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St. George Place, Houston

St. George Place is a neighborhood in Houston, Texas, United States.

A sign marking St. George Place

St. George Place is located outside the 610 Loop and inside Beltway 8 in the Uptown Houston area. St. George Place was formed out of portions of an older subdivision, Lamar Terrace, in the early 1990s.

History edit

Lamar Terrace was established in the post-World War II era.[1] The subdivision opened in 1949.[2]

Adnan Khashoggi property deals and foreclosure edit

In 1982 the front companies of the Saudi citizen Adnan Khashoggi began buying houses in Lamar Terrace. From 1982 to 1985 Khashoggi-controlled companies purchased 75 houses. Mainland Savings Association and Summit Savings Association of Dallas had provided the financing. Triad America, a Utah-based company owned by the Khashoggi family, had plans to build a complex including a skyscraper and a 1,000 room hotel on a 21-acre (8.5 ha) strip of land east of Lamar Terrace.[3] Triad had acquired the site in the mid-1970s.[4] In 1983 the company said that it had suspended the project. In 1985 Triad sold the hotel site to Mainland and gained a line of credit. In 1986 Summit, which had loaned $5 million ($13897996.36 in current money) to Triad Properties Corp., a subsidiary of Triad America, filed loan foreclosure proceedings in order to repossess 47 of the houses.[3] In 1986 Summit declined to foreclose on the houses.[5] Later in 1986, the houses were foreclosed upon.[4]

Urban blight edit

By the late 1980s urban blight had been affecting Lamar Terrace.[1] In 1989 Ralph Bivins of the Houston Chronicle said that some houses of the Lamar Terrace area "are dilapidated rental properties with trash, tires and old cars littering the lawns."[6] In the early 1990s Lamar Terrace had been named the "Galleria Ghetto". Cindy Gabriel of the Houston Chronicle said that Lamar Terrace "stood in sharp contrast to its Galleria neighbor with dilapidated post World War II-era homes, abandoned cars, stray animals and high crime."[7] In 1987 Robert L. Silvers, an investor, visited the Lamar Terrace area after having been away from Houston for a long period of time; he expressed shock upon seeing the state of Lamar Terrace. Silvers said that the community was a "disaster."[8] In 1989 Silvers said "You're between Tanglewood and the Galleria and you're sitting in a slum."[6] In 1987, Chris Chandler, a political candidate for Houston City Council District G, said, as paraphrased by Kim Cobb of the Houston Chronicle, that Lamar Terrace was the "most troubled sector" of District G "and could stand a thorough cleanup by the Solid Waste Management Department."[9]

Redevelopment by Robert Silvers edit

Because residents expected The Galleria to expand westward and create a powerful commercial property market, they had voted out the Lamar Terrace deed restrictions.[1] In 1989 Lamar Terrace had houses that were smaller and older relative to its area. In that period many investors had considered buying properties in the area, because Lamar Terrace was in proximity to Uptown.[6] Silvers began buying property in Lamar Terrace in the late 1980s.[1] He finalized a purchase of 50 Lamar Terrace lots formerly owned by Adnan Khashoggi on Tuesday November 10, 1989. Most of the Khashoggi lots were vacant.[6] He later purchased 47 more lots from the same agency.[10] Silvers eventually had purchased in total 107 lots, all from the Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation. Silvers tore down various rental houses that had been poorly maintained.[11]

Silvers held regular meetings with property owners of Lamar Terrace. Patricia Knudsen, the city's acting planning director at the time, told Silvers to consider establishing a public improvement district.[8] A lawyer told Silvers that he could establish a tax-increment reinvestment zone (TIRZ).[1] When a TIRZ is implemented, tax revenues are immediately frozen.[7] A "base year" assessed values is placed on the properties owned by the taxing entities that participate in the TIRZ.[8] As the development progresses, tax revenues may increase due to an increase in property values. The extra taxes are reinvested into the TIRZ zone.[7] The lawyer also told Silvers that the State of Texas permitted TIRZs to petition to establish zoning ordinances.[1]

On December 12, 1990,[11] Houston's Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone No. 1, serving St. George Place,[8] became the first TIRZ in Houston. Silvers had asked the Houston City Council for twenty years of future property tax revenues so he could rebuild Lamar Terrace.[11] The taxing entities participating in TIRZ #1 included the City of Houston, Harris County, and the Houston Independent School District.[8] The TIRZ had a $12 million tax base in 1992. In 1993 the Houston City Council passed a zoning ordinance for St. George Place.[1] The St. George Place boundaries expanded in 1993 to include their current boundaries.[2]

Development of St. George Place edit

New home construction was slow in St. George Place. To promote home building, Silvers founded Ironwood Homes, and that company began building houses. The activity from Ironwood Homes attracted other home builders. Silvers said that he had not planned to or desired to become a developer.[12]

In August 1999 the St. George Place Civic Association incorporated, allowing for residents to more easily interact with the TIRZ board.[7] In 1999 Silver said that while he was glad that St. George Place had improved, he was frustrated by the slow pace of development. He said that he wished he had never established the TIRZ, since in doing so, he was not making as much money as he would if he had immediately sold the properties that he had purchased in the late 1980s.[12]

Around 2000 new infrastructure such as sewer and water facilities was being installed to service the newly built houses, because the infrastructure built to serve Lamar Terrace was not adequate for servicing the new houses.[2] In 2002 Silvers, as paraphrased by Thom Marshall of the Houston Chronicle, said that he had "planned for development of the zone to be finished by now" but that "it's only reached the halfway mark [...] because the city will not file condemnation lawsuits to take properties from investors who are not developing them."[10]

In 2006 the TIRZ had a tax base of over $160 million ($241822383.62 in current money). During that year, Mike Snyder of the Houston Chronicle said that St. George Place residents "enjoy mostly new, upscale homes, well-maintained streets and easy access to shopping, entertainment and major employment centers."[1]

Government and infrastructure edit

The St. George Redevelopment Authority, with a nine member board appointed by the Houston City Council, administers St. George Place. Most board members are property owners and residents.[7]

The St. George Place TIRZ is the only one in which there is a zoning ordinance and the only zoned area in the City of Houston. Mike Snyder of the Houston Chronicle said "Zoning, however, has not insulated St. George Place from the kind of land-use battles that are common in a city where neighborhood leaders often feel powerless to influence the form of development springing up all around them."[1] Snyder said that the zoning was perhaps the most "cherished asset" in St. George Place.[1]

St. George Place is divided between City Council District G and City Council District J.[13][14] In the 1990s and 2000s (decade), St. George Place/Lamar Terrace was in Council District C.[15][16] In the 1980s it was in Council District G.[9]

Houston Fire Department's Fire Station 28 is located at 3100 Chimney Rock @ Dolores.

The neighborhood is served by the Houston Police Department Midwest Patrol Division.[17]

St. George Place is in Texas's 7th congressional district.[18]

Cityscape edit

The current St. George Place and the former Lamar Terrace area are bounded by West Alabama Street, Chimney Rock Drive, Richmond Avenue, and South Rice Avenue.[7][19] The community of west of The Galleria.[20]

In 2000 the houses were priced from $350,000 ($619246.38 in current money) to $450,000 ($796173.91 in current money).[2] As of April 18, 2002, 242 new houses had been built in St. George Place, with 50 of them being built from January 1, 2002 to April 18, 2002. During the same period, 150 older houses and 80 vacant lots for development had remained. During that period, Bill Hutz, president of the St. George Civic Association, said that he anticipated for the old houses to be completely replaced with newer houses in a five-year period.[7]

In 1999, when discussing the lack of development with Silvers, Brian Wallstin of the Houston Press said "[f]rom an aesthetic perspective, Silvers has a point. The juxtaposition of low-slung ranch houses interspersed with towering multistory brick manses gives St. George Place the look of a bad haircut."[12] Prior to Silvers's investment and redevelopment, Lamar Terrace had a lot of front-yard mechanics and neglected houses. By 1999 the neglected properties had been demolished and the mechanics were no longer in business.[12]

By 2016, home and land values in St George Place (often listed in Lamar Terrace subdivision in real estate listings) had increased substantially, with moderately-used and brand-new homes priced from $575,000 to $1,500,000. ($729991.68 to $($1904326.12 in current money).[21]

Map of St. George Place Management District with original & revised TIRZ 1 boundaries: https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=1oa0c_CGlyhQ0MHqQGMllxswfAf0cxx48&usp=sharing

Demographics edit

In the 1990s, many of the individuals renting houses in Lamar Terrace were low-income Hispanic people.[22]

In 2016, those demographics have evolved to wealthy empty-nester and young professional families of many different nationalities.[23]

Education edit

Public schools edit

 
St. George Place Elementary School

St. George Place is served by the Houston Independent School District. St. George Place is zoned to St. George Place Elementary School[24] and Tanglewood Middle School (formerly Grady Middle School).[25] St. George Place students are zoned to Margaret Long Wisdom High School (formerly Lee High School)[26] and may choose to attend Lamar High School or Westside High School.[27]

St. George Place Elementary School, an 86,000-square-foot (8,000 m2) facility, has a capacity of 750 students.[28] It serves areas east and west of the 610 Loop; the bulk of its boundary is south of Westheimer Road, north of Westpark Drive, east of Fountainview, and west of Weslayan; there is also a section bounded by Westheimer, the 610 Loop, the Buffalo Bayou, and a set of railroad tracks. Besides St. George Place itself, the school also serves Afton Oaks, Larchmont, and the Weslayan area. The building has various color-coded "pods" in which classes are concentrated; the color scheme was used to assist young children. It has science rooms, a multi-purpose room with a stage, fine arts rooms, and a combined media center and library.[29] Molina Walker Architects Inc. designed the facility while Heery International Inc. constructed it for a cost of $14 million.[28]

The new campus of the Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School (MCLIMS) is located adjacent to St. George Place Elementary School. The 118,000 square feet (11,000 m2) facility, which has a price tag of $32 million, uses a sun and moon theme. The 2012 HISD Bond financed the construction. Groundbreaking occurred in December 2014.[30]

History of schools edit

In 1993 HISD was planning to build a middle school on a 20-acre (8.1 ha) site in Lamar Terrace. HISD officials planned to convert Grady Middle School into an elementary school, and have the Lamar Terrace middle school serve students from Grady, Piney Point Elementary, and Pilgrim Elementary. Ron Franklin, a member of the HISD school board, said that the Lamar Terrace area was the only affordable land in the area, and that a new middle school in the area was needed. Several Lamar Terrace area residents opposed a plan to place an HISD middle school in the neighborhood.[19] In 1995 HISD was buying properties to demolish them to make room for the new Lamar Terrace-area school.[22] Ultimately HISD had acquired 94 lots for a site for the new school,[31] using its eminent domain powers, and all of the houses were demolished. HISD had spent $10 million to clear the lots.[31]

As of 2000 no school had yet been built, because no bonds to build new schools had yet been approved.[2] By 2002 HISD had not yet developed the property, and the district stated that it did not know when it would begin developing a school there. A public relations employee of HISD stated that the district acquires parcels of land just in case that a school may be needed there.[10] By 2003 HISD had not yet developed the property.[31]

St. George Place Elementary opened in 2006.[32] Most of the funds used to develop the school came from the HISD bond while some came from the TIRZ.[29] Prior to the school's opening, St. George Place was served by Pilgrim Elementary School.[33] St. George Place was the successor of the charter school School at Post Oak, which was held at a YMCA and formed to relieve overcrowded area schools; about 180 students were to transfer from School at Post Oak to St.George Place.[28]

Public libraries edit

The closest library is the Jungman Branch of the Houston Public Library.

Parks and recreation edit

The city of Houston operates the Grady Park at 1700 Yorktown [1].

The Gerald D. Hines Waterwall Park is within a 3 block walking distance of St. George Place.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Snyder, Mike. "Houston's zoned neighborhood fights change." Houston Chronicle. Monday December 18, 2006. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  2. ^ a b c d e Vaughn, Carol. "Rebirth in St. George progresses / Decade of changes transforms community." Houston Chronicle. Wednesday October 11, 2000. ThisWeek1. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  3. ^ a b Drummond, James. "Foreclosure move filed against Khashoggi subsidiary's homes." Houston Chronicle. Monday May 5, 1986. Business 1. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  4. ^ a b Bernstein, Alan. "Saudi linked to Iran arms had deals here." Houston Chronicle. Saturday December 6, 1986. Section 1, Page 35. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  5. ^ Staff. "Dallas S&L declines to foreclose on area." Houston Chronicle. Thursday May 8, 1986. Business 3. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c d Bivins, Ralph. "Investor's swoop into Galleria-area neighborhood a surprise/Ink barely dried as cleanup starts." Houston Chronicle. Wednesday November 11, 1989. Business 1. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Gabriel, Cindy. "St. George revives `Galleria Ghetto'." Houston Chronicle. Thursday April 18, 2002. ThisWeek 1. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  8. ^ a b c d e Canon, Kim. "Uptown upgrades moving forward." Houston Chronicle. Wednesday February 28, 2001. ThisWeek 1. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  9. ^ a b Cobb, Kim. "District G candidates target area's service gaps as their first priority." Houston Chronicle. Saturday October 24, 1987. Section 1, Page 19. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  10. ^ a b c Marshall, Thom. "Seeking a balance in redevelopment." Houston Chronicle. Wednesday October 16, 2002. A29 MetFront. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  11. ^ a b c Wallstin, Brian. "Houston's Big Experiment." Houston Press. Thursday December 30, 1999. 1. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  12. ^ a b c d Wallstin, Brian. "Houston's Big Experiment." Houston Press. Thursday December 30, 1999. 2. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  13. ^ "Revised Redistricting Staff Plan of May 9, 2011 District G." City of Houston. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  14. ^ "Revised Redistricting Staff Plan of May 9, 2011 District J." City of Houston. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  15. ^ "." City of Houston. May 14, 2008. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  16. ^ "." City of Houston. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  17. ^ "Beat Map." Houston Police Department. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  18. ^ "Congressional District 7." National Atlas of the United States.
  19. ^ a b Golightly, Glen and Melanie Markley. "HISD meets opposition to planned school." Houston Chronicle. Saturday October 23, 1993. A29. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  20. ^ Snyder, Mike. "Sixth Ward preservationists post YouTube pleas." Houston Chronicle. Monday January 8, 2007. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  21. ^ http://www.har.com
  22. ^ a b Robinson, James. "Sounds of demolition/Lamar Terrace makes room for school." Houston Chronicle. Saturday September 30, 1995. A33. Retrieved on October 13, 2012.
  23. ^ http://www.StGeorgePlace.com
  24. ^ "St. George Elementary Attendance Zone." Houston Independent School District.
  25. ^ "Grady Middle Attendance Zone." Houston Independent School District.
  26. ^ "Lee High School Attendance Zone." Houston Independent School District.
  27. ^ as of May 9, 2005. Lee High School.
  28. ^ a b c Baird, Annette (2005-08-04). "School year brings changes". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-05-19.
  29. ^ a b "Houston ISD dedicates School at St. George Place". Houston Chronicle. 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2018-05-19.
  30. ^ "Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School breaks ground for new facility." Houston Independent School District. December 8, 2014. Retrieved on December 15, 2014. See HISDTV video
  31. ^ a b c Marshall, Thom. "Seeking a solution in Playground War." Houston Chronicle. Friday January 10, 2003. A21. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  32. ^ "School Histories: the Stories Behind the Names." () Houston Independent School District. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.
  33. ^ "Pilgram[sic] Elementary Attendance Zone." () Houston Independent School District. Retrieved on October 14, 2012.

External links edit

  • St. George Place
  • Rockwell, Terry (letter to editor) "So far, TIRZ working." Houston Chronicle. Tuesday December 19, 2006.

george, place, houston, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, avail. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message St George Place is a neighborhood in Houston Texas United States A sign marking St George Place St George Place is located outside the 610 Loop and inside Beltway 8 in the Uptown Houston area St George Place was formed out of portions of an older subdivision Lamar Terrace in the early 1990s Contents 1 History 1 1 Adnan Khashoggi property deals and foreclosure 1 2 Urban blight 1 3 Redevelopment by Robert Silvers 1 4 Development of St George Place 2 Government and infrastructure 3 Cityscape 4 Demographics 5 Education 5 1 Public schools 5 1 1 History of schools 5 2 Public libraries 6 Parks and recreation 7 References 8 External linksHistory editLamar Terrace was established in the post World War II era 1 The subdivision opened in 1949 2 Adnan Khashoggi property deals and foreclosure edit In 1982 the front companies of the Saudi citizen Adnan Khashoggi began buying houses in Lamar Terrace From 1982 to 1985 Khashoggi controlled companies purchased 75 houses Mainland Savings Association and Summit Savings Association of Dallas had provided the financing Triad America a Utah based company owned by the Khashoggi family had plans to build a complex including a skyscraper and a 1 000 room hotel on a 21 acre 8 5 ha strip of land east of Lamar Terrace 3 Triad had acquired the site in the mid 1970s 4 In 1983 the company said that it had suspended the project In 1985 Triad sold the hotel site to Mainland and gained a line of credit In 1986 Summit which had loaned 5 million 13897996 36 in current money to Triad Properties Corp a subsidiary of Triad America filed loan foreclosure proceedings in order to repossess 47 of the houses 3 In 1986 Summit declined to foreclose on the houses 5 Later in 1986 the houses were foreclosed upon 4 Urban blight edit By the late 1980s urban blight had been affecting Lamar Terrace 1 In 1989 Ralph Bivins of the Houston Chronicle said that some houses of the Lamar Terrace area are dilapidated rental properties with trash tires and old cars littering the lawns 6 In the early 1990s Lamar Terrace had been named the Galleria Ghetto Cindy Gabriel of the Houston Chronicle said that Lamar Terrace stood in sharp contrast to its Galleria neighbor with dilapidated post World War II era homes abandoned cars stray animals and high crime 7 In 1987 Robert L Silvers an investor visited the Lamar Terrace area after having been away from Houston for a long period of time he expressed shock upon seeing the state of Lamar Terrace Silvers said that the community was a disaster 8 In 1989 Silvers said You re between Tanglewood and the Galleria and you re sitting in a slum 6 In 1987 Chris Chandler a political candidate for Houston City Council District G said as paraphrased by Kim Cobb of the Houston Chronicle that Lamar Terrace was the most troubled sector of District G and could stand a thorough cleanup by the Solid Waste Management Department 9 Redevelopment by Robert Silvers edit Because residents expected The Galleria to expand westward and create a powerful commercial property market they had voted out the Lamar Terrace deed restrictions 1 In 1989 Lamar Terrace had houses that were smaller and older relative to its area In that period many investors had considered buying properties in the area because Lamar Terrace was in proximity to Uptown 6 Silvers began buying property in Lamar Terrace in the late 1980s 1 He finalized a purchase of 50 Lamar Terrace lots formerly owned by Adnan Khashoggi on Tuesday November 10 1989 Most of the Khashoggi lots were vacant 6 He later purchased 47 more lots from the same agency 10 Silvers eventually had purchased in total 107 lots all from the Federal Savings amp Loan Insurance Corporation Silvers tore down various rental houses that had been poorly maintained 11 Silvers held regular meetings with property owners of Lamar Terrace Patricia Knudsen the city s acting planning director at the time told Silvers to consider establishing a public improvement district 8 A lawyer told Silvers that he could establish a tax increment reinvestment zone TIRZ 1 When a TIRZ is implemented tax revenues are immediately frozen 7 A base year assessed values is placed on the properties owned by the taxing entities that participate in the TIRZ 8 As the development progresses tax revenues may increase due to an increase in property values The extra taxes are reinvested into the TIRZ zone 7 The lawyer also told Silvers that the State of Texas permitted TIRZs to petition to establish zoning ordinances 1 On December 12 1990 11 Houston s Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone No 1 serving St George Place 8 became the first TIRZ in Houston Silvers had asked the Houston City Council for twenty years of future property tax revenues so he could rebuild Lamar Terrace 11 The taxing entities participating in TIRZ 1 included the City of Houston Harris County and the Houston Independent School District 8 The TIRZ had a 12 million tax base in 1992 In 1993 the Houston City Council passed a zoning ordinance for St George Place 1 The St George Place boundaries expanded in 1993 to include their current boundaries 2 Development of St George Place edit New home construction was slow in St George Place To promote home building Silvers founded Ironwood Homes and that company began building houses The activity from Ironwood Homes attracted other home builders Silvers said that he had not planned to or desired to become a developer 12 In August 1999 the St George Place Civic Association incorporated allowing for residents to more easily interact with the TIRZ board 7 In 1999 Silver said that while he was glad that St George Place had improved he was frustrated by the slow pace of development He said that he wished he had never established the TIRZ since in doing so he was not making as much money as he would if he had immediately sold the properties that he had purchased in the late 1980s 12 Around 2000 new infrastructure such as sewer and water facilities was being installed to service the newly built houses because the infrastructure built to serve Lamar Terrace was not adequate for servicing the new houses 2 In 2002 Silvers as paraphrased by Thom Marshall of the Houston Chronicle said that he had planned for development of the zone to be finished by now but that it s only reached the halfway mark because the city will not file condemnation lawsuits to take properties from investors who are not developing them 10 In 2006 the TIRZ had a tax base of over 160 million 241822383 62 in current money During that year Mike Snyder of the Houston Chronicle said that St George Place residents enjoy mostly new upscale homes well maintained streets and easy access to shopping entertainment and major employment centers 1 Government and infrastructure editThe St George Redevelopment Authority with a nine member board appointed by the Houston City Council administers St George Place Most board members are property owners and residents 7 The St George Place TIRZ is the only one in which there is a zoning ordinance and the only zoned area in the City of Houston Mike Snyder of the Houston Chronicle said Zoning however has not insulated St George Place from the kind of land use battles that are common in a city where neighborhood leaders often feel powerless to influence the form of development springing up all around them 1 Snyder said that the zoning was perhaps the most cherished asset in St George Place 1 St George Place is divided between City Council District G and City Council District J 13 14 In the 1990s and 2000s decade St George Place Lamar Terrace was in Council District C 15 16 In the 1980s it was in Council District G 9 Houston Fire Department s Fire Station 28 is located at 3100 Chimney Rock Dolores The neighborhood is served by the Houston Police Department Midwest Patrol Division 17 St George Place is in Texas s 7th congressional district 18 Cityscape editThe current St George Place and the former Lamar Terrace area are bounded by West Alabama Street Chimney Rock Drive Richmond Avenue and South Rice Avenue 7 19 The community of west of The Galleria 20 In 2000 the houses were priced from 350 000 619246 38 in current money to 450 000 796173 91 in current money 2 As of April 18 2002 242 new houses had been built in St George Place with 50 of them being built from January 1 2002 to April 18 2002 During the same period 150 older houses and 80 vacant lots for development had remained During that period Bill Hutz president of the St George Civic Association said that he anticipated for the old houses to be completely replaced with newer houses in a five year period 7 In 1999 when discussing the lack of development with Silvers Brian Wallstin of the Houston Press said f rom an aesthetic perspective Silvers has a point The juxtaposition of low slung ranch houses interspersed with towering multistory brick manses gives St George Place the look of a bad haircut 12 Prior to Silvers s investment and redevelopment Lamar Terrace had a lot of front yard mechanics and neglected houses By 1999 the neglected properties had been demolished and the mechanics were no longer in business 12 By 2016 home and land values in St George Place often listed in Lamar Terrace subdivision in real estate listings had increased substantially with moderately used and brand new homes priced from 575 000 to 1 500 000 729991 68 to 1904326 12 in current money 21 Map of St George Place Management District with original amp revised TIRZ 1 boundaries https www google com maps d edit mid 1oa0c CGlyhQ0MHqQGMllxswfAf0cxx48 amp usp sharingDemographics editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2012 In the 1990s many of the individuals renting houses in Lamar Terrace were low income Hispanic people 22 In 2016 those demographics have evolved to wealthy empty nester and young professional families of many different nationalities 23 Education editPublic schools edit nbsp St George Place Elementary School St George Place is served by the Houston Independent School District St George Place is zoned to St George Place Elementary School 24 and Tanglewood Middle School formerly Grady Middle School 25 St George Place students are zoned to Margaret Long Wisdom High School formerly Lee High School 26 and may choose to attend Lamar High School or Westside High School 27 St George Place Elementary School an 86 000 square foot 8 000 m2 facility has a capacity of 750 students 28 It serves areas east and west of the 610 Loop the bulk of its boundary is south of Westheimer Road north of Westpark Drive east of Fountainview and west of Weslayan there is also a section bounded by Westheimer the 610 Loop the Buffalo Bayou and a set of railroad tracks Besides St George Place itself the school also serves Afton Oaks Larchmont and the Weslayan area The building has various color coded pods in which classes are concentrated the color scheme was used to assist young children It has science rooms a multi purpose room with a stage fine arts rooms and a combined media center and library 29 Molina Walker Architects Inc designed the facility while Heery International Inc constructed it for a cost of 14 million 28 The new campus of the Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School MCLIMS is located adjacent to St George Place Elementary School The 118 000 square feet 11 000 m2 facility which has a price tag of 32 million uses a sun and moon theme The 2012 HISD Bond financed the construction Groundbreaking occurred in December 2014 30 History of schools edit In 1993 HISD was planning to build a middle school on a 20 acre 8 1 ha site in Lamar Terrace HISD officials planned to convert Grady Middle School into an elementary school and have the Lamar Terrace middle school serve students from Grady Piney Point Elementary and Pilgrim Elementary Ron Franklin a member of the HISD school board said that the Lamar Terrace area was the only affordable land in the area and that a new middle school in the area was needed Several Lamar Terrace area residents opposed a plan to place an HISD middle school in the neighborhood 19 In 1995 HISD was buying properties to demolish them to make room for the new Lamar Terrace area school 22 Ultimately HISD had acquired 94 lots for a site for the new school 31 using its eminent domain powers and all of the houses were demolished HISD had spent 10 million to clear the lots 31 As of 2000 no school had yet been built because no bonds to build new schools had yet been approved 2 By 2002 HISD had not yet developed the property and the district stated that it did not know when it would begin developing a school there A public relations employee of HISD stated that the district acquires parcels of land just in case that a school may be needed there 10 By 2003 HISD had not yet developed the property 31 St George Place Elementary opened in 2006 32 Most of the funds used to develop the school came from the HISD bond while some came from the TIRZ 29 Prior to the school s opening St George Place was served by Pilgrim Elementary School 33 St George Place was the successor of the charter school School at Post Oak which was held at a YMCA and formed to relieve overcrowded area schools about 180 students were to transfer from School at Post Oak to St George Place 28 Public libraries edit The closest library is the Jungman Branch of the Houston Public Library Parks and recreation editThe city of Houston operates the Grady Park at 1700 Yorktown 1 The Gerald D Hines Waterwall Park is within a 3 block walking distance of St George Place References edit a b c d e f g h i j Snyder Mike Houston s zoned neighborhood fights change Houston Chronicle Monday December 18 2006 Retrieved on October 13 2012 a b c d e Vaughn Carol Rebirth in St George progresses Decade of changes transforms community Houston Chronicle Wednesday October 11 2000 ThisWeek1 Retrieved on October 14 2012 a b Drummond James Foreclosure move filed against Khashoggi subsidiary s homes Houston Chronicle Monday May 5 1986 Business 1 Retrieved on October 14 2012 a b Bernstein Alan Saudi linked to Iran arms had deals here Houston Chronicle Saturday December 6 1986 Section 1 Page 35 Retrieved on October 14 2012 Staff Dallas S amp L declines to foreclose on area Houston Chronicle Thursday May 8 1986 Business 3 Retrieved on October 14 2012 a b c d Bivins Ralph Investor s swoop into Galleria area neighborhood a surprise Ink barely dried as cleanup starts Houston Chronicle Wednesday November 11 1989 Business 1 Retrieved on October 13 2012 a b c d e f g Gabriel Cindy St George revives Galleria Ghetto Houston Chronicle Thursday April 18 2002 ThisWeek 1 Retrieved on October 13 2012 a b c d e Canon Kim Uptown upgrades moving forward Houston Chronicle Wednesday February 28 2001 ThisWeek 1 Retrieved on October 14 2012 a b Cobb Kim District G candidates target area s service gaps as their first priority Houston Chronicle Saturday October 24 1987 Section 1 Page 19 Retrieved on October 14 2012 a b c Marshall Thom Seeking a balance in redevelopment Houston Chronicle Wednesday October 16 2002 A29 MetFront Retrieved on October 14 2012 a b c Wallstin Brian Houston s Big Experiment Houston Press Thursday December 30 1999 1 Retrieved on October 13 2012 a b c d Wallstin Brian Houston s Big Experiment Houston Press Thursday December 30 1999 2 Retrieved on October 13 2012 Revised Redistricting Staff Plan of May 9 2011 District G City of Houston Retrieved on October 14 2012 Revised Redistricting Staff Plan of May 9 2011 District J City of Houston Retrieved on October 14 2012 COUNCIL DISTRICT MAPS gt DISTRICT C City of Houston May 14 2008 Retrieved on October 14 2012 City of Houston Council Districts 1996 1997 City of Houston Retrieved on October 14 2012 Beat Map Houston Police Department Retrieved on October 14 2012 Congressional District 7 National Atlas of the United States a b Golightly Glen and Melanie Markley HISD meets opposition to planned school Houston Chronicle Saturday October 23 1993 A29 Retrieved on October 13 2012 Snyder Mike Sixth Ward preservationists post YouTube pleas Houston Chronicle Monday January 8 2007 Retrieved on October 13 2012 http www har com a b Robinson James Sounds of demolition Lamar Terrace makes room for school Houston Chronicle Saturday September 30 1995 A33 Retrieved on October 13 2012 http www StGeorgePlace com St George Elementary Attendance Zone Houston Independent School District Grady Middle Attendance Zone Houston Independent School District Lee High School Attendance Zone Houston Independent School District Home Page as of May 9 2005 Lee High School a b c Baird Annette 2005 08 04 School year brings changes Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2018 05 19 a b Houston ISD dedicates School at St George Place Houston Chronicle 2007 10 11 Retrieved 2018 05 19 Mandarin Chinese Language Immersion Magnet School breaks ground for new facility Houston Independent School District December 8 2014 Retrieved on December 15 2014 See HISDTV video a b c Marshall Thom Seeking a solution in Playground War Houston Chronicle Friday January 10 2003 A21 Retrieved on October 14 2012 School Histories the Stories Behind the Names Archive Houston Independent School District Retrieved on October 14 2012 Pilgram sic Elementary Attendance Zone Archive Houston Independent School District Retrieved on October 14 2012 External links edit nbsp Texas portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to St George Place Houston St George Place Rockwell Terry letter to editor So far TIRZ working Houston Chronicle Tuesday December 19 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St George Place Houston amp oldid 1172971308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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