Remaking Main Street

Dan Zimmerman, a former Rice football star whose family is known for creative redevelopment in Montrose, is tackling a forgotten corner of Downtown. Will his Main & Co. restoration project, planned as a co-working space, ‘activate’ the area, as he says?

Phoebe Rourke
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Dan Zimmerman kicks up sawdust as he strolls over a sunlit, century-old, herringbone-patterned hardwood floor. Tall, tan and strapping, his longish hair tucked beneath a Patagonia baseball cap, he exudes the chill, California vibe of a pro surfer. It’s only Zimmerman’s calm, measured directives to a construction crew in hard hats, as he juggles phone calls over the shrieks of power saws, that reveal him to be a seasoned commercial real estate veteran, and a rising star of Houston’s development scene.

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Business+Innovation

Houston Saves Sex? Inside the City’s Steamiest Medical Research!

Sexual medicine was once a dirty little secret, considered, at best, a vaguely lascivious pseudoscience about which decent people should only whisper. But times are changing fast, as Houston’s top docs and savviest entrepreneurs lead the world with groundbreaking treatments and promising new research. Here’s the latest and greatest in H-Town sex Rx.

Traci Ling

Editors’ Note: The world has taken renewed interest in Houston and its Texas Medical Center as the global leader in medical research, with many Houston-based experts appearing routinely on TV as experts on the coronavirus — and with multiple possible vaccines in development here. As we reported in our Sexy Issue in summer 2017, H-Town has also been a leader in another area of research and treatment that’s usually only whispered about, sexual medicine, for years.

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Business+Innovation

Of Melodies and Medicine

Therapists at one Houston hospital are proving that music heals — and now even former skeptics are singing a new tune.

Traci Ling
View More: http://traciling.pass.us/citybook--tirr-memorial-hermann

In a small gymnasium at TIRR Memorial Hermann, a 43-year-old patient named Jason, dressed in a Texas A&M t-shirt and gym shorts, sits before a double-headed floor tom drum, held in place by his music therapist Maegan Morrow, who wears a big smile. He is thin, with tattoos on both arms, and radiates tough-guy inner resolve. Slowly, and with some effort, his movement matching the steady beep of a metronome, he leans forward to tap the head of the drum with his fingertips on the “one” of every four beats. For Jason, who suffered a massive stroke while vacationing with his wife in Jamaica, this simple exercise, one of several neurologic music therapy techniques, is gradually helping him regain control of his body.

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Business+Innovation