Within the celebrated Houston Museum of Natural Science in Hermann Park, the Cockrell Butterfly Center is a soaring, three-storey glass-walled rainforest conservatory inhabited by some two thousand free-flying butterflies of around sixty species drawn from rainforests around the world. The centre, which opened in 1994 thanks to a generous gift from the local Cockrell family, is one of the largest tropical butterfly habitats in the United States and a much-loved fixture for visitors to the museum.....
In the Upper Kirby neighbourhood, the Color Factory is an immersive walk-through experience that turns colour itself into the subject of an entire museum. The Houston outpost, which opened in autumn 2022, joined sister venues in New York and other American cities operated by an independent design company that began as a pop-up project before evolving into the polished, ticketed art-experience model that has become a fixture of the immersive-attraction movement. The visit unfolds along a self-pa.....
Stretching across some four hundred and forty-five acres between the Texas Medical Center and the Museum District just south of downtown Houston, Hermann Park is one of the most heavily visited parks in Texas and a cherished centrepiece of city life. The park was created in 1914 on a tract of land donated to the city by the developer and philanthropist George H. Hermann, whose vision was to create a major public park in a city whose rapid growth had left few large-scale green spaces. The park's.....

In the Museum District of Houston, the Holocaust Museum Houston is the fourth-largest Holocaust museum in the United States and one of the most significant centres devoted to remembrance, education and human rights in the South. Founded in 1996 by a coalition of local Holocaust survivors and community leaders, the museum operates in a thoughtfully redesigned and expanded campus that reopened in 2019 following a 33.7 million dollar transformation that more than doubled the museum's exhibition spa.....
In the Museum District just south of downtown Houston, the Children's Museum Houston is widely regarded as one of the finest children's museums in the United States. The museum was founded in April 1980 by a small group of dedicated parents and educators and has grown into a 90,000-square-foot facility that welcomes more than a million visitors each year, making it among the most heavily attended children's museums in the country. The museum's twelve permanent and rotating galleries are designe.....
Tucked into the western edge of Hermann Park in central Houston, the Houston Zoo is one of the most popular zoological gardens in the United States and one of the most visited in Texas, welcoming more than two and a half million guests each year. The zoo traces its origins to 1922, when an American bison and a single albino raccoon arrived at the park, with the first dedicated zoo facilities following on the same site over the next several years. The non-profit Houston Zoo, Inc. has operated the.....
In a striking former arena complex just south-west of downtown Houston, Lakewood Church is one of the largest single-congregation churches in the United States and the home base of the celebrated televangelist Joel Osteen. The non-denominational evangelical Christian congregation traces its founding to May 1959, when Joel's father John Osteen began a small church in a converted feed store on the city's east side, growing the congregation steadily over the following four decades before his death .....
Named for Don Robey's pioneering Bronze Peacock, the Bronze Peacock Room at House of Blues Houston carries forward one of the most storied names in the city's musical history. The original Bronze Peacock opened in the Fifth Ward in 1946 as the finest upscale club in the neighbourhood, a hub for live music on the chitlin' circuit, and later became the headquarters of Robey's Duke and Peacock record labels, where artists from Clarence Gatemouth Brown to Bobby Bland recorded. The modern room sits .....
In the elegant Montrose neighbourhood about three miles south-west of downtown Houston, the Menil Collection is one of the most architecturally distinctive private art museums in the United States. The museum opened in June 1987 to house the extraordinary 17,000-piece private art collection assembled over five decades by the Houston-based oil-industry philanthropists John and Dominique de Menil. The original museum building was designed by the celebrated Italian architect Renzo Piano with the Ne.....

In the heart of the Museum District just south of downtown Houston, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston is one of the largest and most significant encyclopaedic art museums in the southern United States. The museum was founded in April 1924 as the Houston Museum of Fine Arts in a small William Ward Watkin-designed Greek Revival building (since substantially expanded) and has grown over the intervening century into a sprawling 14-acre multi-building campus covering most of the city block on the weste.....