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    Halloween Wrap Up

    Impact boos: Houston's best haunted house is an under the radar neighborhood treasure with a building legacy

    Katie Oxford
    Haunted House
    Nov 2, 2014 | 6:02 am

    Some say “Halloween is for kids.”

    Friday night at 2051 Claremont — it was all about the kids . . . and one heck of a haunted house.

    Julie and David Shannon started hosting this gig six years ago. It’s grown ever since and not just in BOO factor.

    What started as a small cemetery in the front yard the first year went to a flying ghost the second. After that, the kids took over and voila . . . Haunted House. Don’t worry about the chainsaw. It doesn’t have a blade.

    When I left at 8 p.m., kids in costumes were still pouring into the place like sand fleas.

    Their kids and a bunch of their friends start planning it way before school cranks up in September. Some jot notes. Stone Shannon (age 13) sketches. All the input is given to architects, Scott McCool and James Tryles, who then make it happen starting 10 days out.

    How scary fun is this house? Friday night, one little kid who’d just exited was asked, “How was it?” He answered with his thumbs. Two up.

    Tons of other kids agree. Last year, some 200 invitations went out (including UPS folks and all the neighbors) and by the end of the evening 600 kids had answered THE DARE nailed above the entrance.

    No tellin’ how many attended Friday night. When I left at 8 p.m., kids in costumes were still pouring into the place like sand fleas. I looked down Claremont Street and thought, LIVE FROM HOUSTON — IT’S HALLOWEEN!

    Monster mask in wouldn’t you know . . . witch hazel.

    8 Monster mask in wouldn\u2019t you know . . . witch hazel\u2026Katie Oxford Haunted House November 2014
      
    Photo by Katie Oxford
    Monster mask in wouldn’t you know . . . witch hazel.
    unspecified
    news/city-life

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    the power of time

    State-of-the-art Houston art installation will generate clean energy

    InnovationMap Staff
    May 5, 2025 | 4:00 pm
    Arch of Time art installation
    Rendering courtesy Land Art Generator Initiative.
    A rendering previews the Arch of Time.

    Local and state leaders shared updated plans this month on a first-of-its-kind structure that uses art to generate solar energy.

    Slated to be located at Mason Park in Houston’s East End, the new "Arch of Time" is a freestanding sundial art installation that will generate 400,000 kilowatt-hours of power per year using 60,000 solar photovoltaic cells on its south-facing exterior.

    The project will be part of a larger pavilion at the park and is being led by the renewable energy organization Land Art Generator Initiative (LAGI). Architect Riccardo Mariano will design the space. It will be funded by donations and cost $20 million, organizers say.

    The project, originally known as "Arco del Tiempo," was announced in 2023. At the time, the city shared the installation would be installed at Guadalupe Plaza Park in 2024.

    The project's latest update was announced during Houston City Hall’s Earth Day 2025, where organizers described it as "a monument to Houston's past, present, and future leadership as the energy capital of the world."

    The 100-foot structure will also serve as a 25,000-square-foot shaded area, or microclimate, during hot days. It will also feature a stage performance space and a power hub for emergencies. Due to the artwork's north opening and south narrowing, it is also expected to help channel the breezes, according to LAGI.

    The organization says it is also expected to generate enough power to fuel all of Mason Park.

    “Mason Park will soon, perhaps become the first major park in the country that is powered entirely by the sun,” Houston City Council Member Joaquin Martinez said at the news conference. “The economic benefits are clear.”

    Former Houston Park and Recreation director Joe Turner selected the East End park as the location of the arch and believes it could be used as a STEM tool for students.

    “All the STEM education that can come from the way we use the solar collectors, the way it has a water collection system that's going to collect the runoff water, there's so much we can do to teach kids STEM,” said in a Houston Park and Recreation Department video.

    The project is about two years away from being completed. LAGI says the Arch of Time will be the “first public art project of its scale to stand as a net-positive contribution to a sustainable climate.”

    ---

    This story originally appeared on our sister site, EnergyCapitalHTX.

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