Thursday, January 7, 2010

3800 - Correy Crawford - Old Armory Building, Center for the Healing of Racism

3900 - Osman Galindo and Brittney Connelly - Acadian Bakery
4000 - Angelique Huber - Residential, Enviro Tech Chemical Solutions, Property currently for lease

4100 - Osman Galindo - Erinn's Heart (early learning academy), residential
4200 - Gabe Pastrano - Star hair salon - 3.99 haircuts (on Barbee Street - haha), side of Fiesta grocery store
4300 - Correy Crawford - Underneath 59, Fiesta parking lot on one side, Warning Camera on opposite side

4400 - Brittney Connelly - Attorney's office, MD located on this block, often taco trucks parked here
4500 - Shannon MacGregor - Happy Jalapeno restaurant and Avela Corporation (sourcing of products and services in China since 2002)
4600 - Osman Galindo - Montessori School of Downtown and The Mexican Institute of Greater Houston
4700 - Alejandra Trevino - Lots of mid-rise condominiums and one somewhat historic quadplex
4800 - Caroline Collective will represented by a "You Are Here" label
4900 - Yanine King - Covenant Church
5000 - Brittney Connelly - Ophthalmic Prosthetics Inc., Butler On-line Meditation Services
5100 - Leah Hebert - Weather Museum and empty lot across the street
5200 - Shannon MacGregor - (2 residential properties for lease, empty lot, Personal Physician Group located here)
5300 - CJ Soukup - Residential, Clayton Library Center for Genealogical Research

5400 - Tenshi Lau - Holocaust Museum

5500 - Tenshi Lau - Bank Parking Lot and Structure for Lease

5600 - Shannon MacGregor - Bodegas Restaurant, MRI Clinic (Park Plaza hospital)
5700 - Alejandra Trevino - Parking Garage and Park Plaza Hospital
5800 - Yanine King - Museum of Natural Science

Monday, January 4, 2010

Final Shooting of the 3900 Block







These are some images taken with my iphone to show the final shots of the Caroline documentary. Enjoy!

Also, we built a bottle tree today out of all of the discarded bottles on the 3900 block. That will be posted later, but here is an explanation of the bottle tree:

African tradition that migrated to the southern United States in which the slaves would place bottles in trees in hopes that the evil spirits would go into the bottles and be trapped. Once the evil spirits were trapped the slaves would cork the bottles and throw them into the river to wash away the evil spirits. The bottle tree is based on the belief that the shiny, colored glass can attract and then trap the evil spirits. The colorful glass adorning the “limbs” will catch the light of the sun and will display a
dazzling light show.