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Richmond is a suburb of Houston and the county seat of Fort Bend County, Texas, United States. [5] The city is located within the Houston–The Woodlands–Sugar Land metropolitan area. As of the 2020 U.S. census , the city population was 11,627.
The first-floor windows are arched, providing symmetry with the front entryway, while the top two floors have rectangular ones. Between the first-floor and second-floor windows runs a thin stone belt course. The facade of the first floor is decorated by raised brick banding. [2]
The development is named Belle Oaks at Richmond. [14] Richmond Town Square was planned to be demolished in fall 2020. However, the mall remained open throughout the rest of 2020 and until May 6, 2021 when it finally closed for good. [15] In June 2021, an event was held in the parking lot of the former Sears showing locals the plans of Belle Oaks.
2024 is the year of the apartment. The US will see construction on a record number of apartments completed this year. The tally will be 518,108 rental units, up 9% from last year and 30% from 2022 ...
One Park Place is a 501 ft (153 m) tall apartment building located adjacent to Discovery Green park in downtown Houston, Texas. Completed by The Finger Companies in May 2009, the building has 340 units on 30 floors with a total height of 501 feet (153 m) and 37 floors. [2] [3] [4] The building has 346 apartment units.
Tuckahoe Apartments, also known as The Tuckahoe, is a historic apartment building in Richmond, Virginia. It was designed by W. Duncan Lee and built in 1928–1929. It is a massive, six-story, red brick, Georgian Revival style building.
Built by William S. Brown one of the "Old Three Hundred" and one of the oldest log houses left standing in Texas. James Walker Log House: east of Brenham: 1824 Built by James Walker one of the "Old Three Hundred" whose sons John and James Jr. fought in the Texas Revolution. One of the oldest log cabins left standing in Texas. Magee-Love Log House
The home was built by John Matthew Moore (1862–1940) and his wife Lottie Dyer Moore (1865–1924) in 1883, the year they married. John Moore served in both the Texas House of Representatives and the United States House of Representatives. [4] Lottie's father J. Foster Dyer, who died a year before the wedding, was a wealthy rancher in Fort ...