Mr. Bean

New York transplant Jason Giagrande’s first H-Town location of The Roastery is hot — and a second is brewing.

Phoebe Rourke

Inside a hip Montrose hangout, New York restaurateur Jason Giagrande, 38, takes a sip of his chilled mezcal and answers the question he often gets asked about his new venture: Why Houston? 

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Business+Innovation

The Entrepreneurs

She’s a next-wave fitness pro. He’s a seasoned impresario. Together, the Van Deldens own three of the city’s most buzzed-about new haunts.

Jhane Hoang
JH1_9042

Nightlife impresario Darren Van Delden, 41, and his fitness-guru wife Anna, 30, are such a preternaturally handsome and successful couple that it almost seems like they’ve been willed into being by the invisible hand of a stock-photo god. Not to mention they’re charming, warm and thoroughly likeable.

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Business+Innovation

Man of the ‘House’

Through a sometimes rocky half-century relationship with Houston, architect Philip Johnson designed the city’s most famously restrained modern mansion and its most imposing Reagan Era skyscrapers. A new book details how an erudite New Yorker made an indelible mark deep in the heart of Texas.

Philip Johnson

Philip Johnson, the late icon of modern and postmodern architecture whose many feats include New York’s Lipstick Building, gave Houston its design pedigree. He contributed such buildings as Williams Tower and the University of Saint Thomas’ Chapel of Saint Basil. Now, in an exhaustively detailed new biography — The Man in the Glass House, whose title references Johnson’s famous home and masterwork in Connecticut — author Mark Lamster traces Johnson’s rise, and how Houston luminaries such as Gerald Hines became his most important patrons. 

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Business+Innovation