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    Ken On The Move

    Best of Ken Hoffman: The challenges of planning a vacation to France

    Ken Hoffman
    Aug 19, 2024 | 4:14 pm

    Editor's note: After the sudden death of beloved columnist Ken Hoffman on July 14, CultureMap is republishing some of our favorite "Hoffman's Houston" columns. Here's Ken on the challenges of planning a European vacation; it was originally published on September 11, 2017.

    Fake news doesn’t take a vacation. I took my iPad to the AT&T/DirecTV store.

    “I understand that DirecTV has an app where you can watch television on your iPad or phone or any device outside of your home.”

    The store guy says, “That’s right, it’s called DirecTV Now. It’s regularly $35, but I can give it to you half-price.”

    “Sign me up. But here’s the deal. I’m going to France for a week, and I want to watch the U.S. Open tennis tournament. So if I get DirecTV Now, I’ll be able to watch ESPN on my iPad over there?”

    Guy says, “Absolutely, as long as you have access to Wi-Fi, you can watch DirecTV Now, and the package you’re buying includes ESPN.”

    “How about CNN?

    Guy says, “CNN, sure.”

    I’m good to go. There’s nothing I like more than visiting a foreign country and sitting in my hotel room watching American television.

    Naturally, I click the DirecTV Now app and my iPad screen says, “Sorry, DirecTV Now is not available outside the U.S.”

    But the guy said …

    You know what they say, necessity is the mother of hacking the Internet. If I sign up for ExpressVPN, my iPad will trick DirecTV into thinking I’m in Los Angeles. And I can get ESPN and stay up all night watching Roger Federer get beat in the U.S Open quarterfinals. There’s a night I’ll never get back.

    That ExpressVPN app worked perfectly. It cost $12.95 for the month, but there are cheaper plans for people staying longer – or permanently – outside the U.S. Another bonus to ExpressVPN, let’s say you’re visiting a country that cracks down on certain Internet sites, now you can view them. Not sure this would be a good idea in some countries, though, you might get a knock on your door.

    I will be having a word with the DirecTV Now guy when I get home. Don’t you hate salespeople who don’t know their own product?

    There ought to be double the penalty for bad information that crosses countries’ borders. For example …

    Instead of staying in a hotel in Nice, France this week, I thought I’d rent an apartment through a travel website. I wanted to experience what it’d be like to live in Nice (apartment) instead of just visiting (hotel) like usual. Plus an apartment would give me more room. European hotel rooms are typically tiny.

    The ad said, “one bedroom apartment in Old Town,” and showed photos that sure looked like a kitchen, living room, comfortable bed, and spacious bathroom.

    I get to the apartment, meet the landlady outside and she lets me in. And up. Seven flights of stairs, but not stairs like at your office building. These were steep, thigh-burning, high-steppin’ steps – 103, I counted. And I was lugging a heavy duffle bag with my week’s supply of new Coke Zero, which I’m not crazy about, either. Ten thousand brands of soda, and they’ve got to change the one I drink.

    Landlady said, “You didn’t know the apartment was on the 7th floor?”

    No, I didn’t, because you neglected to mention that in your ad. And thanks for leaving out “no elevator.”

    We get to the apartment. There’s no kitchen, just a sink and toaster on a counter. There’s no “one bedroom,” either, just a ladder that climbs up to a ledge jutting above the sink and toaster, with a mattress on the floor (I thought those days were over) and the ceiling only three feet over the mattress. If I sat up in bed – bonk, my head! The electricity wasn’t working. The landlady had to go downstairs and flip a fuse.

    The shower stall in the mini-bathroom was so small, I had to squeeze in sideways between the sliding doors. My shoulders touched both sides of the stall.

    One night it rained, and I was awakened by the ceiling dripping on me. I spooned with a soup bowl in bed that night.

    This isn’t a one bedroom apartment in the heart of Old Town Nice – this is a flophouse. My apartment was smaller than a 2-star Euro hotel room. I would have checked out the first day, but I had paid for the whole week in advance, and just try to get your money back from this landlady.

    On the bright side, there was an Italian restaurant down below, outside the front door. Location, location, location. Pizza, lasagna, chicken parm. I left the windows open to fill my apartment with the aroma of hot focaccia. Glade needs to know about this.

    Now for TripAdvisor. I took the train from Nice to Monaco, which is next door. And Monaco is next door to Italy on the other side. It’s only a 7 Euro ticket roundtrip, about $9. I hit up TripAdvisor for a pizza recommendation. Found a place that “readers” claimed has the “best pizza in all Europe” … “unbelievable pizza” … the “best-kept pizza secret,” etc. It’s on a winding little side street deep in a corner of Monaco.

    It was a take-out hole in the wall, with reheated, school lunch pizza by the slice. The worst. The only people who would possibly recommend this place are the owners. I will give them “unbelievable,” though.

    But I muddle on. I’m in Nice, the most beautiful city, and tonight I’m going to have lasagna at La Favola restaurant in the Cours Saleya flower market. The portions are huge and delicioso. All will be back to wonderful.

    The shower stall in the mini-bathroom was tiny.

    Houston, Hoffman, Nice France travel, September 2017
    Photo by Ken Hoffman
    The shower stall in the mini-bathroom was tiny.
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    all the way

    Historic Houston hotel glows after top to bottom renovations

    Emily Cotton
    Apr 3, 2026 | 11:00 am
    Sam Houston hotel lobby
    Photo by Laura Dante
    The lobby offers seating options for groups of all sizes.

    As downtown Houston street construction smothers locals ahead of the FIFA World Cup, one Lamar High School alum has quietly restored a Federalist-style landmark hotel to its former glory. When the Sam Houston Hotel opened in 1924, a room could be booked for two dollars—two-fifty with a private bath. The charming update is a wink to that bygone era, yet willfully restrains itself from being tied to a theme.

    The hotel was entered into the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. Twenty years later, Rick Singleton, principal of Scenic Capital Advisors, purchased the historic property and had it listed under the Hilton Hotels Tapestry Collection banner.

    Ensconced in downtown Houston’s Historic District, the Sam Houston Hotel — colloquially known as “The Sam” — sits within one of the city’s most vibrant and walkable neighborhoods. Just steps from Market Square Park, the lush community hub on the site of Houston’s original City Hall serves as the heart of downtown’s urban resurgence where guests can explore the more historical side of downtown on their own or even join one of the popular walking tours.

    Local residents may recognize “The Sam” as the site of two enormous murals that exist as part of the city’s larger public art project. Works by artists “Smug” and Victor Ash, titled “Assiduity” and “Human Rights,” respectively, are difficult to miss, as both extend nearly the entire 10-story height of the building.

    Recognizing a disconnect between the building’s stately Federalist-style exterior and its previously-undefined interior, Singleton set out to reunite the two with a period-appropriate interior aesthetic infused with modern comfort and continuity. The interiors feature rich, tactile fabrics, warm wood floors, and detailed paneling and moldings that replace colder industrial materials. The result is a design that feels historic yet contemporary, timeless yet inviting — a true reflection of Houston’s architectural vernacular.

    “It’s a beautiful, Federalist-style building. Then you walk in, and it’s chic — that was the goal,” Singleton tells CultureMap. The remodel was top-to-bottom, with guest room revitalizations beginning in June of 2024. One-hundred total guest rooms span five layouts, providing something for everyone.

    Since the building had been updated prior to the current acquisition, Hilton didn’t require a full renovation — Singleton did it anyhow: “If we don’t do everything, we are just wasting money. It was just disjointed. We needed to go all the way here, and Hilton was really happy about that. We did double the amount of work that was required here.”

    Guest room designs were all handled in-house by Singleton and his wife Laura, a retired interior designer. The rooms have clean lines and sleek furnishings (all made by local trades), while the accent decor lends itself more to the timeless, beloved boutique hotel aesthetic.

    “We wanted hotel rooms that felt collected, and not overly refined, like a lot of hotel rooms tend to feel,” explains [Rick] Singleton. “We wanted lived-in, collected, and even cluttered a little bit. We wanted them full.”

    Houston favorite Gin Design Group handled the original conceptual design and drawings for the lobby space, with Laura taking over procurement and sourcing from there. “I could have never imagined or come up with the look that she did,” says Singleton of Gin Braverman. “She’s super creative, and we are really happy with the work she did.”

    The lobby is very chic indeed, but not in a nouveau riche sort of way; it’s elegant, yet comfortable. Moody greens, chestnut browns, and golds in textures spanning velvets to tweeds beckon guests to settle in and enjoy libations from the hotel’s new Pearl Bar and Restaurant. Just off the lobby, an enclosed billiards room — that doesn’t require a reservation — draws those looking for a place to wait out rush hour traffic or host a small gathering.

    The Instagram-worthy lobby, billiards suite, and gorgeous events terrace beg for photo-ops — in fact, it’s encouraged. General manager Lauren Beiten was plucked straight from Austin’s very vibey Hotel Van Zandt and loves that visitors of “The Sam” bring that same type of energy and enthusiasm to the hotel. In an unintentional nod to Hilton, there is a whimsical tapestry in the lobby that functions as a perfect backdrop.

    From a full wall of intimate, carved-out nooks, to large sectional seating and low-slung cocktail tables for two, there is a spot to accommodate groups large and small. Having a solo coffee break? Disappear into one — or many — of the interesting coffee table books artfully stacked throughout the space.

    Overall, Singleton is thrilled with how his almost completely in-house project has turned out. While his hands-on approach may have taken longer than traditional turnkey design projects, “The Sam” was clearly worth the effort:

    “It’s easy to spend a lot of money to find stuff, but what’s hard is to find something nice for a reasonable dollar — but it does take time.”

    The Historic Sam Houston Hotel is located at 1117 Prairie Street. Room rates start at $186 per night.

    Sam Houston hotel lobby

    Photo by Laura Dante

    The lobby offers seating options for groups of all sizes.

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