Oxberry pays HOA dues to get neighborhood support for luxury retail project

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Oxberry Group compensated nearly 200 residents in a deed-restricted neighborhood to approve plans for a high-end shopping center in the Tanglewood area.

The Houston developer donated $100,000 to the Briarcroft community association and paid one year’s worth of HOA dues — about $625 per household — to any Briarcroft homeowner who voted in favor of its Shops at Tanglewood project. It also held neighborhood meetings, sent informational mailers and knocked on doors to get signatures.

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The Strip Center with Offices Above Planned for the Corner of Chimney Rock and San Felipe


Here’s another development that the Oxberry Group has planned: a strip center for the northwest corner of San Felipe and Chimney Rock Rd. dubbed Shops at Tanglewood. The 2-story retail building and its parking lot would go in place of 4 houses that currently occupy the corner east of the Gables Tanglewood apartments…

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Edge Realty


Palaces in the Sky

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This sense of pride in still having the power to transform Houston, and the weight of responsibility that comes with it, seems to be the common thread running through these new projects, big and smaller. Shahin “Sean” Jamea — one half of the brothers behind the Oxberry Group, a homegrown Houston-based development company — feels it with his firm’s new eight-story luxury condominium project, The Mondrian, in the Museum District.

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Behind the deal: New midrise condo project in the Museum District

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Oxberry Group looked long and hard for the perfect location for its latest project: a luxury condominium midrise called The Mondrian.

The Houston developer wanted a corner lot with an unrestricted deed and unobstructed views close to the Texas Medical Center and downtown Houston. Oxberry zeroed in on the Museum District, a booming submarket for multifamily projects. However, with all the competition, the search proved to be quite a challenge.

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Behind the deal: New midrise condo project in the Museum District

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Oxberry Group looked long and hard for the perfect location for its latest project: a luxury condominium midrise called The Mondrian.

The Houston developer wanted a corner lot with an unrestricted deed and unobstructed views close to the Texas Medical Center and downtown Houston. Oxberry zeroed in on the Museum District, a booming submarket for multifamily projects. However, with all the competition, the search proved to be quite a challenge.

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More details revealed for proposed luxury condominium in Houston's Museum District

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Oxberry Group is planning to build The Mondrian at the Museums, an eight-story, 20-unit condominium project at 5104 Caroline St., on site of the former The John C. Freeman Weather Museum. The 13,000-square-foot plot — located on the southwest corner of Caroline and Palm streets — is near the Asia Society Texas Center on Southmore Boulevard.

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Exclusive: Luxe condo to replace former museum in Houston’s Museum District

Oxberry Group is planning to build The Mondrian, an eight-story, 20-unit condominium project at 5104 Caroline St., on the former site of The John C. Freeman Weather Museum. The 13,000-square-foot plot — located on the southwest corner of Caroline and Palm streets — is near the Asia Society Texas Center on Southmore Boulevard.

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Museum District condo tower to replace weather museum

Local developers plan to build an eight-story luxury condominium tower in the Museum District, replacing a shuttered weather museum on a block that has transformed rapidly in recent years from a boulevard lined with historic mansions to one dense with townhomes, mid-rises and high-rises.

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Longtime Houston Museum to be Torn Down for Luxury Condos

Progress waits for no one in Houston. Especially if one happens to be resting on prime real estate. The shuttered Weather Museum, housed in a building that dates back to 1930, is set to become the latest obstacle removed in the race for stylish upscale housing in a still-booming Houston

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