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South of South Houston, west of Interstate 45, north and east of Shaver Street 80 South Belt / Ellington: Southeast Large area straddling the southeastern corner of Beltway 8 south of Almeda Genoa Road and Shaver Street 81 Clear Lake: Southeast West of Interstate 45, south of Ellington Airport, and northwest of Clear Lake: 82 Magnolia Park: East
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The Clear Lake Patrol Division serves the portion of Clear Lake City in Houston. [19] Pasadena Police Department is the police department for Pasadena. The police department for Taylor Lake Village is the Lakeview Police Department, formed in January 1987 by a merger of the police departments of Taylor Lake Village and El Lago . [ 20 ]
North Shore is a community in east side of Harris County, Texas with a small portion inside the city of Houston, Texas.The area includes subdivisions such as Songwood, Holiday Forest, Wood Bayou, Cimarron, Home Owned Estates, Woodland Acres, Hidden Forest, Pine Trails, Woodforest, Woodforest North, New Forest, and New Forest West, as well as newer neighborhoods near Highway 90 and Beltway 8 ...
Gulfton is a community in Southwest Houston, Texas, United States [1] 3.2 sq mi (8.3 km 2).It is located between the 610 Loop and Beltway 8, west of the City of Bellaire, southeast of Interstate 69/U.S. Highway 59, and north of Bellaire Boulevard.
Clear Lake City is a master-planned community located in southeast Houston. It is home to the Lyndon B. Johnson Space Center, the University of Houston–Clear Lake and a very large upper-middle class Asian American community. The area was annexed into the city of Houston in 1979.
The Houston Heights, one of the earliest planned communities in Texas, is located 4 miles (6.4 km) northwest of Downtown Houston.A National Geographic article says "stroll the area's broad, tree-canopied esplanades and side streets dotted with homes dating from the early 1900s and you may think you've landed in a small town."
By the late 1980s, 35% of Downtown Houston's land area consisted of surface parking. [18] In the early 1990s Downtown Houston still had more than 20% vacant office space. [21] By 1987 many of the office buildings in Downtown Houston were owned by non-U.S. real estate figures. [22] Downtown began to rebound from the oil crisis by the mid-1990s.