USA TODAY US Edition

COMPANIES PICKING UP THE PIECES IN HOUSTON

Road back from Hurricane Harvey has begun and will take weeks, if not months

- Roger Yu @ByRogerYu USA TODAY

Amid piles of wet drywall and ruined electrical systems, Houston businesses are inching back to normalcy.

Thousands of companies affected by Hurricane Harvey are tearing down walls and doors, installing dehumidifi­ers, shuffling work shifts, fortifying secure Internet connection­s for people who work remotely and pooling funds to help colleagues.

The recovery work is far from smooth, and tasks such as negotiatin­g with insurance companies, finding enough money for repairs and dealing with traumatize­d, noplace-to-go employees will take weeks, if not months. Many small business owners without flood insurance, in particular, are possibly looking at years of debt and bankruptci­es.

Still, the mood in Houston’s business corridors, like the weather, has lifted, says Bob Eury,

“We’re open for business. I want to make that clear.” Bob Eury, president of Central Houston, a non-profit group that plans business developmen­t in the city

president of Central Houston, a non-profit group that plans business developmen­t in downtown Houston, which daily sees about 150,000 workers. “It’d appear that most employers in downtown are back up and operating,” he said Thursday. “It feels like a normal day today. We’re open for business. I want to make that clear.”

The cycle of destructio­n and recovery will replay in much of Florida in the coming weeks as homes and businesses affected by Hurricane Irma also begin to dig out. While Texas and Florida differ in industries, they are among two of the nation’s largest and most economical­ly influentia­l states. And the pace of their recovery could have significan­t consequenc­es for the broader national economy.

Energy is Houston’s primary economic engine, with many oil companies, refineries, pipeline operators and oil rig equipment makers based in the region. But it’s also home to some of the world’s most renowned hospitals

and a thriving aerospace corridor, thanks to a sizable presence of the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion.

The gross domestic product of the Houston–The Woodlands– Sugar Land metropolit­an area was $503.3 billion in 2015, the fourth largest of any metro area in the U.S., according to government data, so it’s important to the nation that companies and people get back to work as quickly as possible.

After Harvey struck the region, roughly 27% of all leasable space in Houston, including apartments, could be flooded, or about 600 million square feet, estimated CoStar Group, a commercial real estate informatio­n firm. About 70 million of it was office buildings, including low-rise structures.

Damage from Harvey would likely reach $150 billion to $200 billion, Moody’s Analytics estimated.

Buffalo Bayou, the slow-moving river that stretches through downtown, overflowed after days of rain, flooding the theater district and other parts of downtown.

Just two blocks from the Bayou, Alley Theatre, an award-win- ning indoor theatre in downtown, was still digging out from 8 feet of water that ruined its basement stage, Neuhaus Theatre. The smaller of Alley’s two stages, Neuhaus seats 310 and features a variety of plays and musicals, such as Broadway hit Hand to God and David Sedaris’ The Santaland Diaries.

Water — or more accurately, a black mixture of chemicals, sewage and water — has been pumped out, having left about $15 million of damage. But also destroyed in the basement are five dressing rooms and most of its 100,000 props that were collected over 70 years, says Dean Gladden, managing director of Alley Theatre.

Two blocks northeast, Houston Ballet was dealing with its own remediatio­n problems. Two of its dance studios were submerged with 3 inches of water.

And three different crews weaved through the facility to remove sheet rock and the thick flooring made especially for jumping dancers.

About 7 miles south of the ballet company, crews at MD Anderson Anderson Cancer Center, whose main lobby was drenched, deployed dehumidifi­ers and are using infrared cameras to identify unseen wet spots.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ALLEY THEATER ?? Workers begin cleaning up Alley Theater in Houston, which was heavily flooded after Hurricane Harvey.
PHOTOS BY ALLEY THEATER Workers begin cleaning up Alley Theater in Houston, which was heavily flooded after Hurricane Harvey.
 ??  ?? Alley Theater had more than 8 feet of water in one of its theaters after enduring Hurricane Harvey.
Alley Theater had more than 8 feet of water in one of its theaters after enduring Hurricane Harvey.
 ?? HOUSTON BALLET ?? Workers begin the long process of cleaning up and repairing facilities at the Houston Ballet after Harvey.
HOUSTON BALLET Workers begin the long process of cleaning up and repairing facilities at the Houston Ballet after Harvey.

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