Building Detail - Dynamic

The Star Luxury Apartments at the Historic Texaco Building

1111 Rusk Street, Houston, TX 77002 United States

The Star Luxury Apartments at the Historic Texaco Building

1111 Rusk Street, Houston, TX 77002 United States

Building Area (sf): 476,000

Completion: December 2018


Architect of Record:

HBG Design

Mark Weaver, FAIA, Principal-in-Charge of Design
Janet Smith-Haltom, AIA, Principal-in-Charge (retired)
Geoff Wyonzek, Principal-in-Charge of Project Management
Rob Jurbergs, AIA, Lead Architectural Designer
Steve Trott, AIA, LEED AP, BD+C; Project Architect
Jason Fox, Construction Administration


  • Owner/Client:
  • General Contractor: Provident Realty Advisors Construction
  • Electrical: DePouw Engineering, LLC
  • Engineering:
    Haltom Engineering, LLC
  • Other:
    Lerch Bates Company
  • Photography:
    Peter Molick Photography - Exterior shot (from street)
    Lauren Parsons - All other photography



Designers undertook a vigorous restoration and revitalization effort to convert a long-abandoned, century-old landmark headquarters as a stunning 17-story mixed-use multi-family tower, reconnecting it to the urban fabric as a focal point for downtown Houston’s live-work-play vision.

After oil giant Texaco moved out of its downtown Houston location in 1989, the historic, century-old office building stood vacant for more than twenty years waiting for its next purpose. Engaged by a local developer with plans to reshape the desolate building into a luxury apartment community, designers had a large task ahead of them. Originally designed in Renaissance Revival style with Beaux-Arts accents, The Star incorporates an initial, 13-story structure that opened in 1915, with an addition added in 1938 and a 16-story addition added in 1958. Though mostly gutted over its 30 years of non-use, sitting in dilapidated condition in the heart of central downtown, many historically-significant features were judged to be restorable. Designers worked hand-in-hand with historic regulatory agencies through extensive approval processes in the preservation and sourcing of similar materials to match the original design intent of the building. Creative design by the architects altered the building layout from an office floor plate to apartment units. To accommodate the new use, the team designed an L-shaped 66,000 square foot addition to the back side of the historic building, increasing the overall dimension of the upper floors. This solution was able to increase density and create more efficient use of the land, while maintaining historic integrity.

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