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    Smither Park

    Here Be Dragons: Delightful Smither Park brings artful fun and whimsical life to East End

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 12, 2016 | 10:30 am

    Houston possess a plethora of parks and green spaces, but only in Smither Park, do dragons, bears, octopi, and guitar playing armadillos roam freely. Technically these creatures were formed by human hands out of recycled material, glass and tile but they fill this block on Munger Street in the East End with whimsical life.

    A years-in-the-making project from the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art, Smither Park recently officially opened with a celebration honoring all the artists’ work and especially the lives of the park’s namesakes, folk art collectors and longtime Orange Show supporters John and Stephanie Smither.

    Before the party began, I had a chance to walk among the mosaic animals and mirrored trees on a guided tour with Smither Park designer Dan Phillips. Though he immediately rejected my attempt to pin a renaissance man moniker on him, the artist and designer has at one point in his life also been a dance professor, cryptogram puzzle maker, antiques restorer, and nationally recognized builder and founder of Phoenix Commotion.

    While Phillips and Stephanie Smither’s initial vision took root at the groundbreaking in 2011, Phillips has been a guiding presence the last five years as the park grew and blossomed.

    “The idea was that I was able to dream my wildest dreams and then let reality beat us back into feasibility,” said Phillips of when Stephanie Smither first asked him to join the project. “My job was to come up with the concept and then herd a hundred cats through the development.”

    The cats in this scenario are the nearly 300 artists who contributed to the creation of the park, and Phillips' herding continues to take the form of offering guidance and encouragement to help the artists focus their unique visions.

    “I’ve been an ombudsman and a cheerleader. I try to just keep everything running smoothly,” he said.

    A Mosaic Tree Grows in Houston

    Art blooms everywhere in Smither Park with almost every inch of concrete destined to be cover in mosaic images. All of the park’s main elements use recycled and sustainable materials and each feature has a distinctive place and function in the park, while creating a sense of play and wonder.

    The Shell Plaza Walkways meander through the park parallel to the nearly 500-foot-long Memory Wall that stands as the back boarder to the park. Divided up into 60 panels for artists, volunteers and friends of the Orange Show to pay tribute to loved ones, remember beloved places or depict their dreams. Near the middle of the Memory Wall the white porcelain and ceramics tiled alcove of the Marilyn Oshman Meditation Garden offers visitors a space for quiet pondering and still contemplation.

    The giant fish mouth, the Lindley Fish, anchors the park at one end. Designed and constructed by artist Matt Gifford the Fish serves as a bandshell for performances and concerts. In the middle of the park grows the four pillars of the covered Vinson & Elkins Pavilion. Each pillar shaped like a tree went to a different artist, and the structure will be available for rental for private parties and gatherings.

    Designed by Dan Phillips, The Johnson Marble Tower is still under construction, but Phillips’s descriptions of this marble drop conjured up for me images of a part interactive sculpture, part Rube Goldberg Machine that will likely become a favorite for kids of all ages. After playing at the Marble Tower, a whole family might relax and fit together on the large bench swings.

    A Smither Planting

    Throughout our talk, Phillips continued to credit the park’s fruition to the vision and drive of Stephanie Smither, who envisioned the park as a tribute to her husband, but passed away herself in June of this year.

    “It was a sad day when we lost John in 2002 and devastating when we lost Stephanie,” said Phillips but as he continued to describe the couple, I looked around and thought perhaps a bit of their spirit would live on in every blade of glass throughout the park.

    “What was so much fun about John and Stephanie was that they were willing to entertain the most outrageous of ideas and had the resources to do that. If it appealed to them as an adventure, they’d do it,” he described.

    Though now open to the public, some of the main features of Smither are still in sapling stages of growth, but that’s all part of the fun as volunteers, including those with no experience, can come on down and dig in every Saturday to help nurture the art of Smither. At the end of our talk, I asked Phillips if there will come a date when the park is complete and finished.

    “Art takes time,” he said. “It’s a work in progress, but it’s a functional park. It will keep on growing and evolving.”

    Catch a performance or concert in the Lindley Fish.

    Lindley Fish, Smither Park
    Photo by Tarra Gaines
    Catch a performance or concert in the Lindley Fish.
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    news/arts

    MFAH expands

    Houston museum acquires historic Masonic lodge property for new greenspace

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 23, 2025 | 2:16 pm
    Holland Lodge masonic building
    Holland Lodge No. 1, A.F. & A.M./Facebook
    The building at 4911 will be torn down for the new greenspace.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston has acquired a prime parcel to expand its campus in the Museum District. On Tuesday, December 23, the museum announced it has purchased a two-acre parcel of land at 4911 Montrose Blvd that will bring its total footprint to 16 acres.

    Located just north of the Glassel School of Art, the property will be developed as a greenspace that will serve as a community lawn as well as be utilized for future museum events and parking. MFAH has retained landscape architects Nelson Byrd Woltz — the firm responsible for work at Memorial Park and the recently-opened Ismaili Center — to create the design for the new greenspace.

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston greenspace rendering A rendering offers a bird's-eye preview of the new greenspace.Image by by Cong Nie/Courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    At this time, the museum does not have plans to build anything on the property, according to a press release.

    To make way for the greenspace, the property’s existing building, Holland Lodge No. 1, will be torn down. Built in 1954 as a home for the oldest Masonic lodge chapter in Texas, the building features a sandstone mural facade. It has been for sale since at least 2005, according to a report in the Houston Chronicle.

    Demolition on the site is expected to begin in spring 2026 with the greenspace opening in approximately two years, according to press materials. In addition to the Glassell School, the museum’s campus includes the Audrey Jones Beck Building, the Caroline Wiess Law Building, the Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden, and the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building.

    “We are delighted to contribute to Houston’s greenspace access with this new initiative, which will expand the museum’s 14-acre campus to a thoroughly walkable 16 acres,” Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH, said in a statement. “While the primary objective for the purchase of this property is to secure land for any potential future expansion of the museum, our priority now is to create a welcoming community lawn. Thoughtfully designed by Nelson Byrd Woltz, one of the leading firms in sustainable landscape practice, the site will serve as public greenspace and provide additional parking for museum visitors.”

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