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    Marriott Marquis Preview

    First look: Spectacular new downtown Houston hotel offers a Super experience

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 15, 2016 | 6:26 pm

    By any measure, the Marriott Marquis impresses. Set to open December 26 and become a prime gathering spot at Super Bowl LI in early February, the $370 million downtown hotel that sits on the northeast corner of Discovery Green has some Texas-sized statistics: It's 29 stories tall, employs a staff of 700, has 1,000 rooms, and a mammoth 40,000-square-foot ballroom — the largest in Houston, capable of holding up to 4,000 people.

    During a walk-through preview of the new hotel Thursday, Jay Marsella, the hotel's director of sales and marketing, pointed out features of the detailed space. Guest enter through the lobby, where they'll find check-in and the concierge desk, but the hotel has numerous public areas. As expected, the design by Looney & Associates, telegraphs luxury with marble table tops, wood floors, and tray ceilings.

    "Millennials don't stay in their guest rooms anyway," Marsella noted. He describes the property as an "experiential hotel" with six bars and restaurants that are designed to appeal to the next generation of hotel guests with a diverse set of options that will keep people onsite.

    That starts with Texas T, which Marsella describes as a "Starbucks on steroid." In addition to Starbucks coffee, the cafe will offer grab-and-go sandwiches at breakfast and lunch, as well as bottles of beer and wine to consume on premises. Beyond Texas T lies the Texas Trading Company gift shop. A nearby "library" area offers places people can work alone or in groups at communal tables with plugs for keeping portable electronics fully charged.

    Next to Texas T, patrons will find Cueva ("cave"), the hotel's wine bar. In addition to wines on tap, the bar's staff will use a Coravin system that will allow them to serve any bottle of wine by the glass for people who commit to two glasses. Non-wine drinkers will have limited beer and cocktail options. Tapas-style small plates will provide snacks.

    Hugo Ortega's Xochi occupies the restaurant space near Texas T. Dedicated to the cuisine of Oaxaca, the restaurant will open after the hotel does, tentatively on January 9.

    Biggio's, a two-story sports bar opened in partnership with the Astros Hall of Famer, sits on the corner of Walker and Avenida. The space has three sections: a lounge that features baseball leather-style couches, a long bar lined with baseball bats and TVs, and a large restaurant seating area. Within the restaurant, two giant projection screens — one media member estimated them at 20 feet long and 15 feet tall — can be viewed from Vegas sportsbook-style lounge seats. They have plugs, too, of course: perfect for getting a little work done (or checking fantasy football scores).

    Biggio's contract with the restaurant stipulates that he'll make at least 30 appearances at the hotel per year. Approximately half will be for marketing events, but patrons will likely see him in the dining room from time to time. Beyond the signage bearing his name, the restaurant also displays signed memorabilia like batting helmets, balls, and jerseys.

    Walker Street Kitchen, a "casual coastal" seafood restaurant, serves as the hotel's main restaurant, with a breakfast buffet, as well as lunch and dinner daily.

    All of the restaurants will be open to the public during the week of Super Bowl LI. Since the restaurant is the official host hotel for the game's staff, it will house a number of celebrities, including NFL execs, former players, at least one team owner, and high-profile, out-of-town media. Expect celebrity sightings galore — at least for those who can find a place to sit.

    The hotel's meeting and ballrooms occupy floors two through four. If the fourth floor's 40,000-square-foot ballroom is either too much space (or not enough), consider the second floor's 22,000 square-foot "junior ballroom." Both ballrooms can be divided in half and feature spacious foyers for cocktail hours or other pre-event festivities. Marsella says the hotel has already begun booking society galas for both spaces, which means the boldface names will soon be making regular appearances.

    Guests have plenty of luxury of their own. The sixth floor features the MClub for preferred travelers, as well as the Pure Spa, fitness center, and the already famous Texas-shaped lazy river. Billed as the only rooftop lazy river in the world, the feature is only open to guests and spa patrons, at least for now. The water feature and an adjacent infinity pool offer a spectacular view of Discovery Green. Those who want to linger pool side will be able to rent one of a half-dozen cabanas.

    Even the hotel's fitness center is one-third larger than Marriott requires for a 1,000 room hotel, which should mean no fighting with Roger Goodell for an elliptical. Taken together, the owners hope these features make the hotel appealing to leisure travelers as well as business people.

    Given the posh surroundings, the guestrooms are almost anti-climactic. All rooms feature either one king-size or two queen-size beds; 50-inch, flat panel smart TVs offer Netflix built-in. Bowing to current convention, most of the rooms contain only stand-up showers; tubs are reserved for suites. Rooms will be priced in the mid $100s to low $200s in the summer and are roughly $100 more in season. Expect the two, 2,200-square-foot presidential suites to run about $8,000 per night; pricey, sure, but they do have private balconies and views of Discovery Green and the downtown skyline.

    The Texas-shaped lazy river is open to hotel guests and spa patrons.

    Marriott Marquis Texas lazy river
    Photo by Eric Sandler
    The Texas-shaped lazy river is open to hotel guests and spa patrons.
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    good for the soul

    Houston blooms as No. 3 best city for urban gardening in the U.S.

    Amber Heckler
    Apr 15, 2026 | 11:30 am
    Urban gardening
    Photo by Jonathan Kemper on Unsplash
    Let's get gardening, Houston

    Folks in the Bayou City have plenty of reasons to develop a green thumb: Houston has harvested new acclaim as the No. 3 best city in America for urban gardening in 2026.

    Lawnstarter's annual report, "2026’s Best Cities for Urban Gardening," compared 500 U.S. cities based on their respective public access to community gardens, climate, the prevalence of nurseries and gardening supply stores, and the number of regional gardening clubs and online groups.

    Atlanta topped the list as the No. 1 best U.S. city, followed by Miami (No. 2); St. Louis (No. 4); and Jacksonville, Florida (No. 5).

    For the uninitiated, urban gardening is the practice of growing plants or food in densely populated areas. Local examples include Blackwood Skyfarm, which is the largest rooftop farm in Texas, or Urban Harvest's 160 affiliate gardens – but backyards, apartment balconies, and vacant lots could also fit the bill. Additionally, the Houston Parks and Recreation Department has an Urban Garden Program where residents can volunteer to help locate sections of local parks to turn into community gardens.

    Houston was No. 1 nationally in the "supplies" rank, and Lawnstarter said the city is home to 253 landscaping equipment shops – the most in the U.S. – and the second-highest number of gardening stores (276) and nurseries (132). The city also earned a respectable No. 6 rank for its "support and interest" of urban gardening, meaning many residents are searching terms like "community gardens," "vertical gardening," and others.

    Here's how the city fared in the remaining three categories:

    • No. 115 – Public access
    • No. 157 – Climate
    • No. 390 – Private access (based on average yard size for starting an at-home garden)
    Cathy Walker, president of the American Community Gardening Association, offered some tips for first-time gardeners to help get their hands in the soil: choose only a few easy growing plants to start; learn which growing zone you're in to determine the plants that will thrive in your area; watch how much sunlight your garden space gets daily; and prioritize keeping soil healthy with compost and mulch.

    Ecoregions are also helpful for understanding what plants will thrive. Whereas zones are about temperature, ecoregions are much more detailed groups. Planters can learn about their ecoregion and get personalized growing tips from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation in its new native planting app, Wild Thumb.

    Starting your own garden can also have a financial benefit, the report suggested. However, up-front costs can get high in gardening, so gardeners might have to stick to it for a few seasons to see savings.

    "With grocery prices projected to rise by 3.1 percent in 2026, there’s never been a better time to grow your own food," the report's author wrote. "Estimates show that growing a 600-square-foot plot for fruits and vegetables can save you around $600 in a single season."

    The top 10 best cities for urban gardening in 2026 are:

    • No. 1 – Atlanta
    • No. 2 – Miami
    • No. 3 – Houston
    • No. 4 – St. Louis
    • No. 5 – Jacksonville, Florida
    • No. 6 – Orlando
    • No. 7 – Cincinnati
    • No. 8 – Fort Meyers, Florida
    • No. 9 – Tampa
    • No. 10 – Austin
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