Massage Moguls

After making millions in the energy biz, these Houston entrepreneurs are turning their attention to … your skin!

Jhane Hoang

Sanctuary Spa in River Oaks may be the oldest day spa in the United States. “We were the first in Houston, and we believe possibly the United States, to offer hydrotherapy,” says co-owner Paul Colgin. What distinguishes a “day spa” from a typical spa is the use of hydrotherapy baths as a key component in treatments. Water, it is believed, can heal.

Keep Reading Show less
Business+Innovation

Last Exit to EaDo

Peopled by collaborative young entrepreneurs, funky festival promoters and earnest street artists, EaDo may just become Houston’s answer to trendy Brooklyn districts. But it will have to survive its own good fortune first.

Shannon O’Hara
3g6b7515

Among armchair futurists, East Downtown, or EaDo as it was dubbed after a naming contest in 2008, is Houston’s most talked-about neighborhood. It is a blank slate that could become the city’s coolest enclave. That, or its rising property values and fast track to gentrification could make it more the province of bankers and emptynesters than young urban pioneers. For now, it’s catering to both constituencies, as rival forces contest exactly how the ’hood will be transformed, and who will live and work there.

Keep Reading Show less
Business+Innovation

Brand New ‘Day’

Downtown’s Barbara Jordan Post Office shuttered last year. But when the highly anticipated second iteration of Omar Afra’s Day for Night festival hits there Dec. 17 and 18, the site will once again be — ahem — pushing envelopes.

Laurie Perez
028_laurieperez-com_0340_hirescmyk

MOST MUSIC FESTIVALS follow a simple formula that has changed little since the days of Woodstock: Wrangle some big-name acts, throw up some stages in a big empty field, provide booze, and release as many concertgoers as you can into the space. It’s a strategy that has worked for years, and with the music industry as calcified as it is, it’s often hard for festival producers to make even small changes to that template without facing incredulity from the industry’s “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it” crowd.

Keep Reading Show less
Business+Innovation