Admission is $10 per person for the general public ($7 for Preservation Houston members and students.) Children 11 years old and under are admitted free. Advance ticket purchase is required. Reservations are offered on a first-come, first-served basis. We are not able to accommodate walk-ups the day of the tour. There are no refunds for tour reservations. Registrants will receive parking and check-in information via e-mail. In the event of inclement weather that prevents the tour from being offered as planned, we will notify registrants as far in advance as possible about their options to attend a rescheduled tour or transfer their reservations to another Preservation Houston tour.
https://www.preservationhouston.org/calendar/2024/10/13/midtown-architecture-walkThe area now known as Midtown originally developed as farmland on the outskirts of Houston, then was transformed into the upscale South End residential district as the city expanded to the south around the turn of the 20th century. Over the years, South End residents moved to newer suburban neighborhoods and their grand homes were demolished to make way for office and retail buildings, apartments and parking lots.
A few remnants of the old South End survive today, including a handful of homes and neighborhood institutions such as Trinity Episcopal Church, the former South End Junior High (later San Jacinto High School and now Houston Community College’s Central Campus) and Congregation Beth Israel’s 1925 temple (now HCC’s Heinen Theatre). Today the neighborhood also features office and apartment buildings built in the first half of the 20th century; remnants of Main Street’s pre-World War II retail strip; and prominent new projects such as MATCH, the Midtown Arts & Theater Center Houston.
Our 90-minute, docent-guided walking tour explores the neighborhood’s history, visiting some sites that are reminders of South End glamour and others that show how Midtown is transforming into a modern urban residential and cultural center.