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Summer Fun

Thrill-packed Apollo 13-themed escape room reminds Houston of its NASA roots

Sydney Arceneaux
Jul 27, 2017 | 9:31 am

Nine people in Mission Control, three astronauts stranded in space, and 60 minutes to bring them home safely work as a team, decipher codes, and beat the clock. That is the task Escape Hunt's new Apollo 13-themed room, Houston We've Had A Problem, challenges guests to complete.

Escape rooms have become the new "it" activity in recent years, increasing in popularity worldwide. Scores of the immersive experiences that challenge groups to solve dilemmas to get out of a room in a limited amount of time are popping up all around town. James Barcz, owner of Escape Hunt in Houston, is helping our city fuel its new obsession.

The Houston branch of Escape Hunt, which bills itself as "the world's leading live escape the room & exit game indoor entertainment experience," offers three different options to choose from. They include a rescue of the "original" Texas Lone Star, a murder in a London mansion, and the new space-themed experience based on the famed Apollo 13 manned space mission that had to be aborted after an oxygen tank exploded six days after the launch.

The adventure begins immediately once inside an unassuming building hidden on a corner in Midtown. Workers dressed in Sherlock Holmes-esque detective gear greet guests and direct them towards their respective games.

The deceptively large building has nine rooms, eight of which hold functioning games. Each room offers one of the three different microcosms to venture into. In particular, the new Apollo 13 game transports guests to another time.

The decor of the room eerily recreates NASA from the 1970s, including small elements like faux half-smoked cigarettes and rotary dial phones. Taking into consideration the detail of the room, it is no surprise that Escape Hunt took almost a full year to plan and build the new game to ensure its authenticity.

“It normally doesn’t take 11 months,” said Barcz, “but we wanted to engage specialists from all over the country… This is a very very complex game that uses a lot of technology and creates a lot of realism.”

The Apollo 13 room has a maximum of 12 people. Nine work as staff in Mission Control, and three become prospective space travelers. After the group solves their first task of powering up the main grid, the astronauts in their bright orange “EVA space suits” begin their journey into “space,” which may or may not be an adjacent room.

Fair warning: Escape Hunt does not fall short on its promise of authenticity. The game attempts to hold the astronauts to the same standard as those in NASA, relatively speaking. Come prepared to crawl through smoke, work in binary, and problem solve under pressure.

The room in particular cultivates teamwork. With only one person in Mission Control communicating with the three astronauts "in space," staying calm and working together is a must.

When taking into account the character traits the game brings out, it makes sense that many businesses uses such sessions to improve synergy among companies and co-workers. Barcz explains that “much of [Escape Hunt’s] business is from corporate training for companies who want to bring their people in for a fun event or to develop their team working skills.”

Although my group did not complete the mission, we were assured that even the NASA pros needed a few extra minutes to escape this one.

----------------

Houston We've Had a Problem costs $38 per person; Theft of Texas Lone Star and Murder in Marylebone are $30. Reserve games online. Hours of operation: Monday – Thursday 3 - 10 pm; Friday 3 pm - midnight; Saturday noon - midnight; Sunday 1 - 7 pm. Location: 125 West Gray Street, Suite 100.

Once inside the building hidden on a corner in Midtown, the adventure begins immediately with detective-themed decor.

Houston, Escape Hunt Apollo 13 interior, July 2017
Photo courtesy of Gordon Productions
Once inside the building hidden on a corner in Midtown, the adventure begins immediately with detective-themed decor.
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Stretching the budget

A $100,000 salary in 2026 goes further in Houston than it did last year

Amber Heckler
Mar 5, 2026 | 12:30 pm
Houston skyline
Photo by Leo Yao on Unsplash
$100,000 stretches a little further in 2026.

A 2026 income study has good news for big earners in Houston: A six-figure salary goes further than it did last year.

A Houston resident's $100,000 salary is worth $84,840 after taxes and adjusted for the local cost of living, according to the new financial analysis from SmartAsset. That's about $1,500 more than Houstonians were bringing home last year.

The 2026 take-home pay is about eight percent higher than it was in 2024, when the same salary had an adjusted value of $78,089.

SmartAsset used its paycheck calculator to apply federal, state and local taxes to an annual salary of $100,000 in 69 of the largest American cities. The figure was then adjusted for the local cost of living (which included average costs for housing, groceries, utilities, transportation, and miscellaneous goods and services). Cities were then ranked based on where a six-figure salary is worth the least after applicable taxes and cost of living adjustments.

Houston ranked No. 60 in the overall ranking of U.S. cities where $100,000 is worth the least. If the rankings were flipped and the cities were ranked based on where $100,000 goes the furthest, that places Houston in the No. 10 spot nationwide.

Manhattan, New York remains the No. 1 city where a six-figure salary is worth the least. A Manhattan resident's take-home pay is only worth $29,420 after taxes and adjusted for the cost of living, which is 3.10 percent lower than it was in 2025.

SmartAsset determined Manhattan has a 29.7 percent effective tax rate on six-figure salaries. Meanwhile, the effective tax rate on a $100,000 salary in Texas (based on the eight cities examined in the report) is 21.1 percent. It's worth highlighting that New York implements a statewide graduated-rate income tax from 4-10.90 percent, whereas Texas is one of only eight states that don't tax residents' income.

Oklahoma City, No. 69, is the U.S. city in the report where a $100,000 salary stretches the furthest. A six-figure salary is worth $91,868 in 2026, up from $89,989 last year.

This is the post-tax value of a $100,000 salary in other Texas cities, and their ranking in the report:

  • Plano (No. 27): $72,653
  • Dallas (No. 47): $80,103
  • Austin (No. 53): $82,446
  • Lubbock (No. 59): $84,567
  • San Antonio (No. 62): $86,419
  • El Paso (No. 67): $90,276
  • Corpus Christi (No. 68): $91,110
According to the report, getting some "financial breathing room" by making six-figures really depends on where someone lives and what their lifestyle is. For residents living in the 42 states that levy some amount of income tax, their take-home pay dwindles further.
"And depending on how taxes are filed, reaching a $100,000 income may push a household from the 22 percent to 24 percent marginal tax bracket," the report's author wrote. "Meanwhile, locations with high costs across housing and everyday essentials may be less forgiving to a $100,000 income."
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