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Volume 14
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Number 2
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FEBRUARY 2017
Cold for a cause
Starting strong
Ed Newby, left, has created a charity to help cancer-stricken children in the Houston area.
The staff of Luxz Painting and Design is enjoying its early success as it looks to grow.
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resented with a chance to help out local children, Ed Newby has gone above and beyond to create Operation Snowstorm. Newby is the owner of All Star AC and Heating Services, and in 2015 after hearing about a local Cypress, TX child who was suffering from a rare, terminal childhood cancer called rhabdomyosarcoma, he came up with an idea. “On this particular incident, I have four kids of my own, it kind of pulled at my heart strings,” Newby said. “I wanted to think of something to do. It was a hot day in July, maybe over 100 degrees. My daughter said ‘Gosh, it is hot out. I wish it would snow here.’ That light bulb came on. We make it cold inside, why can’t we make it cold outside?”
And that’s what he did. Newby created something kids in Texas rarely get to see – snow. He got 10,000 pounds of ice and put it through an auger and a blower to create a snowstorm. “The girl fell in love with it,” Newby said. “It was a magical day. She didn’t really have any issues that day. She kind of forgot what she was going through. “Maybe three or four days after Christmas, she passed away. It completely tore me in half. I wasn’t expecting it and I got to spend so much time with her that it hurt. I spent Christmas thinking of what I could do to make things better. New Year’s Day, I woke and thought we should do this for another family. That’s continued on Page 13
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fter moving to Texas in 2012, Eddie Torres’ company, Luxz Painting and Design, is taking off. Torres started to really invest in the business last year and has already seen the impact. “I wanted to make everything legit,” Torres said. “The trucks, uniforms, registering the company and all the backend marketing started in 2015.” Luxz specializes in painting but its other services include wall covering installation and removal and home design. The success has led to awards in just a year. ““Honestly, it’s because of our work ethic and quality of work. I don’t feel like there’s a lot of companies out there that can match our work ethic 20 months into their business,” Torres said. “When we
joined Angie’s List last year, and at the end of October, we were able to get that Super Service Award which put us into the top five percent of painters in Houston. This year, we were awarded the same award for painting, dry walling and pressure washing.” Torres sold his restaurant in southern California before going to work with a friend in the painting business. He started off sanding baseboards and working on projects such as the Valley View Casino, Hilton Anaheim and Westin Galleria. “My history was doing all those jobs, and now I do all the Extended Stay America Hotels in the majority of Texas,” Torres said. “We do work for them as far as drywall and painting. We’ve been continued on Page 13
Aviation school takes off
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tudents in the Houston ISD who want to take to the skies have a unique opportunity to learn just how to do that with the district’s Sterling Aviation High School. Replacing facilities that were built in 1965 with a brand new $67.5 million facility, funded as part of the voter-approved 2012 Bond Program, students returned to a state-ofthe-art school in January. With Cadence McShane as construction manager-at-risk, the new building is built to accommodate 1,600 to 1,800 students and supports the latest technology. The facility includes over 252,000 sf of new tilt-wall construction on a 22.5-acre site and features a massive airplane hangar, which serves as the centerpiece of both the school and its focus on aviation science. Lined with large viewing windows and surrounded by career and technology education classrooms, the hangar serves as a flexible learning space where students can work on airplanes
and their engines — both individually and in large and small groups. The campus also includes state-ofthe-art science labs, flexible classroom spaces, and several learning commons areas, each of which serves as a sort of modern, high-tech library. Also highlighted is the school’s learning stairs, which serves not only as a staircase, but also as a flexible learning space for small groups or impromptu lectures. Additionally, the dining commons opens to the main hallway and features flexible seating to provide space for small groups and project-based learning throughout the school day. Challenges with the project included scope to budget adjustments. Cadence McShane provided extensive preconstruction coordination with the owner and architect to develop design modifications, such as converting to a tilt-wall Sterling Aviation High School students returned from the winter break to this gorgeous new facility built by Cadence McShane.
continued on Page 13