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    the best houston parks

    6 favorite public parks to soak up the best of the Bayou City

    Jayme Lamm
    Jayme lamm
    Apr 11, 2018 | 9:30 am

    Out-of-towners scoff at the abundance and beauty of Houston’s green spaces, preferring to dwell on the traffic and “concrete jungle.” But the the Bayou City boasts amazing parks — with pristine and manicured greenery — that are perfect for exploring. These spaces are perfect for that finite window of glorious Houston weather, and even for an evening experience when the temps go from sunny to scorching. Here are six of our favorite Houston public parks.

    Memorial Park
    With over 4 million visitors each year, Memorial Park is known as the largest urban park in Texas. One of the most active and highly trafficked parks in the city (just inside Loop 610 at Woodway Dr.), it's one of Houston’s most popular three-mile running trails (technically it's 2.9 miles) and so much more throughout the 1,500 acres of parkland. This is a great spot for meeting friends for an all-out sprint or leisurely stroll, hitting up the stretch deck for an easy meeting spot (with a bathroom), or for joining an intramural league or tournament at one of the many fields.

    Good for: intramural sports, volleyball, softball, baseball, tennis, swimming (indoor), track, running, biking, cycling, golfing.

    Hermann Park
    This 445-acre urban park space is Houston’s most historically significant public green space, dating back to 1914. Also home to Hermann Park Golf Course, the Houston Zoo, Miller Outdoor Theatre, the Houston Museum of Natural Science, Japanese Garden, Rose Garden and McGovern Lake, it is one of the most family-friendly parks in Houston. So popular in fact, it gets an estimated 6 million visitors each year.

    Good for: hiking, running, biking, cycling, golfing, fishing, and picnics.

    Discovery Green
    It’s hard to believe this almost 12-acre downtown park is celebrating its tenth anniversary this year. It seems like just yesterday plans for this downtown development were underway; it has since hosted several events like Super Bowl LIVE (Super LI), Final Four festivities, movies on the green, and other free programming year-round. ​This space redefined the landscape of a once dwindling downtown environment and adds to the beauty and vibrancy of the city of Houston. Folks head here in need of some fresh air, or when looking for a new spot to take the kids or enjoy upbeat, urban vibes. Discovery Green features tree-shaded walks, a new jogging trail, one-acre lake, open lawns (perfect for picnicking or a friendly football game), a children’s playground, and more.

    Good for: picnics, canoeing, playground, running (new), flea markets, nearby dining, free weekend programming (such as yoga or movies on the lawn).

    Buffalo Bayou Park
    Still not fully operational since Hurricane Harvey (Harvey update here), it would be remiss not to include Buffalo Bayou on the list of Houston’s best parks, mostly because of its central locale to the city and the unobstructed, beautiful views of the city’s skyline. Houstonians enjoy this popular park anytime of day, thanks to its recently completed transformation in 2015 turning this 160-acre, 2.3-mile stretch of Buffalo Bayou from Shepherd to Sabine Street — making it one of the most fit-friendly parks in the entire city. Don't miss the Lee and Joe Jamail Skatepark, new art installations at The Cistern (105 Sabine Street, tickets required), and the newly opened visitors center Sunset Coffee Building to rent kayaks, canoes and bikes and enjoy the beautiful fresh air and skyline views. Click here for a detailed guide of this sprawling park.

    Good for: picnics, running, walking, hiking, skateboarding, kayaking,canoeing, biking, city skyline views.

    Menil Collection Campus
    Occupying an entire city block, this 30-acre campus located in the hip Montrose neighborhood provides a serene setting not only for visiting the Menil Collection, but simply embracing the outdoor and thought-provoking spaces that fill the campus in this oft-overlooked green space. Located between the gallery and the chapel sits an open park covered by beautiful canopy trees making it the perfect spot to bring a favorite book. Pack a lunch or stop by Bistro Menil to grab a picnic to-go while taking in the gorgeous campus. The University of St. Thomas adds to the serenity of the area. The Rothko Chapel, which was listed in the National Register of Historic Places back in 2001, is arguably one of the most .

    Good for: picnics, inspiration, outdoor reading, walks.

    Emancipation Park
    Located in the third ward of Houston on the outskirts of downtown, this 10-acre park boasts revitalized and refurbished landscapes, playgrounds and even a beautiful new Community Center. Having been around for more than 140 years, this landmark park’s recent transformation was completed in 2017, adding a whole new level of excitement and heritage to its previous claim to fame. And this isn’t just one of the best parks in Houston (not to mention oldest in all of Texas), but perhaps the entire nation. NBC News calls it “one of the nation’s most spectacular cultural and recreational facilities.”

    Good for: picnics, walking, baseball, softball, tennis, basketball, swimming, cultural events.

    Emancipation Park.

    Emancipation Park, June 2012
    Photo by Karen Burd
    Emancipation Park.
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    9 acres of gardens

    10 things to know about America's first Ismaili Center opening in Houston

    Emily Cotton
    Nov 6, 2025 | 1:05 pm
    Ismali Center, Houston exterior
    Photo by Iwan Baan
    The building is reflected in the pool, a feature common in Muslim design.

    The long-awaited Ismaili Center, Houston is set to open to the public next month. The 11-acre site has been painstakingly-designed and constructed to offer indoor and outdoor public spaces for Houstonians to enjoy, connect, and engage. As the only Ismaili Center in the United States, and seventh in the world, it joins its international communities in London, Vancouver, Lisbon, Dubai, Dushanbe, and Toronto.

    Nearly 20 years in the making, the Ismaili Center, Houston features a prayer hall, rotating art installations, a black box theater, a cafe, numerous social halls for weddings and other events, plus 9-acres of outdoor space and landscaped botanical gardens. Involved parties hope that the community will see the space as an extension of the neighboring parks along the bayou, and have included a garden entrance to the north lawn and gardens at the corner of Montrose Boulevard and Allen Parkway.

    While Houston is known for its many community engagement centers, the architects and designers believe that the seamless integration of indoor and outdoor spaces sets the Ismaili Center, Houston apart from all others.

    “What we know is the connections between buildings, environment, quality of life, and landscape — this is nothing new,” structural and facade engineer Hanif Kara tells CultureMap. “But, certainly, it’s hard to see that in other developments, particularly when they are done by developers. It’s quite difficult to find community spaces, and to see how quality of life is improved for everyone. I think we’ve all experienced that kind of hope that it will play out something like this.”

    Designed by Farshid Moussavi Architecture and Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects, the remarkable 11-acre site is designed both to receive LEED Gold certification and to withstand the tests of Houston’s sometimes extreme weather conditions.

    Principal architect Farshid Moussavi looks forward to seeing the Houston community utilize the space she’s worked so hard to deliver: “We’ve given the hardware to the community, now the software needs to come in. So I hope that there will be music recitals, or lectures, or book fairs, or other kinds of markets that can happen—even simultaneously. This is not an experiment, it’s the seventh in the world.”

    Community welcome events are scheduled for December 12 and 13, but, until then, here are 10 things to know about the Ismaili Center, Houston.

    What is the Ismaili Center, Houston
    “The use of the building is really meant for, or our hope, is that we are able to—on an enhanced view of what the community does today—have engagement on service projects, arts and culture, interfaith dialogue, and even just in bringing people together,” Omar Samji, Ismaili Council for the United States of America tells CultureMap. “The notion of bringing people together in a place where it is easy to create connections because it’s an open space, and because it’s specifically designed to be a place where people interact and where people find commonality. Because whether you’re out in the gardens, or on the environs, or in the atrium, this enables connection.”

    The Scale
    The Center stretches out across an 11-acre site along Montrose Boulevard, from West Dallas to Allen Parkway. The physical building is 150,000 square feet, leaving 9-acres for garden spaces on both the north and south sides of the building. The south side of the property is more formal, with gardens and community spaces that flank an 80-foot reflection pool and other water features. The gardens on the north side of the building are more informal, but densely planted and vast.

    The creation of Ismaili Center Houston was a huge team effort
    The development of the Ismaili Center was led by the Ismaili Council. It was initiated by His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan IV (1936-2025), and completed under the leadership of his eldest son, Prince Rahim Aga Khan V.

    The project was designed and constructed by a team of both local and international firms. Farshid Moussavi Architecture joined forces with structural and facade engineer Hanif Kara, co-founder and creative director of AKT II. DLR Group is the architect and engineer of record, while contractor McCarthy Building Companies built the project. Thomas Woltz, senior principal and owner of landscape architecture firm Nelson Byrd Woltz, along with principal Jeff Aten taking lead on the nine acres of garden space. The project is targeting LEED Gold certification.

    Walk, work, play, or find a cozy spot to enjoy nine acres of native Texas plants and trees
    The Center will be recognized as a leading cultural asset for the City of Houston, complementing nearby institutions such as The Menil Collection, Rothko Chapel, Asia Society Texas, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. While the surrounding gardens will add to the other notable Nelson Byrd Woltz projects within close proximity at Memorial Park, Rothko Chapel, and Rice University.

    “We’ve been building massive projects in Houston for 12 years,” Woltz tells CultureMap. “We know the horticultural community in the region, and we did a deep, deep dive in ecological research to understand ‘What are the native plants of whatever region?’ It’s just baked into our process. Right when we are starting any project in Houston—right to the river. Look at the soils, ‘What are the plants appropriate to that place?’ Its solar aspect, its humidity, it’s moisture in soils, the shadow of the building.

    But then, this idea of taking a section across the state of Texas, so that each of those distinct ecological regions is represented by one of the terraced gardens — so it’s very clear. It’s a diagram of the state of Texas and all of its native plants. This is functioning like a botanic garden and a repository for biodiversity — this is work in service.”

    The exterior is eco-friendly
    The exterior of the building is clad in stone, a durable material with low embodied carbon. The stone cladding is a rainscreen over in-situ ‘fair-faced’ concrete walls, exposed on the interior to minimize additional material use. The concrete mix used has replaced 35-62 percent of Portland cement with fly ash and slag, reducing CO2 emissions by roughly 30 percent compared to standard mixes. The exterior stone rainscreen uses smaller tiles to increase the stone yield, utilizing 20-25 percent more of the irregular blocks they are cut from. This reduction in waste has also lent itself to crafting the cladding in a unique way.

    The tessellation of the stone pieces changes across the building's surfaces to create different patterns on different sides of the buildings and at the corners. Relief stone tiles are used to add texture to the facades.

    It will host outdoor plays and concerts
    The north-facing botanical gardens that will accommodate the 200-year flood plain offer a 27 foot gradient toward the building. This allowed for various levels of seating and gathering areas that culminate at an elevated terrace that will act as a stage for various events such as plays and concerts. Attendees can stretch out and enjoy the shows from an extensive lawn area that is surrounded by dense gardens of native trees and plants.

    Check out both international and community events and performances in the Black Box Theater
    A 2,600-square-foot black box multipurpose space which seats 125 people is found on the second floor of the building’s west wing. It can host public events, such as exhibitions, film screenings, theatrical performances, music recitals, and other artistic programs throughout the year. It will also serve as a flexible space for teaching and learning. With acoustic isolation to surrounding spaces and the mechanical mezzanine above, it is designed to operate simultaneously without disrupting other events in the building. Design includes an upper-level control room, pipe grid, and flexible drapery and seating configurations to allow for a wide variety of programming.

    Grab a bite or a beverage at the cafe
    The center’s café is a 1,600-square-foot, double-height space located in the west wing (Montrose side) that opens onto an enormous terrace, offering visitors the option to enjoy their coffee or food outdoors. The terrace near the cafe is lined by an exterior wall and long, trough-style fountains that aid in noise reduction from Montrose Boulevard. The second-floor wall overlooking the Café is fully glazed, creating visual connection with the levels above.

    There is a The Prayer Hall / Jamatkhana available to members of the Ismaili community.
    The prayer hall is a whopping 12,240 square feet, featuring a unique structural system of seven interlocking squares, formed from steel beams spanning the 115-by-115-foot open space. These beams are clad in concrete to enhance durability, beneath which lies a two-layer perforated aluminum ceiling with integrated diffused lighting. Its intricate pattern recalls the traditional jālī screens of Islamic architecture creating a soft, seemingly infinite ceiling effect, adding to the serenity of the prayer hall.

    Who is His Highness the Aga Khan?
    His Highness Prince Rahim Aga Khan V is the 50th hereditary Imam (spiritual leader) of the Shia Ismaili Muslims and a direct descendant of the Prophet Muhammad. He was educated at Philipps Academy in Andover and Brown University (Class of 1995). He became Imam in February 2025 upon the passing of his father, His Highness Prince Karim Aga Khan IV.

    The Aga Khan promotes an understanding of Islam rooted in values of generosity, tolerance, pluralism, environmental stewardship, and the shared unity of humanity. He also chairs the Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN), one of the world’s largest private development agencies, which works across more than 30 countries to improve quality of life for marginalized communities regardless of faith or background.

    Ismali Center, Houston exterior

    Photo by Iwan Baan

    The building is reflected in the pool, a feature common in Muslim design.

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