Check in time: 1:00 PMCheck out time: 12:00 PM. This simple motel in a no nonsense low rise is 13 miles from Downtown Houston and 6 miles from the Gerald D. Basic rooms with exterior entrances have cable TV and Wi Fi access, as well as minifridges, microwaves and coffeemakers. Freebies include continental breakfast and parking. There's an exercise room, an outdoor pool and a hot tub. Hines Waterwall Park. Meeting space is available. William
Discovery Green (16 min.) Park with live music public art restaurants playground pond for kayaking & exercise classes. The Museum Of Fine Arts (13 min.) Distinct campus & sculpture garden with notable art from antiquity to today plus films & programs. Art Car Museum (19 min.) Museum of elaborately decorated cars & contemporary art with a scrap-metal & chrome exterior. Hermann Park (14 min.) Expansive park featuring a golf course Japanese garden a natural science museum & a kiddie train. Memorial Park (12 min.) Expansive city park with lush natural features popular running trail golf course & lots of shade. Buffalo Bayou Park (16 min.) Winding 160-acre green space featuring views of the Houston skyline plus a fountain & a skate park. The Menil Collection (15 min.) Over 16 000 pieces of art & artifacts from the Paleolithic era to the present in a historic space. Downtown Aquarium (18 min.) Sprawling spot for sea life including touch pools shark tank & displays of aquatic ecosystems. Children S Museum Of Houston (15 min.) Bustling family museum with a wealth of hands-on activities such as a Bubble Lab & a Tot Spot. Gerald D. Hines Waterwall Park (10 min.) Park whose centerpiece is a 64-ft.-tall fountain circulating 11 000 gallons of water every minute. Bayou Bend Collection And Gardens (17 min.) American decorative arts & paintings displayed in a historic home set in a serene 14-acre garden. Houston Museum Of Natural Science (15 min.) Museum with dinosaur hall & other permanent exhibits planetarium IMAX theater & butterfly house. Beer Can House (18 min.) Guided tours are given at this folk art house built from 1968 1988 using 50 000 recycled beer cans. |