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Bryan-College Station Boom

3 new reasons to visit this booming Texas college town

Kristin Butler
Nov 30, 2016 | 11:35 am

Three unique hotel concepts are coming to Bryan-College Station, establishing the area as a destination way beyond Texas A&M University.

Cavalry Court opened its doors on November 18, and two more luxury hotels will grace the emerging Lake Walk town center by spring 2017. The pedestrian-friendly enclave full of restaurants and retail is the epicenter of the 200-acre, mixed-use Atlas and Traditions community, home to corporate campuses for the growing biotech industries. The wellness-focused community offers beautiful outdoor spaces, including a 5-acre lake, waterfront park, and hiking trails.

The Stella, a four-star boutique hotel, broke ground in August 2015 and is expected to open its doors in March 2017. The hotel is minutes away from the acclaimed Traditions Club, featuring the Jack Nicklaus-designed championship golf course, and will anchor Lake Walk and Atlas.

The full-service, 176-room hotel will offer extensive meeting space. “What really sets us apart is our backyard area. We’ve got quite a large area that is available for event space. You can have an indoor/outdoor event,” said Spencer Clements, president of William Cole Companies, developer of the Atlas community.

The hotel’s seasonally driven restaurant, Campfire, takes inspiration from Czech cuisine popular in the Brazos Valley, as well as local farms and ranches, Clements said. Tucked around the corner from Campfire will be a yet-to-be-named craft cocktail bar.

Specialty coffee roaster, POV, will sell caffeinated beverages, kolaches, and grab-and-go sandwiches by day, and offer cheese, charcuterie, beer, and wine by evening. And the hotel's resort-style pool experience includes a pool bar, the Watershed, and poolside cabanas with TVs and lounge chairs.

The Stella’s interior and guestrooms will be designed by Design Duncan Miller Ullmann, the firm responsible for the look of Hotel ZaZa in Dallas and Houston. The sleek design will appeal to both "a 22-year-old and an 82-year-old," Clements said. "The 22-year-old has to think it’s cool; the 82-year-old has to know how to use the room."

In addition to The Stella, two hotels with creative concepts are going up on University Drive, directly across from Texas A&M.

The retro military-inspired Cavalry Court, now open, is the second of the Court concepts, the first being Lone Star Court at The Domain in North Austin. Cavalry Court is a throwback to the roadside hotels of the '50s and '60s. It pays tribute to the Texas A&M Cavalry and the Corps of Cadets, as well as the bygone era when Texas A&M was the only attraction at its railroad stop.

At Cavalry Court, the courtyard takes center stage. “Everything is centered around a courtyard with fire pits, a pool, and poolside cabanas, each with big screen TVs. There’s live music at the outdoor bar,” said Lydia Godfrey, director of sales and marketing for Valencia Group, which manages both Cavalry Court and The George.

Its neighbor, the more traditional, sophisticated hotel concept, The George, honors all the famous Georges of the world — locally, George H. W. Bush, as well as George P. Mitchell, the distinguished petroleum engineer and graduate of Texas A&M University. The George’s whiskey bar, 1791, pays homage to the year of the whiskey tax rebellion under the leadership of George Washington. The hotel’s restaurant is named Poppy, which is what Bush’s grandchildren called him. His signature is the Poppy logo.

Cavalry Court started accepting reservations in November, and The George is slated to open in spring 2017.

A guestroom at The Stella.

The Stella hotel College Station room
Rendering courtesy of The Stella
A guestroom at The Stella.
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Applause for Austin

Austin named the No. 9 best city for families in new report

Kristina Rowe
Nov 2, 2022 | 9:01 am
Fortlandia
Photo by Brian Birzer
Mid-size cities dominated the list, and Texas snagged five of the top 20 spots.

Here's good news for the 20 percent of Austin families who are raising children: A recent report names the Capital City one of the most family-friendly places in the United States.

In StorageCafe's recent analysis of 100 large and mid-size cities to raise a family, Austin places at No. 9 overall. StorageCafe, an online platform that provides storage unit listings across the nation, evaluated 29 factors including public school rankings, childcare cost, neighborhood safety, and community amenities to determine the best cities to live in for families with children.

Austin ranked second for public school ratings, and touted a mid-range affordability factor, with child-care costs rated as “moderate.”

"As one of the favorite moving destinations in the U.S., Austin’s real estate scene is by no means cheap, but compared to other buzzing urban hubs, it still provides access to comfortable living," the report says.

"Zooming in specifically on the cost of homes, prices are in fact above average, hovering at about $642,000. However, family incomes are some of the most generous on our list ($121,000/year), thanks, in part, to Austin’s status as the tech and innovation hub."

Mid-size cities dominated the list, and Texas snagged five of the top 20 spots.

At No. 1 is the Dallas suburb of Plano, which earned outstanding grades in the area of education. Of the cities considered, Plano’s public schools were rated the highest, and the city claims a 96 percent graduation rate.

Another factor that raised Plano’s profile is affordability. While home prices are above average in Plano ($533,000), the median income ($116,000/year) is higher, as well. Healthcare availability was another factor, with Plano boasting the second highest number of healthcare establishments per capita.

“Plano has long been recognized as one of the country’s most family-friendly cities. We’re proud to offer all the amenities families seek in a place to live – a top-tier education system, a reasonable cost of living, a fantastic parks system, all in a safe and clean environment," says Mark Thompson, executive director of Visit Plano.

Coming in at No. 10 overall is Lubbock, which ranked 25th in public school ratings and ranks among the lowest prices for groceries, childcare, homes, and apartment rent.

El Paso and Laredo, with overall rankings of 12th and 15th, also offer low cost of living, although it’s offset by lower median income. Public education in both cities was rated in the top third.

Judging by this report, it looks like bigger cities aren’t necessarily better for families with children. San Antonio (55), Fort Worth (56), Dallas (63), and Houston (69) ranked in the bottom half of the 100 cities considered.

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Staying Put

New brewpub puts down roots in Austin's busy Rainey Street District

Hannah J. Frías
Nov 1, 2022 | 3:05 pm
Stay Put Rainey Street
Stay Put
The Stay Put is slated to open in the Rainey Street District on November 17.

A new watering hole is headed to one of Austin's busiest food and drink destinations. Slated to open in the Rainey Street District on November 17, the Stay Put will offer plenty of reasons to do just that, inviting guests to settle into its comfortable neighborhood environment with beer brewed onsite, draft cocktails, and a dog-friendly patio.

With a combined indoor-outdoor square footage of 3,043, two separate bars will help separate the space into more intimate, individual settings. The indoor area will be the most intimate of the two, featuring a 46-seat oak bar; hand-built communal tables, and locally sourced taxidermy and tchotchkes for a “Cowboy Kitsch” vibe. Outside, the relaxed, 102-seat patio will include a satellite bar and shade from a 120-year-old pecan tree as an oasis from the busyness of Rainey Street.

Backing the project is Los Angeles-based hospitality company Pouring with Heart, which is quickly expanding into Texas markets. The team worked with local architect Scott Magic of Magic Architecture to oversee the restoration of the 1921 single-family bungalow, which is listed under the National Register of Historic Places.

Overseeing operations is general manager Amanda Carto, who brings over a decade of bar management from beloved Austin establishments such as Half Step and Nickel City. Working alongside Carto on the brewpub's small batch brewery system will be head brewer Kevin Lindsey, whose time at Asheville, North Carolina's Wicked Weed Brewing Pub led him to several national awards such as the Great American Beer Festival and US Open Beer Championship.

According to a release, the Stay Put's "10-barrel premier stainless system features state-of-the-art touch screen control panels and high efficiency temperature controls, which will serve up a wide range of beer styles directly off of the brite beer tanks, with influences from Czech, German, and Mexican style lagers that pay homage to those unique brewing traditions."

In total, the bar will feature 16 taps with a mix of Stay Put house brews and guest brews, and a robust draft cocktail list will round out the bar menu with "crushable, updated classic cocktails like Hibiscus Ranch Water," seasonally-driven ingredients, and a spirit list highlighting local distilleries.

“The Stay Put is focused on becoming a consistent cornerstone in a fast changing Austin," says Carto in the release. "Our team consists of dedicated ambassadors to Austin. Most of our crew are Rainey Street veterans or born and raised in Austin who have seen the street develop over time who know how to serve up Texas hospitality to locals and visitors alike. We’re beyond excited to grow The Stay Put into a new gem on Rainey Street."

The Stay Put will be open seven days a week: Monday through Wednesday from 3 pm-12 am; Thursday through Saturday 12 pm-2 am; and Sunday from 12 pm-12:30 am.

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Reading Gone Rogue

Ever-popular East Austin Lit Crawl sets the scene for Texas Book Festival

Brianna Caleri
Nov 1, 2022 | 1:33 pm
Book and spilled drink
Photo by Alice Pasqual on Unsplash
Lit Crawl Austin is a free spinoff event of the Texas Book Festival on November 5.

Austinites crawling through that last book they picked up (you had such high hopes, and yet…) have a chance to renew their vigor for reading on Saturday, November 5.

Lit Crawl Austin, a free spinoff event of the Texas Book Festival, will take participants through a series of locations where they’ll enjoy the literary equivalent of a session IPA: a short story, a conversation, perhaps even an actual beer with a new bookish friend.

The crawl calls this its “12th year of irreverent literary programming,” which ranges from straight-up silliness to political activism, culminating in a closing celebration dedicated to banned books. Four locations — Vintage Bookstore and Wine Bar, Easy Tiger on East 7th Street, Hillside Farmacy, and Saddle Up — host at least two events each across the series, lasting four-and-a-half hours from start to finish.

The adventure begins at 5:30 pm at Vintage Bookstore and Wine Bar, with a happy hour and a recording of Hopeton Hay’s Diverse Voices Book Review podcast by KAZI 88.7 FM. The crawl closes at Saddle Up, where Tony Diaz, author of The Tip of The Pyramid: Cultivating Community Cultural Capital and leader of Librotraficantes (members of a movement of “book traffickers”), has curated a collection of words from banned books and the readers they informed and inspired.

There’s no shortage of readings at the Texas Book Festival, so the Lit Crawl offers some more improvisational events. A live episode of the podcast Literary Death Match, at Easy Tiger, pits four authors against each other in a twist on a traditional reading event interrupted by critiques and comedy. Hillside Farmacy hosts a large-scale, live version of a common writing exercise, passing a paper between participants writing one line at a time. At Saddle Up, a storytelling event inspired by The Moth asks authors at the festival to speak extemporaneously on the theme “On the Edge of Dreams.”

Unfortunately, since there is some overlap, crawlers will have to make a choice between some of the scheduled events. However, there are only 10 events, and since some are recordings, they will still be available after the festival ends. As any crawl would imply, the venues are also fairly close to each other; three of the venues are lined up within a third of a mile, with Easy Tiger about half a mile south.

More information about the Lit Crawl, including a full schedule and event descriptions, is available at texasbookfestival.org. The Texas Book Festival is also free to attend.

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