Houston Chronicle

Sunday Streets is a sweet retreat

Event supporting small businesses, exercise dubbed ‘amazing’ and ‘unique’ by attendees

- By Andrea Rumbaugh

Three-year-old Daniel Powers galloped his stick horse down the middle of the road. Eight-year-old Dakota Knight jump roped 26 times without stopping. And their parents weren’t worried about the usual hustle and bustle of 19th Street in the Heights.

“Amazing, because normally there’s cars out there,” Dakota said of playing in the road.

Families enjoyed the sunny weather and car-free street at this year’s kickoff Cigna Sunday Streets. In its fifth year, the city of Houston event shuts down streets to provide an opportunit­y for families to be active and support small businesses they may overlook from the confines of a vehicle.

The first event was in the Heights. It next will move to the Third Ward on Emancipati­on Avenue, near the new Emancipati­on Park, on April 22, and then it will be held May 20 on Westheimer Road in Montrose.

In the fall, Cigna Sunday Streets will stop at three new communitie­s: Near North Side in October, Rice Village in November and Kingwood in December.

Cigna has agreed to be the title sponsor for another three years.

“Every Sunday Streets is different than every other one,” said Mayor Pro Tem Ellen Cohen. “They’re unique to the communitie­s they’re at.”

Chelsea Longoria rode a bike as her two sons, Justin, 13, and Braden, 10, rollerblad­ed. She enjoys visiting the different neighborho­ods and not worrying about traffic. Justin likes the food. At one of last year’s events, he recalled a mini pizza. He was enjoying a popsicle Sunday.

“We go to every single one,” Longoria

said.

Julie Caplinger and her husband, Kim Macdonald, gained a new perspectiv­e of Houston after attending Cigna Sunday Streets on Washington Avenue this past fall. They had just moved from Austin and, before attending the event, thought Houston was all about cars and didn’t want pedestrian­s or cyclists.

Macdonald joined Bike-Houston at last year’s event and gained a new appreciati­on for the city.

“I just think they need to do more of it,” he said. “You see people relate to each other differentl­y when they’re not in a huge SUV.”

Melissa Powers, whose son was galloping down the street on a stick horse purchased at Big Blue Whale on 19th Street, agreed.

“It’s a nice way to see the city,” she said. “It’s a cool way to interact with our neighbors and do some local shopping.”

The event brings a new group of people to Jubilee, a boutique selling apparel, accessorie­s and home decor. It has been on 19th Street in various locations for the past 22 years.

In turn, the store provided these new customers with a keg of Miller Lite and rock funk band Lords of Kool.

And for those too busy with the exercise portion of the event — Operation Get Fit was leading line dancing and strength training — Sunday Streets could entice them to return to 19th Street.

“People might not be in a business today,” said Alli Jarrett, owner of Harold’s Restaurant, “but they’re noticing a business.”

 ?? Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle ?? Chris Stephens and Gerald Sampson walk Keely, left, and Daisy on 19th Street in the Heights during the Cigna Sunday Streets event, which blocked motor vehicles from a reserved stretch of street, allowing for walking, cycling and socializin­g.
Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle Chris Stephens and Gerald Sampson walk Keely, left, and Daisy on 19th Street in the Heights during the Cigna Sunday Streets event, which blocked motor vehicles from a reserved stretch of street, allowing for walking, cycling and socializin­g.
 ?? Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle ?? Annie Clayton, 1, rides her scooter along 19th Street on Sunday.
Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle Annie Clayton, 1, rides her scooter along 19th Street on Sunday.
 ??  ?? Amelia Ortiz, 1, enjoys a popsicle at the Heights event.
Amelia Ortiz, 1, enjoys a popsicle at the Heights event.

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