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    Astrodome Shame

    St Louis absolutely shames Houston on the Astrodome with unabashed big money love of its own historic icon

    Ralph Bivins
    Apr 6, 2015 | 11:51 am

    It’s a tale of two cities. Two symbolic structures. Both 50 years old.

    For cities that dream big, 1965 was a very good year.

    Fifty years ago, St. Louis completed its Gateway Arch in October 1965. It’s an internationally recognized city symbol and St. Louis is currently spending $380 million to upgrade the grounds at the base of the arch.

    That same year, Houston opened the Astrodome. It opened 50 years ago this week — April 9, 1965 as the Houston Astros tangled with the New York Yankees in an exhibition game.

    A new study by the Urban Land Institute recommends a $242 million redevelopment for the Astrodome, which has been vacant for years. The Astrodome and the area around it could be greener, more park-like, instead of acres of parking that sit vacant much of the time.

    Two layers of underground parking can be built underneath the Dome, the ULI says. The floor of the Dome could be used for the Offshore Technology Conference or for places to party before and after Houston Texans games.

    The innovative Astrodome, the first air-conditioned covered stadium, was called the Eighth Wonder of the World when it opened, so why not put an innovation museum in the Dome?

    The Astrodome — the most recognizable building in Houston for many folks in other parts of the country — could be a tourist attraction.

    The St. Louis Example

    St. Louis certainly has made a grand tourist attraction out of its Arch. Some 2.4 million people visited the Arch and its grounds last year, says Ryan McClure, communications director for the City Arch River Foundation of St. Louis.

    The 90 acres surrounding the Arch are undergoing a massive redevelopment, funded by public sales tax funds approved in an election, and private donations from corporations, foundations and individuals.

    The Astrodome — the most recognizable building in Houston for many folks in other parts of the country — could be a tourist attraction.

    A key portion of the improvements will be covering over a depressed section of freeway that separates the Gateway Arch from St. Louis’ downtown. With cars passing underneath, a park and pedestrian passageway will lead to the Arch. Dallas did a similar thing a few years ago, covering over a depressed section of the Woodall Rogers Freeway near downtown to create a five-acre park.

    The 630-foot tall Arch, controlled by the National Parks Service, is adjacent to the mud-brown Mississippi River, which is dominated by industrial barge vessels. Improvements are underway on the banks of the riverfront by the Arch.

    Michael Van Valkenburgh Associates, a Brooklyn landscape architecture firm has designed an extensive redevelopment of the 90-acre park around the base of the Arch, with new trees, plantings and pathways.

    The Arch began in 1933 as President Franklin Roosevelt approved the Arch when the nation needed economic stimulus. It was envisioned as a memorial to celebrate the westward expansion of the United States.

    But the Arch has been more than a monument, more than a tourism attraction. “It’s our calling card to the world,” McClure says.

    The Astrodome was not meant as a monument to the past. It is a future-looking building born from the vision of entrepreneurs. Our baseball team was named after our newly anointed 1960s-era space explorers. The Dome’s costumed female ushers were called “Spacettes.”

    Houston was called Space City then and the whole city worshipped the astronauts, who worked at the new NASA Space Center on the southeast side of town. President Kennedy had challenged the nation to put an astronaut on the moon before the end of the decade and Houston was making it happen. The Astrodome was born from that same space-age, can-do spirit that runs in Houston’s veins.

    If St. Louis can raise that much money, why can’t Houston come up with $242 million?

    While St. Louis labored for its Arch, Houston was building its Dome. Both were unprecedented feats of engineering and construction know-how. The builders attempted things that had never been done before and erected remarkable structures.

    St. Louis is stepping to the plate — now spending $380 million to keep its 1965 masterpiece a vital part of the community.

    If St. Louis can raise that much money, why can’t Houston come up with $242 million?

    It’s time for the leadership of Houston to lead. Whether it’s Rich Kinder, Ric Campo, Gerald Hines or some of our elected officials, Houston has great leaders who can mobilize this city. A great task lies ahead. May our leaders step forward now on behalf of the Astrodome’s future.

    The Astrodome can be transformed into something grander than it ever has been. Let’s dream big . . . again.

    Ralph Bivins, editor of Realty News Report, is a past president of the National Association of Real Estate Editors.

    The exterior of the Astrodome will be gussied up before the Super Bowl is played next door in NRG stadium in 2017.

    Astrodome
    Photo by Ralph Bivins
    The exterior of the Astrodome will be gussied up before the Super Bowl is played next door in NRG stadium in 2017.
    unspecified
    news/real-estate

    Celebrity listing

    Country star Miranda Lambert lists Texas childhood home for $1.6 million

    John Egan
    Mar 13, 2026 | 9:15 am
    18621 Country Rd 477-1, Lindale Miranda Lambert childhood home
    Photo courtesy of Compass
    Miranda Lambert's childhood homestead, at 18621 Country Rd. 477, in Lindale, Texas is for sale.

    The 25-acre childhood homestead of country music star Miranda Lambert — whose popular ballad “The House That Built Me” very well could apply to the Grammy winner’s upbringing — is on the market in East Texas for nearly $1.6 million.

    According to Mansion Global, Lambert and her parents, Beverly and Rick, have listed the estate nearly 30 years after the family bought the main residence there.

    She and her family moved into the house when she was 14 years old. Lambert lived there till age 21, when she relocated to the adjacent “pink house,” which she purchased with money from her first big record deal.

    Lambert still owns the “pink house,” and her parents have vacated the primary home but still own everything except their daughter’s house, Mansion Global reported. The property is in Lindale, about 120 miles east of Fort Worth.

    Miranda Lambert Miranda Lambert received the 2023 TMAA for achievement in music and songwriting. Photo by Taylor Prinsen Photography

    The main attractions at the four-bedroom, five-bathroom, 103-year-old property are its two cottage-style homes, stocked three-acre pond, and shooting range.

    “The main residence showcases hardwood flooring, built-in cabinetry, textured walls, and vintage details that add character throughout,” says the listing from Lee Trowbridge of Compass. “Light-filled living spaces connect naturally to porches, decks, and courtyard areas, offering comfortable transitions between indoor and outdoor spaces.”

    The second home offers views of the pond and its own outdoor areas.

    The property, an old dairy farm at 18621 County Road 477, also includes:

    • A soaking tub in the primary bathroom.
    • An outdoor kitchen.
    • A brick courtyard.
    • A warehouse.
    • A shop with a bathroom and living quarters.
    • Three RV hookups.

    “Experience this rare opportunity to enjoy land, water, multiple residences, and a piece of music history in a setting that feels both quiet and connected,” the listing says.

    Part of Lambert’s music history is the 2009 song about “The House That Built Me,” which Tom Douglas and Allen Shamblin originally wrote for her first husband, country music star Blake Shelton.

    When you read some of the lyrics of that tune, you can picture a young Lambert at the Lindale home:

    I know they say you can’t go home again

    I just had to come back one last time

    Ma’am, I know you don’t know me from Adam

    But these handprints on the front steps are mine

    Up those stairs in that little back bedroom

    Is where I did my homework and I learned to play guitar

    And I bet you didn’t know under that live oak

    My favorite dog is buried in the yard

    Lambert maintains strong ties to her hometown. There, she owns the Pink Pistol boutique, located on Miranda Lambert Way, according to Mansion Global. The tasting room for Red 55 Winery, which Lambert and her family started in 2005, is attached to the boutique.

    18621 Country Rd 477-1, Lindale Miranda Lambert childhood home

    Photo courtesy of Compass

    Miranda Lambert's childhood homestead, at 18621 Country Rd. 477, in Lindale, Texas is for sale.

    celebritiesmiranda lambertcountry musiceast texasluxuryhome-for-sale
    news/real-estate
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