Neartown Houston

[3] Houston's urban real estate boom starting in the 1990s transformed Neartown and significantly increased property values.

The City of Houston's Planning Department refers to Neartown as a mixed-use community.

Montrose has "wound a tortuous course from Silk Stocking and Low Rent and back again.

"[4] In 1997 Katherine Feser of the Houston Chronicle stated that "Montrose [is] not for starving artists anymore".

[5] On June 6, 2006,[6] a teenage MS-13 gang member named Gabriel Granillo was stabbed to death at Ervan Chew Park.

Its design, with arcs of retail space on either side of West Gray Avenue, was considered a model for future development.

[8][10][11] Portions of the historic shopping center were demolished in September 2007 to redevelop the site for bookstore and a parking garage.

[14] The community is within the Houston Police Department's Central Patrol Division,[15] headquartered at 61 Riesner.

[16] The City of Houston purchased the building used for the storefront with federal community development funds.

[27] Since redistricting effective for the 2012 election, Neartown has been redrawn into the Texas 2nd Congressional District, served by Ted Poe.

[44][45][46] All Neartown area pupils are zoned to Lamar High School in Upper Kirby.

Will Jones, which formerly served a section of Neartown,[52] was consolidated into Blackshear Elementary School, a campus in the Third Ward.

[1] The administrative offices of the Houston Public Library are located in the Marston Building in Neartown.

[8][61][62] The City of Houston spent $1.3 million to renovate the Marston Building to accommodate HPL staff.

The River Oaks Examiner is a local newspaper distributed in the community [2][permanent dead link‍].

Legacy Community Health Services [3] and Montrose Counseling Center [4] are located in Neartown.

In February 2000 the park was renamed for Ervan Chew, a Chinese-American Eagle Scout who grew up in the area and won the Silver Beaver Award, which was delivered by Ronald Reagan, in 1986; Chew died at age 42,[67] on January 19, 1999.

The Friends of Ervan Chew Park funded the dog zone, which was dedicated in May 2004.

The downtown Houston skyline, viewed from Montrose
Residential property in Neartown
Shops along Westheimer Road —a major arterial traversing Neartown
Houston Police Department Neartown Storefront
Fire Station 16
River Oaks Station Post Office
The America Tower houses the headquarters of Baker Hughes ; the tower hosted Continental Airlines 's headquarters from 1983 to 1998
Lanier Middle School serves the western half of Neartown
The Eleanor K. Freed Montrose Library of the Houston Public Library
Cherryhurst Park
Metropolitan Multi-Service Center a.k.a. the West Gray Adaptive Recreation Center