) itself, but is part of the larger University
of Houston System
. The school currently has an enrollment of
12,000 traditional and
non-traditional students from around
the Houston area.
The
South Texas College of
Law is a private law school located within Downtown and is one
of three law schools in Houston.
Downtown is within the
Houston Community College
System, and it is in close proximity to the Central Campus in
Midtown.
Primary and secondary education
Public schools
The grade-school children of Downtown are served by the
Houston Independent School
District.
Four elementary schools have zoning boundaries that extend to areas
of Downtown with residential areas; they are:
E.O. Smith Education Center (in the
Fifth Ward)
takes most of Downtown's students at the middle school level.
Marshall Middle School (in
Northside) takes students at the
middle school level from a small section of northern Downtown.
Davis High School (north
of Downtown) takes students from almost all of Downtown at the high
school level.
Reagan High
School (in the
Houston Heights)
take students in the high school level from a small section of
northwest Downtown. The
High School for
the Performing and Visual Arts, located in
Montrose, is in close proximity to
Downtown.
History of public schools
Booker T.
Washington
High School's first location, 303 West Dallas, served as the
school's location from 1893 to 1959, when it moved to the north.
Lockett Junior High School was established in the former Washington
campus and closed in 1968.
Foley's Academy was formerly located inside
the Foley's (now Macy's
) at 1110
Main Street in Downtown Houston.
Anson Jones Elementary School served a portion of Downtown until
its closing in Summer 2006.Brock Elementary School served a portion
of Downtown until its closing in Summer 2006 and repurposing as an
early childhood center; its boundary was transferred to Crockett
Elementary. Before the start of the 2009–2010 school year J.
Will
Jones was be consolidated into Blackshear Elementary School, a
campus in the Third Ward
. During its final year of enrollment J. Will
Jones had more students than Blackshear. Many J. Will Jones parents
referred to Blackshear as "that prison school" and said that they
will not send their children to Blackshear. By Spring 2011 Atherton
Elementary School and E.O. Smith will be consolidated with a new
K-8 campus in the Atherton site.
Private schools

The former Sacred Heart School
The
Roman
Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston oversees the Incarnate
Word Academy
, a Catholic all-girls' school founded in 1873 and
the only high school located in Downtown. Trinity Lutheran
School, a PreK-8 Lutheran School, is located at 800 Houston Avenue,
northwest of and in close proximity to Downtown. Its early
childhood center is located at 1316 Washington Avenue, near the K-8
center and in proximity to Downtown.
On September 27, 1897 a school in the two-story annex to the Sacred
Heart Parish, staffed by
Dominican
sisters, opened with 28 enrolled students.
St. Thomas College
(now known as St. Thomas High School
) opened in Downtown in 1900. In 1902 the
parish bought a building used by St. Thomas and moved it from
Franklin Street at Crawford Street to Pierce Street and Fannin
Street.
In 1905 he parish sought and received
approval from the state to start a high school; in January 1907
St. Agnes
Academy
, outside of Downtown, opened and high school
students were transferred to St. Agnes. In 1911 the former
school building, known as the Green House, was demolished and
replaced by a church building. In 1922 the existing Sacred Heart
School building opened; the parish spent $52,800 to build the
building. St. Thomas moved to its current location, outside of
Downtown, in 1940. The Sacred Heart School provided Catholic
elementary education for 70 years until its closing in May 1967
after declining enrollment and increased operation costs. As of
2009 the former Sacred Heart building houses the diocese's parish
religious education program.
Public libraries

Jesse H.
Houston Public Library has
the Central Library in Houston. It consists of two buildings,
including the Jesse H. Jones Building, which contains the bulk of
the library facilities, and the
Julia Ideson Building, which contains
archives, manuscripts, and the Texas and Local History
Department.
Houston's first public library facility opened on March 2, 1904.
The Ideson building opened in 1926, replacing the previous
building. The Jesse H. Jones Building opened in 1976 and received
its current name in 1989. The Jones Building closed for renovations
on Monday April 3, 2006. It reopened May 31, 2008.
In addition, HPL operates the HPL Express Discovery Green at 1300
McKinney R2, adjacent to Discovery Green Park. HPL Express
facilities are library facilities located in existing buildings.
The library opened in 2008.
See also
References
- " Project Statistics Summary." One Park
Place. March 2007. Retrieved on December 8, 2008.
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