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Royal Oaks Country Club is a country club and subdivision in Houston, Texas, United States, in the Alief community. The country club is located at 2910 Royal Oaks Club Drive,[1] 8 miles (13 km) west of The Galleria.[2] Sunrise Colony Company developed Royal Oaks out of the former Andrau Airpark property.
The country club portion was the first country club built in the Houston City limits in fifty years.[3]
History
editAndrau Airpark closed in 1998. Sunrise Colony Co. developed Royal Oaks Country Club. The company selected the site to develop a community because of the location in proximity to several business districts (it is immediately west of the Westchase business district), The Galleria, entertainment centers, George Bush Intercontinental Airport, and William P. Hobby Airport (via the Sam Houston Tollway (Beltway 8) which runs about a mile east). Builders that agreed to develop houses in the complex include Abercrombie Custom Homes, Charles R. Martin and Associates, Jonathon Custom Estate Homes, King Residential Group, Masterpiece Homes, and McVaugh Custom Homes. As of September 8, 2000 the community developers sold 204 houses, including 34 of the 43 estate houses.[4]
Location and composition
editRoyal Oaks Country Club is in close proximity to Richmond Avenue and Wilcrest Avenue.[3]
The community developers planned to establish 900 single family and estate houses; of the houses 43 were to be estate houses. As of 2000 the prices were to be set between $300,000 and over $3 million. The community offered 26 house designs. The elevations range up to 15 feet (4.6 m).[4] The Royal Oaks community occupies 140 acres (57 ha) of land. The country club portion occupies 10,400 square feet (970 m2) of land. The golf course takes 160 acres (65 ha) of land.[3]
Access to and from the community is controlled by a video-monitored gatehouse, which is staffed 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. A masonry wall surrounds the community.[citation needed]
Demographics
editAs of 2007[update] it was one of several communities that attracted upper income Mexican citizens. Wealthy Mexicans living in Houston prefer to live in gated communities with private security patrols as the environment is similar to that of wealthy neighborhoods in Mexico.[5]
Neighborhood services
editMembers of the community have a subdivision-wide intranet and a fiber-optic network. The community offers executive, golf, sports club and spa, and social club and swim memberships.[4]
Government and infrastructure
editThe Houston Fire Department operates Fire Station 83 Royal Oaks, a part of Fire District 83.[6] Station 83, a three bay station, has an ambulance, an engine, and a squad; the station houses about nine firefighters per each four-hour shift. The area around what is now Station 83 experienced a wave of construction of high density housing, which stressed the existing emergency infrastructure services. The city responded, holding a groundbreaking for Station 83 on October 8, 2002. The fire department assumed ownership of the station on February 14, 2005. On March 2, 2005 firefighters moved into the station. On June 1, 2005 ribbon-cutting ceremony was held.[7]
Houston City Council District F covers Royal Oaks Country Club.[8]
Education
editPublic schools
editFamilies are zoned to schools in the Alief Independent School District. In 2008 John Hansen, an Alief ISD board member and a resident of Royal Oaks Country Club, stated that Royal Oaks was "by far the most expensive real estate in the Alief school district and very few of the children attend Alief ISD schools."[9]
Residents are zoned to:[10]
- Outley Elementary School,[11] with bilingual students zoned to Youens Elementary School.[12]
- Budewig Intermediate School, for regular and bilingual students[13][14] - The 115,849-square-foot (10,762.7 m2) school is named after a firefighter at Fire Station 76, who is an alumnus of Alief Hastings. The cost to build the school was $12,500,000.[15]
- O'Donnell Middle School[16]
All Alief ISD residents are assigned high schools through a lottery. Outcomes include Elsik, Hastings, and Taylor. The district also maintains two magnet schools, Kerr High School and Alief Early College High School.[17]
In 2008 the Alief ISD proposed raising the property tax rate to $1.34 per $100 appraised value, 7.5 cents above the rate for 2007, with an election scheduled for November 20, 2008. A group of homeowners in Royal Oaks named Property Tax Votes Alief Area campaigned against the increase.[9]
Private schools
editAs of 2019[update] The Village School in the Energy Corridor area has a bus service to Royal Oaks Country Club.[18]
Colleges and universities
editThe area is a part of the Houston Community College district. Betty L. Martin of the Houston Chronicle wrote that Alief ISD voters had "overwhelmingly" approved the annexation of HCC into the tax base. The Property Tax Votes Alief Area group has protested that proposal on November 4, 2008.[9]
Parks and recreation
editThe community hosts a 7,033-yard (6,431 m), par-72 Fred Couples signature golf course. In addition it houses a 45,000 square feet (4,200 m2) clubhouse, a sports club and spa complex, a tennis complex, an aquatic center, and a restaurant. The club and spa complex includes another 11,000 square feet (1,000 m2) clubhouse.[4]
Gallery
edit-
Royal Oaks bridge
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Royal Oaks Country Club Amenities and Info". nd. Retrieved July 10, 2011.
- ^ Home. Royal Oaks Country Club. Retrieved on March 6, 2011.
- ^ a b c Rutledge, Tanya. "Fore! First Houston country club in 50 years breaks ground." Houston Business Journal. Sunday April 9, 2000. Retrieved on October 15, 2012.
- ^ a b c d "Royal Oaks Country Club grabs limelight near The Galleria area." Houston Chronicle. Friday September 8, 2000. Retrieved on March 6, 2011.
- ^ Meyer, Eugene L. (2007-09-16). "For Rich Mexicans, Parallel Lives in U.S." The New York Times. p. 1111. Retrieved 2017-07-16.
- ^ "Fire Stations." Houston Fire Department. Retrieved on December 4, 2008.
- ^ "Fire Station 83." City of Houston. Retrieved on May 8, 2010.
- ^ City of Houston, Council District Maps, District F Archived 2012-06-25 at the Wayback Machine." City of Houston. Retrieved on November 5, 2011.
- ^ a b c Martin, Betty L. "Royal Oaks residents protest plan to raise property tax." Houston Chronicle. November 12, 2008. Retrieved on April 3, 2014.
- ^ Map. Royal Oaks Country Club. As of March 10, 2004. Retrieved on December 1, 2018.
- ^ "Elementary School Attendance Zones." Alief Independent School District. 2015. Retrieved on December 1, 2018.
- ^ "Elementary School Bilingual Attendance Zones." Alief Independent School District. 2014. Retrieved on December 1, 2018.
- ^ "Intermediate School Attendance Zones." Alief Independent School District. 2014. Retrieved on December 1, 2018.
- ^ "Intermediate School Bilingual Attendance Zones." Alief Independent School District. 2014. Retrieved on December 1, 2018.
- ^ Martin, Betty L. (2003-07-17). "Namesake for campus a real hero". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2022-09-17.
- ^ "Middle School Attendance Zones." Alief Independent School District. 2014. Retrieved on December 1, 2018.
- ^ "Alief ISD High School Information." Alief Independent School District. Retrieved on February 15, 2017.
- ^ "Bus Services". The Village School. Retrieved 2019-03-30. - Village Bus Routes 2018-2019 (states: "Clubhouse @ Royal Oaks Country Club") and Royal Oaks/Westpark Bus Route