In the Travel section..... http://www.cnn.com/2007/TRAVEL/DESTINATIONS/02/13/houston/index.html An oil town, refined POSTED: 1:15 p.m. EST, February 13, 2007 By Mario Mercado Travel+Leisure (Travel+Leisure) -- Once known as the land of big oil fortunes, Houston has emerged as the Gulf Coast's cultural capital, with a world-class art scene -- and a slew of hotels, restaurants and shops to match. Stay The Hotel Icon (220 Main St.; 800/970-4266; www.hotelicon.com; doubles from $235), housed in a landmark 1911 bank downtown, is an intimately scaled grand hotel, and ideally located next to a light rail stop. Jean-Georges Vongerichten's restaurant Bank (dinner for two $120), in the hotel's lobby, is a destination in itself. Decked out in nautical blues, greens and whites, the affordable Hotel Indigo Houston (5160 Hidalgo St.; 866/246-3446 or 713/621-8988; www.hotelindigo.com; doubles from $144) opened in June. What you save on your hotel bill, you can spend at the nearby Galleria complex (see Shop below). Also in the area: Hotel Derek (2525 W. Loop S.; 866/292-7100; www.hotelderek.com; doubles from $280), where the vibe is stylish and attractive, and the service gracious and Texas friendly. Up next: the whimsical Hotel ZaZa opens its doors in late June next to the Museum of Fine Arts. (More Houston hotels) Eat Everyone -- Bill Clinton, beautiful twenty-somethings and Houston Grand Opera singers -- beats a path to Hugo's (1602 Westheimer Rd.; 713/524-7744; dinner for two $80) for authentic Mexican (not Tex-Mex) dishes such as duck in red mole sauce and braised beef in green tomatillo salsa. French-born Philippe Schmit prepares updated French classics (magrets de canard with spinach flan) at Bistro Moderne (2525 W. Loop S.; 713/297-4383; dinner for two $120), inside the Hotel Derek. The year-old Gravitas (807 Taft St.; 713/522-0995; dinner for two $85), set in an airy former warehouse, is known for rich dishes, including the don't-miss venison chili with gruyère and crème fraîche, and an extensive wine list. Now in its 26th year, Cafe Annie (1728 Post Oak Blvd.; 713/840-1111; dinner for two $130) is a stalwart of Southwestern cuisine, drawing crowds for its subtle combinations of bold flavors. Shop Big fortunes beget big stores, and the dizzying Galleria (5085 Westheimer Rd.; 713/622-0663) -- chockablock with Neiman Marcus, Saks Fifth Avenue, Tiffany & Co. and over 370 other shops -- is a prime example. On a much smaller scale is the women's collection at Mix (2707 Colquitt St.; 713/522-0606), which includes clothes from Balenciaga, Alberta Ferretti and Alexander McQueen, Bruno Frisoni shoes and Jade Jagger's gem-heavy jewelry for Garrard. A block away, the Moody Gallery (2815 Colquitt St.; 713/ 526-9911) has been a mainstay for emerging and established Texas artists for more than 31 years. In the Montrose neighborhood, Houston's original bohemian enclave, the new Peel Gallery Shop (4411 Montrose Blvd.; 713/520-8122) carries the work of artists, artisans and designers from the city and well beyond its limits. Look for Scrapile tables and trays, which Brooklyn-based designers Carlos Salgado and Bart Bettencourt craft from discarded wood, and an exclusive collection of silk scarves and wraps -- along with pearl-and-silk jewelry -- by Chinese designer Han Feng. Do In a light-filled Renzo Piano building, the renowned Menil Collection (1515 Sul Ross; 713/525-9400; www.menil.org; free admission) houses John and Dominique de Menil's wide-ranging collection of 20th-century and ancient art, with satellite galleries devoted to Cy Twombly and Dan Flavin, the Byzantine Fresco Chapel Museum and the famous Rothko Chapel. The Museum of Fine Arts (1001 Bissonnet St.; 713/639-7300; www.mfah.org), conveniently set along the light rail line, has one of the nation's great encyclopedic collections. On view: "Hélio Oiticica: The Body of Color"; "The Masterpieces of French Painting from The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 1800-1920"; and "The Temptations of Flora: Jan van Huysum (1682-1749)" (opens February 18). The Houston Grand Opera (510 Preston St.; 713/228-6737; www.houstongrandopera.org) is known for commissioning new works and innovative productions. Anthony Freud, the company's general director, marked his debut season with a December production of Humperdinck's classic "Hansel and Gretel," staged and extravagantly designed by puppeteer Basil Twist. Verdi's "Aida" opens April 13.
Man, I really need to get back to Houston. Me and my girlfriend have been trying to plan a trip to some place we have never been before but I just want to go back to H-Town.
And look at that, $79 to Houston from Little Rock via Southwest. I just might have to make that trip.
Where are you seeing this fare? I travel from Houston to Little Rock on business every week on Southwest, and my fare is typically about $220 when buying a week in advance.
theres this going on at the museum of fine arts... The Masterpieces of French Painting from The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 1800-1920 On view February 4 - May 6, 2007 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, is the sole venue in the United States for this sweeping exhibition of French masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The exhibition will present 135 works from New York´s Metropolitan Museum´s treasured collection of French painting. The Metropolitan Museum´s French masterpieces are among the best in the world, and are by the greatest artists active in France between 1800 and 1920, with many, such as Ingres, Corot, Courbet, Delacroix, Millet, Monet, Degas, Cézanne, Renoir, Van Gogh, Matisse, and Picasso, represented by multiple works.
I click on fantastic fares on the home page and then select my destinations. Of course, I looked at fares a month or two in advance not a week. That could still help you though if you wanted to purchase them that far in advance and save yourself a little cash.
That's a nice attempt to boost Houston's tourist dollars, but I doubt that Houston is on anybody's short list for vacation destinations.
Yeah...much less tourists who can afford to pay that much... If I visited Houston, I'd be staying at the Red Roof Inn on Highway Six and eating at Le Madeline...
Haha...AND it's right there on Hwy 6...thanks for the heads up, I love that cheap crap. I have to say though, I'm dying for some tomato basil soup from Le Madeline right now...