Texas Company Building, Historic office building in Downtown Houston, United States.
The Texas Company Building at 1111 Rusk Street is a 13-story structure featuring Renaissance Revival architecture built from brick, terra cotta, and Bedford limestone. Today it contains 286 residential apartments and about 21,000 square feet of retail space at street level.
The structure was completed in 1915 as the headquarters for the Texas Company, an oil business. After the company became Texaco in 1959, the building continued serving downtown Houston until a major 2017 renovation transformed it into housing and retail.
The building displays elaborate Beaux-Arts design elements with vaulted arcades supported by Tuscan columns that shape how people move through ground-level spaces. These architectural features create visual interest along the street and remain core to how visitors experience the building today.
The building sits in downtown Houston and is easily walkable, with retail entrances and public passages connecting to street levels. The ground-level arcades and retail areas are open to visitors, though upper floors are residential and private.
The distinctive vaulted arcades were created by the Guastavino Tile Company, specialists in this particular building technique that was celebrated in early 20th-century architecture. Few visitors realize that these ornate passages represent a level of craftsmanship that was highly prized at the time of construction.
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