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Nightclub A Tourist Lure

Historic swinging nightclub's transformation into a tourist center is a win for Houston — and nature

Ralph Bivins
Jan 22, 2014 | 1:52 pm

For the bayou mariner, it’s 29.7621 latitude; 95.3598 longitude.

For old hippies, it’s the location of Love Street Light Circus, a 1960s nightclub where you could score a matchbox full of Mary Jane and listen to new psychedelic bands, like the fledgling ZZ Top.

And if you go waaay back, to 1910, it was the Sunset Coffee Building, a coffee roasting factory — an industrial structure at the early-day port of Houston on the banks of Buffalo Bayou.

The vacant three-story brick building has been wasting away for years, mostly a home for downtown’s pigeons and a bathroom for street people.

The Sunset Coffee building deserves to be a lot more. It’s built on Houston’s Plymouth Rock — the place where entrepreneurs John and Augustus Allen came ashore in 1836 and established the city. The Sunset Coffee Building sits on a patch of bayou frontage Houstonians now call Allen’s Landing.

So the Sunset Coffee building is going to be redeveloped and it will become a place of tourism and a recreational focal point for the ongoing enhancements and park improvements and trails underway along the bayou. Construction work on the building, located on Commerce Street between Main and Fannin, has finally begun (as previously reported on CultureMap).

The redevelopment of the Sunset Coffee Building will be more than just a place where people can enjoy the trails, rent bikes and kayaks, says visionary bayou advocate Kevin Shanley, principal in SWA Group, a major landscape architecture and land planning firm.

Although restoring historic buildings is a great thing, this project means a lot more.

The vacant three-story brick building has been wasting away for years, mostly a home for downtown’s pigeons and a bathroom for street people.

“For visitors and people who live in Houston, this is the center of gravity for learning about the bayou,” Shanley says. “People, in the last 10 or 15 years, have woken up and realized the city doesn’t have 2,000 year-old redwood trees or snowcap mountains or white sand beaches, but we have this bayou system. The people are really proud of it.”

The Sunset Coffee building redevelopment will add to Houston’s tourism package by offering a diversion for people visiting downtown Houston for conventions.

“It’s Allen’s Landing. It’s the founding place. It’s where the city started. White Oak and Buffalo bayous come together here. The trail systems all coming together here, “ Shanley told me as we stood outside the building. “It’s right on the water. It represents the reason why Houston is here.

"This is the original port of Houston, right here at the Landing, so we want to recall that and remember that.”

Shanley has been a leader with the Buffalo Bayou Partnership organization, which has raised much of the money for the Sunset Coffee building redevelopment through private donations.

The $5.3 million construction project is a joint public-private partnership with other funds coming from a $500,000 federal grant and nearly $900,000 from the downtown Tax Increment Reinvestment Zone No. 3.

Houston First Corp., a local government corporation that manages the convention center, Jones Hall and other city facilities, is providing $2.5 million. Houston First will own and operate the Sunset Coffee building and grounds upon completion in about one year.

The project will have an outdoor plaza, ground level rental facilities for bikes and canoes, office space for Buffalo Bayou Partnership and a rooftop terrace for parties and other events.

The historic Sunset Coffee building will be redeveloped with facilities for renting bikes and kayaks.

Allen's Landing Sunset Building January 2014
Photo by Ralph Bivins
The historic Sunset Coffee building will be redeveloped with facilities for renting bikes and kayaks.
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THE AMERICAN DREAM

How long it takes to save for a home down payment in Houston

Brandon Watson
Dec 30, 2025 | 12:30 pm
Home for sale sold sign
iStock
Houstonians don't have to save long to afford a down payment.

Saving for a down payment remains one of the biggest barriers to homeownership nationwide, but a new report from Realtor.com shows San Antonio area buyers face a far shorter wait than most Americans.

According to the real estate site’s 2025 analysis, the typical U.S. household needs seven years to save for a standard down payment, a notable improvement from the 12-year peak in 2022. Still, the timeline remains roughly double the pre-pandemic norm, reflecting higher home prices, larger down payments, and lower household savings rates.

Houston, however, stood out as one of the most accessible major metros in the nation. The Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands metro boasted one of the shortest time sto save for a down payment among the nation’s 50 largest markets, with households needing just 3.5 years to reach a typical down payment, according to the study.

The report found that Houston’s median down payment from January through November was $14,927. A median household income of $83,452 was estimated to produce an annual savings of $4,228. Notably, San Antonio, the only other Texas city included in the report, had the shortest time to save for a down payment at just 1.3 years.

Nationally, the time needed to save has shortened as home price growth cooled and affordability modestly improved. Still, saving for a down payment takes significantly longer than it did before the pandemic.

“Higher home prices and intensified competition have pushed typical down payments higher, at the same time that inflation and rising household expenses have reduced savings rates,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com, in a release. “Although conditions have improved since 2022, today’s timeline shows that saving for a home takes meaningfully longer than it did before the pandemic, especially in high-cost markets.”

Lower savings rates have played a key role. The U.S. personal savings rate has averaged 5.1 percent of income so far in 2025, down from the pre-pandemic norm of 6.5 percent, limiting how quickly households can build funds for upfront housing costs. Meanwhile, the typical down payment has more than doubled over the past six years — rising from about $13,900 in the third quarter of 2019 to $30,400 in the third quarter of 2025.

In high-cost coastal metros, the impact is far more severe. Saving for a down payment can take 20 to more than 35 years in California cities like San Francisco, San Jose, Los Angeles, and San Diego, effectively sidelining many first-time and moderate-income buyers.

“In high-cost markets, the typical down payment alone exceeds a full year of household income,” said Hannah Jones, Realtor.com senior economic research analyst. “That reality makes homeownership feel unattainable for many buyers, particularly younger households trying to enter the market for the first time.”

Despite those challenges, the report notes that roughly three-quarters of Americans still consider homeownership part of the American dream. Realtor.com says easing rents could help first-time buyers save more, while repeat buyers may use accumulated savings to reduce loan balances and manage higher monthly payments.

“Saving consistently, even in small amounts, is a meaningful first step toward homeownership,” Jones said. “In today’s market, building that financial cushion can make a real difference when buyers are ready to act.”

home market economy down payments home ownership real estate
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