Village Arcade
The Village Arcade Shopping Center is a shopping center in Rice Village, Houston, Texas owned by Rice University.
History
The center was developed in phases in the early 1990s.[1] The buildings of the Village Arcade complex were owned by Weingarten Realty while a subsidiary of Rice University owned the land itself.[2] Weingarten had a ground lease with options to renew the center until 2040.[1]
David Kaplan of Cite wrote in 1996 that the development "has become a lightning rod of controversy, representing either the glories or the perils of progress."[3] Kaplan stated that the Rice Village development paralleled the teardowns of smaller older houses and replacements with larger houses in surrounding neighborhoods.[2]
In 2014 Rice University announced that it was acquiring the Village Arcade shopping center from Weingarten Realty. Rice University opted to buy Weingarten out of its lease, paying $55–60 million. This means the university also owns the property in addition to the land.[1]
Composition
The Village Arcade is a pink brick shopping center.[4] The Village Arcade occupies an area bounded by Kirby Drive, Amherst, Morningside, and University. The development also occupies most of the block bounded by Kelvin, Amherst, Times, and Morningside. Kaplan wrote that compared to other developments in Rice Village, it is a "monolith".[2]
Tenants
As of 2013 it includes tenants such as Banana Republic, The Gap, La Madeleine, and Starbucks.[1]
As of 2001 The Gatsby Social Club, previously the Cody's in the Village, is located on the complex's top floor.[5]
As of 1996 it includes national chains such as Eddie Bauer, Express, Gap, Starbucks, Structure, and Victoria's Secret.[4]
Bibliography
- Kaplan, David (Winter 1996). "The Village" (PDF). Cite. Rice Design Alliance: 16–21. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-04-15.
Notes
- ^ a b c d Sarnoff, Nancy (2014-02-14). "Rice to take control of Village Arcade". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2014-04-14.
- ^ a b c Kaplan 1996, p. 19.
- ^ Kaplan 1996, p. 18-19.
- ^ a b Kaplan 1996, p. 18.
- ^ Lindsey, Craig D (2001-02-08). "Tender Is the Nightlife". Houston Press. Retrieved 2014-04-15.
External links
- Village Arcade Shopping Center
- v
- t
- e
Uptown
- Super-regional enclosed malls
- The Galleria
- Enclosed local malls
- The Shops at Houston Center
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- Bayou Place
- Highland Village
- GreenStreet
- River Oaks District
- River Oaks Shopping Center
Montgomery County
- Super-regional enclosed malls
- Deerbrook (Humble)
- Woodlands (The Woodlands)
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- Market Street (The Woodlands)
- Teas Crossing (Conroe)
Northern Houston
- Super-regional enclosed malls
- Greenspoint
- Willowbrook
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- Houston Premium Outlets (Cypress)
- Northline Commons
- Vintage Park Houston
- Defunct
- Northline Mall
- Northwest
West Houston
- Super-regional enclosed malls
- Katy Mills (Katy)
- Memorial City
- Enclosed local malls
- West Oaks
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- CityCentre
- LaCenterra (Cinco Ranch)
- Marq*E
- Town & Country Village
- Defunct
- Town & Country Mall
and Bellaire
- Enclosed local malls
- PlazAmericas (Sharpstown)
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- Hong Kong City
- Meyerland Plaza
- Rice Village
- Village Arcade
- Defunct
- Westbury Square
- Westwood
Brazoria Counties
- Super-regional enclosed malls
- First Colony (Sugar Land)
- Enclosed local malls
- Brazos (Lake Jackson)
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- Brazos Town Center (Rosenberg)
- Pearland Town Center (Pearland)
- Sugar Land Town Square (Sugar Land)
and Galveston County
- Super-regional enclosed malls
- Baybrook
- Enclosed local malls
- Almeda
- Macroplaza Mall (Pasadena)
- Outdoor/lifestyle
- Gulfgate Center
- The Strand (Galveston)
- Tanger Outlets Texas City (Texas City)
- Victory Lakes Town Center (League City)
- Defunct
- Galvez Mall (Galveston)
- Gulfgate Mall
- Mall of the Mainland (Texas City)
- Palms Center
- Port Holiday Mall (Galveston)
- San Jacinto (Baytown)
29°42′58″N 95°24′58″W / 29.71608°N 95.41621°W / 29.71608; -95.41621