
With its close proximity to the Galleria, the Medical Center and downtown
Houston, Bellaire is a community prospective buyers find irresistible. Recently
experiencing a building boom, with older homes being replaced with new
construction, Bellaire offers a diversity of residential choices for the new
home buyer. The Bellaire of today is certainly a far cry from the original
two-square-mile parcel bounded by Palmetto, Jessamine, First and Sixth Streets.
Soon after the turn of the century, W.W. Baldwin purchased 97,000 acres of
land known as the DeMoss Ranch; the original townsite of Bellaire was part of
this purchase. Baldwin had no idea his rural setting, which he renamed
Westmoreland Farms, would become a bustling city with 15,000-plus residents.
Bellaire was chartered on June 24, 1918 and no taxes were assessed or
collected during the citys earliest years. The only compensated employee was
the marshal, whose salary was funded by fines levied on the owners of straying
cattle! U.S. Census figures reported 26 homes in Bellaire in 1919. By 1929,
there were 75, increasing to 330 by 1939, when the city adopted its first zoning
ordinance. A burst of growth
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followed and, by 1950, there were over 3,000 homes
with that number doubling during the next ten years. Bellaire's physical
boundaries were gradually extended, one-half mile at a time. During 1949, the
city of Houston annexed the land on three sides of Bellaire and West University
formed the fourth boundary, thus eliminating any possible plans for Bellaires
future expansion.
The construction of Loop 610 had a significant impact on Bellaire. The Loop
split the city into an east/west division, altered traffic patterns permanently
and, between 1962 and 1968, displaced 250 homes. Since 1939, the issue of zoning
has been a controversy between residents who favor business expansion and those
who want to retain Bellaires identity as a residential community within the
expanding Houston metropolis.
One thing all residents agree on is that Bellaire is a grand place to live.
Quiet neighborhoods, excellent libraries, parks and recreational facilities,
award-winning schools, and quality city services make Bellaire one of Houstons
best values. When the city changed its long standing no-growth building permit
process in the 1980s, a building boom occurred. Builders flocked to Bellaire and
purchased small, post-World War II housing to tear down and rebuild. The result
is a divergence of architectural styles with spacious homes on large lots.
Bellaire combines the charm and ambiance of a warm, small-town setting with
extraordinary amenities, big city conveniences, and an accessible location.
Residents agree that Bellaire is truly an outstanding community in which to
raise a family!
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