ISSUE NO. 4 FEATURES
QUARTER 4
2017
LOCAL HISTORY
CABOOSE
Trey provides information on our city’s oldest house.
Trey gives us some timely updates on our caboose restoration.
Ne ale Hou se: Endangered spe cie s
FULL STEA M A HEA D
BALLI’S RESTORATION RESUME CONTINUES TO GROW BY TREY MENDEZ The latest addition to Brownsville’s growing list of restorations can also be considered a rescue operation of sorts. Having sat vacant for some time, the building at 902 E. Adams had the good fortune of falling into Fernando Balli’s able hands this past summer. Coincidentally, Balli, a contractor and real estate investor, did not know the history of the structure until well after he purchased it. A plea for research assistance to Stephen Fox, the well-known architectural historian and lecturer at the Rice School of Architecture, resulted in Balli learning more than he could’ve ever expected. According to Fox, the building was built in 1893 and originally known as “El Alamo”, the Lucio Bouis and Brother Store. Other than housing a store, “El Alamo” served as a residence for Lucio Bouis-Alcala (1863–1908) and his second wife, Mary O’Brien, whom he married in 1898. Fox believes that there is a very real possibility that it was designed and built by S.W. Brooks, the architect and builder who is responsible for many of Brownsville’s other late 19th century treasures. Very few individuals possess the combination of experience and vision held by Balli, who has previously restored his 1920s-era residence on Palm Blvd., and the Tamayo Store on E. Madison St, another late 1800s border brick gem. While he works on “El Alamo,” Balli is also busy working
El Alamo Building at 902 E. Adams.
on the former Laytons Grocery Store at 540 E. Monroe, and a small 1950s bungalow on Ringgold St. Asked what convinced him to buy “El Alamo”, Balli said that he truly believed that he could save it and make it better, improving downtown in the process. As part of the restoration of the building, Balli and his skilled band of “maestros”, led by Pedro Rocha, have removed the interior partitions and additions, replaced the majority of mortar on the interior brick and have peeled back portions of the exterior stucco façade that was added onto the building, likely more than a half century ago. Fortunately, the