Showing posts with label College Station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label College Station. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Days Inn on University Drive East

I realize that taking a picture from the official website of the hotel is a cop-out but on the plus this should last for years after it changes hands in reality, and I don't think I'd get a better shot.

I did want to cover this one as it's part of dismantling the FM 60 page on Carbon-izer, and while I find hotels interesting, there's not a lot to say about this one. 901 University Drive East has been Days Inn by Wyndham College Station University Drive since December 2016. It has been associated with Best Western for most of its existence. From what I can tell it opened in 1983 as The Inn at Chimney Hill (back when Best Western was more an affiliation and not a brand)1 and while it did have an unbranded in-house restaurant serving Chinese food2. In 1986 it was foreclosed on, with the paper3 noting the University Drive East/Tarrow area was hit hardest by the recession. In 1988, the restaurant area was retooled again as Crepe Myrtle Bar (with "fine spirits and authentic country food"). Things didn't change much at the hotel, it was still a Best Western into 2005, though by 2007 it had lost that branding (just The Inn at Chimney Hill) and in January 2008 was rebranded as a Travelodge under then-owner Rossco Holdings (the old Holiday Inn/Forum reopened as such around the same time). By the early 2010s it took the EconoLodge name, by 2015 was branded as "Executive Inn & Suites and as previously mentioned became Days Inn after that.

Just as a side note, the Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant and the Comfort Suites hotel just to the east of this opened in 2005 and 2006, respectively, but since they are the original tenants they won't be covered anytime soon unless there's a really good reason.4

1. As a general rule, even up until around the mid-2010s, the "real" name of the hotel was below the Best Western sign.
2. The Chinese restaurant concept was changed by 1984, ads stopped talking about "authentic Chinese food" and starting talking about "now serving Omaha steaks".
3. "Hotel, shopping center posted for foreclosure". 7/29/86, The Eagle.
4. If, say, you wanted a sponsored post that would be pushed to the top of the site for a few weeks and be part of the permanent archive, the line is open. Advertisers, this means you!

Friday, March 20, 2026

Varsity II Apartments

Varsity II shortly after suffering a fire (The Eagle, 8/20/94).

Located at 100 Jersey Street (later 100 George Bush Drive) and built in 1966, Varsity II Apartments1 was a victim of right of way expansions for the George Bush Drive underpass project, which still has yet to be built. The apartments dropped the name (at least on the front of the building) sometime around the late 2000s and torn down around 2017, but despite their long run there's not a lot I can say about them other than they were just a fixture of Southgate and in the 2000s there was usually some old man at the stoplight impressing passers-by by grabbing the FM marker sign pole and doing horizontal pull-ups.2

The only major story of note I found about the apartment buildings was in August 1994, when 29-year-old Carl Henry Blue bought 50 cents worth of gasoline in a paper cup from the nearby Chevron3 and set his ex-girlfriend, 38-year-old Carmen Richard-Sanders4, on fire, with the resulting fire injuring one other person and doing "extensive damage" to the apartment building. It isn't clear to what extent things happened. The building wasn't torn down and only a few units were destroyed, but all the residents had to move out for a few days, mostly in relation to repairing gas furnaces. Richard-Sanders had to be airlifted to Hermann Hospital in Houston, but it was too late; she died of her injuries within 24 hours. Blue, who had already turned himself in when he caught wind of a manhunt, was charged with felony murder, found guilty, and sentenced to death.5 It was not the only fire at Varsity II over the years, but certainly the most notable one.

1. The question if there was a Varsity I is inconclusive. A few pre-1966 references have a reference to one being near Marion Pugh Lumber Company and having central air, so it's not 303 University and it's not clear if this was one and the same with Varsity II.
2. Bart Braden was his name and attracted a bit of notoriety including a Battalion article written about him. He passed away in January 2026 during the writing of this article.
3. While the Chevron or ownership was not charged in relation to Blue's crimes, it was (and is) against the law to sell gasoline in an unapproved container like a paper cup. Also, 50 cents in the mid-1990s was a significant amount of gasoline, closer to half a gallon...but the cup was probably not filled up to that much.
4. Initial reports put the victim's name as "Carmen Richardson", likely from a communications error.
5. Carl Blue was executed by lethal injection in February 2013.

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Woodstone Shopping Center


They may have been overselling Woodstone, but it was at least unique for its time. (Eagle advertisement, 10/25/1980)
There isn't much left on Harvey Road that I haven't covered yet1 (especially with adding Post Oak Village and Advance Auto Parts last year, and 620 Harvey Road the year before that2, but there were a few things left on the now-removed Harvey Road page on Carbon-izer, most notably, Woodstone Center.

Woodstone's history goes back to 1907, and it wasn't even on Harvey Road. That is when Southern Pacific built a train station in Waller, Texas, and operated until it closed around the mid-1960s. That was in the same era of time when the College Station depot shuttered, the Hempstead-to-Giddings line was abandoned3, and the passenger train industry was on a steep decline. But unlike the fate of the College Station depot (which was later demolished) the Giddings depot was saved and transplanted (cut in two and reassembled, with a large expansion to double the size) to its new location at 815 Harvey Road, with the new name of the C&S Transit Co. restaurant, opening in April 1977 with a large menu of pizza, sandwiches, and pasta dishes.

Between October 1977 and February 1978, the restaurant renamed to "The College Station Depot" and by spring had closed, replaced with another restaurant called Beef & Brew (not related to the similar Beef 'n Brew at Southgate, later on), a steakhouse with complimentary drinks and salad. In late 1979 it became C.K. Krumboltz, another steakhouse, owned by Thomas Nolan4, and by summer 1980, it had changed hands again, this time back to a reincarnation of Beef & Brew (new ownership, looks like). By fall 1982 it was closed once more and by summer 1983 it was Park Avenue Club & Cafe.5 In July 1984, an advertisement for "Malibu Beach" appeared in the Battalion ("We're bringing a little Florida and California to College Station!"), by January 1985 there was an ad in the Battalion for the grand opening of BeZerk (if that's how it was stylized) which mentioned it was "formerly ANX", which means that by 1985 Malibu Beach already came and went. After that, I can't find anything until sometime in 1986 when it became MC2 (that's not a footnote, that's the name of the establishment, as in Einstein's work, which had moved from 109 Walton).6 In November 1986, a fire at MC2 caused extensive exterior damage, which is probably why the current building doesn't resemble an old train station much anymore (it appears to have not been reopened under that name, giving this post a [death by fire] label). In 1987, the building was repaired and reopened as another club, Parthenon, its 11th name in a decade, and briefly Club Fahrenheit in 1990. Despite the numerous names the building had since moving to College Station, in 1990, The Tap opened, and it has been The Tap since.

Moving over to the east side of the complex, 919 Harvey Road was home to Hamburgers by Gourmet, a hamburger restaurant that operated mostly in the Houston area in the 1970s and 1980s (a short-lived "revival", or knockoff, in Nassau Bay notwithstanding). It closed around December 1983 and reopened as Archie's 39¢ Hamburger Place, a restaurant chain founded in Austin a year earlier owned by E.C. "Archie" Archambault of the local Taco Bell restaurants7, which he advertised with. Archie's Hamburgers closed around 1988-19899 and in 1990, the third restaurant opened, DoubleDave's Pizzaworks, its fourth local location.8

This operated until 2005, and by 2006, it was Shivers ice cream and snow cones (it had a Bryan location as well, though the College Station had relocated from Dominik Drive). It closed in 2009 and was quickly replaced by Carroll's Giant Burger (out of Navasota) though that lasted only a few years before being replaced by How Do You Roll?, a fast-casual sushi restaurant (basically you picked ingredients on a sushi roll, much like Subway or Chipotle) chain. I always wanted to try it but in early 2015 the College Station closed, and within two years the entire chain was gone. There was Eskimo Hut following it from late 2015 to January 2019, and in January 2020, the spot reopened as Tacos La Perlita, which it still is.

The rest of Woodstone isn't that interesting, though. The center is designed so there are some exterior facing tenants and others (primarily offices) face inside. Clockwork Games & Events (traditional games like board games and tabletop games, not video games) has been at 903 Harvey Road suite A since 2012 (after being at 913 Harvey G for a few years). At 913 Harvey Road C, a Subway has been operating since 1983 (the second of its type in the area, and one of the few in the state at the time). 907A held Coffee Station since late 1997 until around 2009, a railroad-themed coffee shop with a cool loft area, which was sold and briefly closed for a redecoration and rename to Mugwalls, though that closed for good in 2016. From 1984 to 2012, there was a Rother's bookstore (later known as Traditions) here as well. There are a number of other tenants and addresses here, on Carbon-izer I have hosted a full layout of the place, from Loopnet.

Finally, there are some additional stores that have come and gone from Woodstone...the stuff mentioned here is by no means a complete list. There was The Unicorn & Which Witch?10 (come for the mysticism gifts, stay for Misty the cat), The Cookery (opened 1980), Carroll's Baskets and Wicker (opened 1979, not to be confused with Carroll's Giant Burger)11, The Modern Touch, The Dandylion Dress Shop, and many others over the years. - footnotes - 1. West of Earl Rudder Freeway, at least.
2. At the time, the former Johnny Carino's, and later Anchor Bar, which came and went after just over a year.
3. The line went to Austin. Past Giddings, the rail line exists (unlike east of Giddings, where it's completely gone except for a short segment in Brenham), but the line is railbanked with no freight or passenger activity east of Elgin. It has been recently cleaned up with new signage, though!
4. Nolan does not have a label on this site currently, but has owned a number of establishments including The Peanut Gallery and Piknik Pantry, the latter in its pre-Chinese food early days, and Zacharias' Green House.
5. An application was made as "Confetti's" but I'm not sure if it opened under that name.
6. Currently La Gabriella bakery. That page has gotten a huge overhaul recently but it missed the nightclub there.
7. It's unclear if Archambault owned the chain or not. The articles about the restaurant and its other location in College Station at 310 N. Texas Avenue make it seem that way, and all the remaining restaurants became Archie's Hamburgers before disappearing in the early 1990s.
8. The previous three have been covered by this site...Carter Creek, Northgate, and Southgate.
9. Archambault tried a spin-off restaurant next to Pepe's Mexican Cafe which we previously covered. But by 1990 the Hamburger Place restaurants were gone. The Waco one lingered into the 1990s, though.
10. Not to be confused with Which Wich?, the sandwich shop that has since closed both its university and off-campus location.
11. An ad for The Cookery and Carroll's Baskets and Wicker can be seen here.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Culpepper Plaza's Burger King

Burger King is no more, it's a Chick-fil-A now. (Picture by author, 3/26)

Recently I re-did Culpepper Plaza's article and in the process eliminated 1719 Texas Avenue South, Chick-fil-A, also formerly the site of a Burger King.

Our area has never been much for Burger King. Its first attempt was at 3807 S. Texas Avenue in Bryan back in '69, but it closed in 1977. In comparison, McDonald's first landed in 1973 and it's been expanding since. By 1985, there were four restaurants in operation, and in that year, Burger King decided to try again with another restaurant in Culpepper Plaza. In the next twenty years, however, Burger King never built any other stores in the area, and although Burger King was a common treat on road trips, I don't remember eating here too often. I do remember the Pokémon promotion, which should've been huge if they hadn't been hit with a recall.1 I can't find exactly when it closed (I believe it was late 2006 but it might've been early 2007) there's a gap before the Texas Avenue and Deacon store opened, though it appears to line up with the East 29th and Villa Maria Road East store. Franchisee Shiloh Foods ultimately opened more two more Bryan stores (one of which folded within a few years of opening) before selling out in the early 2010s. I can't remember what the Burger King looked like, I do remember it had wood paneling on the outside but was not the common 2500 Model found in stores built in the 1990s. I've searched around in vain for a picture but you can just barely see it here without the modern paint (so a brown roof, and wood paneling on the right side). In spring 2008, Chick-fil-A replaced it, which at the time was a huge deal. There was only one stand-alone Chick-fil-A (in Bryan) and the only College Station stores was a popular outlet at Post Oak Mall and four "Express" locations on campus (most of which I've covered previously, Ag Café, the MSC, the Underground, and the Commons). Chick-fil-A is still there, of course, but in 2017 upgraded its drive-through (you couldn't park in front of the store anymore) before redoing it around 2023 to a new drive-through lane altogether.

1. I believe I still have my original toy, but it's still near-worthless on the used market.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

980 University Drive East

Grub's space went through several incarnations, and may yet continue to do so (from The Eagle, 4/27/08)

We've covered the restaurants around the fountain (except for Blue Baker/Atami, which are still their charter tenants from almost twenty years ago)—Abuelo's Mexican Food Embassy (now Casa Mangiare), the building that once held Veritas Wine & Bistro, Ben & Jerry's, and It's a Grind (and their successor restaurants), and what was, until recently, Razzoo's Cajun Cafe...plus, the stand-alone restaurant east of it, the old TGI Friday's. Beyond that is 980 University Drive East.

It featured four spaces, with 980A (instead of 100), suite 200, suite 300, and suite 400, and as of 2025 there are two vacant spaces, though most of them have operated in the last twenty years. The first space was originally home to Pei Wei Asian Diner, a fast-casual concept owned by P.F. Chang's China Bistro, operating from late 2005 to August 2019 (Pei Wei closed a bunch of restaurants during this time, likely stemming from being spun off from P.F. Chang's). In late 2021, The Cookshack, a restaurant serving Nashville hot chicken, opened, but it too closed as of November 2025 (seems the whole chain imploded, at least partially). Suite 200 has SportClips (the first local location) since around 2005, nothing dramatic there, suite 300 had Jamba Juice, which closed in November 2023 (I don't think it ever got the new "Jamba" branding).1 It is still vacant to my knowledge. Suite 400 opened in 2007 (maybe early 2008) as Eccell Steakhouse, a new concept by Eccell Group, before it closed in 2010 and became Bodega Coast, a seafood restaurant, trading in the Cafe Eccell-inspired menu for the nearby La Bodega, and that lasted six months before another concept, Knockouts Grill House (I think it was a sports bar) came. By January 2012 it was closed and a few months later, Grub Burger Bar opened. Grub Burger Bar was a relatively successful concept and opened a number of locations all the way to the East Coast, and by the time it was acquired by Hopdoddy in 2018, had 18 locations (several had closed in 2020). Grub doesn't exist as a chain anymore...Hopdoddy rebranded them and probably would've done the same here as it already had a location at Century Square about a mile or so to the west.

What does the future hold for this site? Prognosis isn't looking good, it's 20+ years old, half-vacant, and Hopdoddy is probably letting Grub Burger Bar run down its lease2. This may end up being the first true redeveloped building on the strip, even if many of the restaurants in the center are second-generation.

1. Jamba Juice wasn't new to the area, not exactly. In 1999, they purchased the Zuka Juice chain, which had two locations, one of them part of the Exxon center at Welsh and FM 2818, the other near Best Buy and Office Depot, but these closed in 2001.
2. The other possibility is that it's Century Square they don't want to renew on, and will close down Grub for a new Hopdoddy location. Either way, Grub's future is looking dim.

Saturday, January 24, 2026

Plaza 3 Theatres

Here is the subject of today's post as "The Globe", following its closure as a movie theater. It looked like this when opening but no longer does today. (source).


We've covered a few of the Schulman-owned theaters in town, with almost thirty years of cinema at the Blinn site and the late Campus Theater but one of their theaters didn't operate for very long, the Plaza III at 226 Southwest Parkway East, only operating from August 1985 (first films were Volunteers, Years of the Dragon, and The Return of the Living Dead) to 1991. In 1993, it became The Globe, much to the consternation of the Oak Forest Mobile Home Park, with the residents remembering the loud music of the Edge nightclub in the Winn-Dixie shopping center a few years earlier. The Globe opened with no live music and other limitations, opening in late 1993. Despite that, The Globe soon gained a bad reputation as far as incidents requiring police were involved, and by fall 1994, the nightclub, now named Aftershock, was still giving CSPD problems before closing for good a few months later. (It might have been a TABC license revocation). In 1996, it reopened as HomeStore Furniture, but the furniture store closed less than two years later (it was a one-off operation, not a chain). By the end of 1998, it was back to being a tavern (Rack's Warehouse, a pool hall). Also around this time (maybe early 2000s), the whole area, which had been drawn out as commercial space with concrete driveways, was rezoned as residential and one of these driveways was sealed off from the rest of the development and became a city street (Ashford Drive). After Rack's closed around 2001, it became another nightclub, Time Square, in spring 2004, which did feature live acts, including a weekend of local metal bands in October 2005. In spring 2006, Time Square closed and the building was purchased by Brazos Fellowship as their first permanent building and opening in November 2006, almost two years after the official founding of the church in a living room.

In 2012, the church began a massive remodeling project that demolished the original theater facade for a new addition, with a four-story addition being built around 2018 (which can partially be seen from the Southwest Parkway E. side, for a glimpse, see the post on the Wendy's). It has been almost twenty years since Brazos Fellowship took over the building, and even memories of Time Square become ever-distant.

Friday, January 23, 2026

O'Reilly Auto Parts on University Drive East

O'Reilly Auto Parts and its predecessor has been open here since the Arab Oil Embargo. (Photo by author, 1/2026)

As per standards made in fall 2021, the last time we covered O'Reilly Auto Parts it wouldn't count, but this one does. Opened in 1973 as Hi-Lo Auto Supply #34 (later branded as later branded as Hi/LO Auto Parts), this1 became the first O'Reilly Auto Parts store in College Station (there was also a Bryan store) when O'Reilly bought the chain in 1998, adding around 182 stores to its repertoire2. (O'Reilly certainly grew faster than Hi/LO did...in 1975 O'Reilly had just 7 stores compared to the 34 or so Hi-Lo had, by 1998 they had over 250 stores.

O'Reilly's website includes a picture of a typical Hi/LO store and it is what College Station's store looked similar to. Within a few years of the purchase, it had O'Reilly's branding and color scheme, and remained that way until 2016 when O'Reilly modified the facade to remove the large mansard awning.

1. Located at 210 University Drive East.
2. Hi/LO had 189 stores, but they sold the seven stores in California to Carquest of California, as O'Reilly didn't have any West Coast stores at the time.

Editor's Note: We (the royal we) have been hard at work updating some of the older posts on this site. Most recently (and most importantly), the articles for Former Fitzwilly's and Campus Theater have been upgraded. Nothing too groundbreaking...but perhaps you could throw in something for the site's future development?

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Aggieland Outfitters of Southgate

This building has been Aggieland Outfitters for the last 20+ years but time is running out...

Technically this is not a day later after January 7th's post as I've made a placeholder, something I've done for Numbered Exits.1

The earliest reference I can find for the address (208 George Bush Drive, formerly 208 Jersey Street) is 1962 with the opening of a medical doctor, David J. Shannon with the address being used a few years later for Gala Realty. In 1972, the first convenience store, Sak & Pak, moved in. In 1977, this was replaced with UtoteM (I can't tell if they purchased it or not) and in 1984 was rebranded as Circle K (#3346) as it took over the chain. In 1993 it was sold (by this time the address was 208 George Bush Drive) and became Tropicana Quik Mart (a locally-owned operation)2. It closed in 2000 with Aggieland Outfitters taking over the entire building in 2002 with a large indoor-and-out renovation. This also took over the 210 space. This was the home of Cut-Rate Liquor (later Coach's Cut Rate Liquor—this I DO remember, it was on the left side of the building; the door doesn't even exist anymore). This operated from 1971 to shortly before Aggieland Outfitters took over. It replaced Big G Malt Shop, but I can't find too much on the restaurant, only that it existed in the late 1960s.

Among the new features of the store was a little fenced-in area with a Bevo statue with its horns sawed off and for a decade when A&M left the Big 12 and stopped playing University of Texas, it was replaced with a "Gig'em" statue in a wave of related iconoclasm, but as of summer 2025 the Bevo statue is back. In fall 2023, a new location was built just about three blocks away due to eventual construction at the intersection (most of the other places have been closed or cleared, including McDonald's at Marion Pugh, the Equity office, the Unitarian Universalist church, 101 Grove, a large apartment building that sat on the corner of the street, and a few other houses. Despite that, both stores continue to operate, at least for now.

All photos in this post were taken January 2026 by the author.

The liquor store may have had a pick-up window.
The north side of the building dates back to the opening of Aggieland Outfitters and has faded over the years as murals tend to do. That iteration of Kyle Field, once iconic to College Station, is now just a memory.

This alley area was created when a shed was built behind the store around 2013. Note the cinderblock on the right, which was created on the liquor store side of the building and dates back to that time.

Bevo's back, but that statue isn't the same as the original pre-2012 one.

1. It's a way to fill every day that I haven't made a post with something, and the next one will come on the 23rd.
2. The phone books had been pretty good about when businesses stopped operating, but still listed the Circle K after it changed hands.

Friday, December 26, 2025

Chipotle on University

1984 advertisement celebrating the newest owner at the time.

As I mentioned in a recent post, most of the University Drive part of the FM 60 page has been covered (very unlikely A&M United Methodist Church will be discussed—churches only get on here usually due to special circumstances). Only 815 University Drive has not been covered yet. While the address hosts a Chipotle today, it replaced a gas station that was a "garage"-style gas station, with a full service auto repair center (mechanics, state inspections) but not so much a convenience store (not that Northgate was lacking in convenience stores). The earliest reference I can find was in 1959 for University Mobil at 815 Sulphur Springs Road. The station changed hands a few times (but remained a Mobil) before finally being closed as late as 2002, at which point it was torn down for a Chipotle Mexican Grill. It was perhaps fitting that Chipotle was next to McDonald's as McDonald's corporate owned some 90% of Chipotle at the time, though by the time the College Station store opened in 2003 McDonald's was re-thinking that strategy and by 2006 had sold it off entirely. It retained its original facade until around 2024-2025 when it was changed to reflect Chipotle's current design standards (and the 2009 logo).

Anyway, much like we did last year and the year before that this is the last post of the year. This year, we spiked at over 43k visitors in a single month (August), the busiest time ever (usually this site averages 5000, which jumped up from 2000 a few years ago). Oddly, despite 10k in September, the site cratered to less than 1000 in October, numbers so badly that they haven't been seen since 2011.

As far as top posts go, Former Fitzwilly's takes the #1 spot (it was #3 last year). Skipping sub-pages (the Post Oak Mall sub-pages don't count, though no doubt they were bolstered by the big Post Oak Mall page I made on Carbon-izer), Manor East Mall will take the #2 spot despite the page needing a major rewrite. Going down the list, newcomer Blinn Bryan Campus featuring Schulman 6 takes #3...though I have a feeling that people found it through searches for Blinn and not because of the movie theater. Campus Theater took #4 and Café Eccell's Former Domain takes #5.

This year, more Bryan posts than ever were produced. Of the (numbers from 11/9 here) 50 posts produced this year, almost half were in Bryan. The long gap between the last post and this one proves I can't consistently month after month keep producing content, but that's not what this blog is for. I don't know if I'll be living in the area a year from now. There were times I weren't or got burned out. It's unlikely I'll hit 50+ posts in a year anytime soon, possibly ever, and with 52 posts it's second only to 2013. I'd also like to take the time to share my own personal top five posts, that I think you should check out, with the top 5 starting with my 5th favorite.

5. Wendy's Tiger Town. Wendy's served nachos and pitas in addition to hamburgers, and the signage is still original.

4. Post Oak Village had a spread of several stores, and it hosted a few chain stores over the years, including Color Tile and Catherine's.

3. The Veggie Garden was fun to research. It was a long-standing mystery and while I think that the location is underused, I've always had a bit of an affinity for buildings in that stretch (Barry Pool Co., Sunset Gardens).

2. Finfeather's 7-Eleven. This post allowed me to take another look at the crossing at Villa Maria and Wellborn Road. The underpass is much nicer in many aspects (unless you really wanted to access Finfeather from Villa Maria, and vice versa), but I still sort of miss the old crossing.

1. Winn-Dixie on 29th Street: This post celebrates the other Winn-Dixie and a 20th anniversary of the bankruptcy. It was even a bit brighter than originally planned as investors and C&S Wholesale Grocers had bought the company back from Aldi, sparing it from complete destruction.

Several posts also got significant updates...Krispy Kreme of course burned down but updates to the article talks about Grandy's in more detail. I updated 110 College Main with more former tenants as well as adding a new page to Post Oak Mall to discuss all that in more detail. Boyett Businesses was retooled as a new post with some new tenants unearthed. The Lost Buildings of Villa Maria Road and Texas Avenue also had substantial updates added to it with information on El Caribe and Pizza Inn.

The only bummer is that my Ko-fi was a bit of a bust, but if you could throw in a few bucks...

We'll be back next year, returning January 7th.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

1800 Texas Avenue South

The strip center as of November 2025. The foundation of Harvey Washbanger's/Mazzio's with its flooring can also be seen. Previously, the view of the wall would've been impossible. Photo taken by author.

Briefly mentioned in the Harvey Washbanger's post (written a few months before a fire destroyed the restaurant)1, was the original 1800 Texas Avenue South tenant, Pepper's, an "old fashioned" hamburger restaurant (in vogue at the time as Fuddruckers and similar establishments like Flakey Jake's)2. Owned by the Ken Martin group, Pepper's opened in 1978 (there was another reference to the address a few years earlier, the "B-CS Flea Market" in 1975).

In the late 1980s it was redeveloped as a new strip center (as part of also redeveloping the former Kashim) with most of it occupied by 2-Day Video, a video rental chain based out of the Dallas-Fort Worth area. Around late 1996, Blockbuster Entertainment (buoyed by corporate parent Viacom at the time, a fact that is rarely factored into the company's decline) purchased 2-Day Video and converted it to their name in early 1997.3 Blockbuster eventually jumped to the top of the hill at the old site of Tom's Barbecue & Steakhouse, where it would remain until the chain went bankrupt.

As of 2025 the stores here include, from left to right, Game X Change, CleanEatz, Top Nails, Cricket, CPR Cell Phone Repair, and Rocks Discount Vitamins-n-More. I've lost track of what exactly was what, but going back in Google Maps, CleanEatz was Chill Milkshake and Waffle Bar (opened 2021 but maybe for like a year or two at most), Yogurtland (2010-2019)4, and in 2007 was another location of Western Beverages. Top Nails has been there since 2005 (it was Planet Beach Tanning Salon in the early 2000s), Cricket was here since 2007, though originally with a different logo), and the phone repair place was Pro-Cuts (which was an early tenant, operating from 1988 to 2013) but not before becoming Pinot's Palette for a few years. Rock's used to be "Nutrition Central", but not before becoming Just for Hair. There were others too, I remember Texas Avenue Cigars, which had a green sign that resembled the Texas Avenue signs on the stoplights (it later moved to a new location as Cavalier Cigar Company. There was also Hurricane Office Supply & Printing (an early tenant from 1986 but did not last more than a few years) and more than likely a few others I missed.

1. The College Station Fire Department unfortunately was not able to save Harvey Washbanger's, but they DID save the strip center from the fire, there wasn't even smoke damage on the walls.
2. Our area did not have a Flakey Jake's, though there were two in Houston in the mid-1980s for a brief time.
3. Unlike 2-Day Video, Blockbuster had a policy against NC-17 movies, meaning that titles like The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover and Showgirls would've been removed and/or replaced with edited R-rated versions.
4. Also, very briefly, "Swirls" afterward; more of the same. Probably lost the franchise.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Former Western Auto

This picture was taken in October 2025 by author.

If you follow my website I used to have a list of businesses on Harvey Road, though I discontinued it a while ago. Today we're going back and re-adding and expanding those entries, starting with 204 Harvey Road, which is currently Advance Auto Parts. The story goes back to Western Auto, however.

When Western Auto opened in 1986 at Townshire1, it wasn't a stranger to the community, a previous Western Auto Associated Store had existed at 300 East 25th Street in Bryan from the 1950s to 1970s. The new corporate-owned store at Townshire, subleased the space from Texas Central Hardware (which moved in 1982, but struggled to deal with the large 60,000 square feet Sears left behind), and dealt exclusively with auto parts (the corporate stores had dropped the broader selection). It also used the Sears auto bays, something that Texas Central Hardware wasn't able to use.

Within a few months of Western Auto's opening, however, Central Texas Hardware shuttered, leaving Western Auto beside itself. In 1990, it left for a brand-new building at 204 Harvey Road, the subject of this post. While older Western Auto stores had a broader selection of appliances and home & garden supplies, the corporate-owned stores by this time were exclusively auto parts, something both the 1986 and 1990 store had.

Although the Western Auto name is gone, the store opened at 204 Harvey is still open today. At the time of the opening of this location, Western Auto was owned by Sears, Roebuck, & Company (it bought Western Auto from its old owners Wesray Capital in 1988), which of course had a large full-line store at 1500 Harvey Road at Post Oak Mall. The biggest difference between the current store and the original Western Auto is that it had an automotive service center, which was a decision by Sears (competition with Sears Auto Center, perhaps?) and affected the local store in 1997 when it was converted to a new name (Parts America) among a major closure round of Western Auto, and in 1998, Sears gave up entirely by selling both Western Auto and Parts America to Advance Auto Parts, and in 1999, the store was rebranded again to Advance Auto Parts, though around that time, the automotive service center was subleased to CarDoc, an independent auto repair shop.

As Sears had converted the company-owned Western Auto stores to Parts America (and Advance Auto Parts finished the job), Advance Auto Parts shut down the Western Auto Supply Company division and gave the franchised stores until 2006 to change their names, ending the use of Western Auto anywhere.

1. The Townshire article needs a major upgrade as of this writing. The Sears wasn't as small as I originally quoted.

EDITOR'S NOTE: I changed the email on the site. I thought it hadn't been working for months, but it was. Still, I can't trust it and it has been changed.

Monday, October 20, 2025

The French Quarter Apartments

Newspaper article from 1966, the first time them or that address was mentioned.
A short one today. The last time we covered dead apartment complexes was Normandy Square (if you don't count the residences at Texas Oaks), and like Normandy Square, this one is at Northgate, The French Quarter Apartments at 601 Cross Street.

Unfortunately, while I did record some of the basic history elsewhere, noting that in fall 2007 they had become Gleissner Hall Apartments1 under the ownership of St. Mary's Catholic Church before they were demolished in early 2017 and effectively land-banked for their master plan. It's currently a parking lot.

As it has long since been demolished the best I can really offer is one of its first advertisements as seen above and a link to Google Maps Street View when the apartments were still there.

1. This was from a 2007 (maybe 2008) article from The Battalion entitled "Living by faith" but finding it again has proved to be elusive.

Saturday, October 18, 2025

The Country Kitchen

Advertisement from c. 1970 phone book

Back before Highway 47 (which was its name for many years), the airport terminal, and other fixtures west of FM 2818 on Raymond Stotzer Parkway, which despite the development of the "Biocorridor" and other new features is still considered the fringe of the Bryan-College Station, there was the Country Kitchen (unassociated with any other restaurants, including a franchised operation back in the 1970s and 1980s). Built in 1961 (or 1968, there is conflicting information) by Frank and Mae Meads and resembling a typical one-story ranch home (this was not, in fact, its original use, and was built as such to be converted into a house).1 The restaurant, located a little over two miles west of FM 21542 originally served barbecue, but expanded to chicken fried steak and catfish within a few years, and in 1975 leased to Ray Martin (I believe the brother of famous College Station restaurateur Ken Martin) which had all-you-can-eat dinners (chicken or fish), along with other options (including chicken fried steak) served every day of the week. The pies were dropped as a menu item, and the Meads felt like Ray Martin was "turning it into fast food" despite otherwise running it well, and planned to take it back over when the lease expired in late 1982. Unfortunately, the restaurant burned down in April 1982 destroying the restaurant and the antique collection the Meads had built up there. The building went quickly, not just because of its isolated location (firefighters had to bring their own water and ultimately resorted to pumping water from the pond on the property) but because of grease-soaked walls and floors (plus, by the time Frank Mead was even alerted to the fire, flames were pouring out of the window and the roof).

When the Meads rebuilt and reopened in 1984 the area was in recession. Five restaurants had failed in June 1984 alone (but were "all student places").3 Ultimately, the reincarnation was short-lived, closing in August 1989 for the construction of Highway 47 and reconstruction of FM 60 (the frontage road is where the restaurant was). (This also marks the first FM 60 entry covered without being University Drive or University Drive East, which is why I made the new [FM 60] label).

The pond, the houses next to it, and the restaurant were all part of the same property.

Footnotes for this article are below.

1. This is discussed in the 1984 article about the reopening of the restaurant.
2. The modern address is 4812 Raymond Stotzer Parkway, still owned by the Meads family. On old maps and some references, this part of FM 60 was called Jones Bridge Road but it wasn't until 1992 when the current name was adopted, during which I assume the addresses were added.
3. The only one I can 100% confirm was Bogie's and likely The Stadium.

EDITOR'S NOTE: A bunch of changes have been made to the labels, which I've adjusted recently again. [Loupot's] has been added to the new post from the other day as well as others, [Charles Stover] and [Costa Dallis] has joined [Joe Ferreri] and [Ken Martin] as a post grouping, and a few new chains now have their own label including ones that only made it to one location in the area. There were a few obsolete tags that were taken out ([railroad], [services], [service businesses], [drug store]). Went through [demolished] and replaced many of them with [redevelopment] (this one sticks with [demolished]). This is addressed in the FAQ.

Wednesday, October 15, 2025

Loupot's Southgate

From The Eagle, August 12, 1988

As a complement to their Northgate location, then-locally based Loupot's built a second store here in August 1988. Like their Northgate location, however, the store closed in spring 2012. Sometime afterwards, Maroon & White, LP moved in, better known as TexAgs. (Their film subsidiary, Texas Filmworks, was in the building before moving out to the old Chevron, where you can also see a picture of the building). TexAgs owns MyBCS, a popular Bryan-College Station forum that they ended up fully integrating into their main site. (I will refrain from discussions regarding TexAgs directly, though I will comment that the moderation team takes the rather pretentious term of "Staff" despite almost certainly being a volunteer position).

There also used to be a barbershop accessible on the upper level (Southgate Barbers) but I think that moved out by the time TexAgs moved in.

The article above mentions a Quicker Sticker, but it wasn't there for very long (it first opened off Cavitt Street in 1984) and I don't see anything on old aerials. Did they operate out of the then-Gulf's garage...?

EDITOR'S NOTE: A major re-do was done to Westgate Center's article. Authentic coastline atmospheres, salsa-saturated sandwiches, and Blimpie's second run, it's all here on the new page! Don't forget to check out that Ko-fi link. If we raise $100 I'll make the Defunct Business List, a list of every store and restaurant covered in this blog with a link back to its appropriate post.

Sunday, October 12, 2025

Former Boston's The Gourmet Pizza

This was taken in June 2015 (by author) not too long before Razzoo's opened (but before the old Boston's signage was cleaned off and new signage installed).

As the "FM 60" directory on Carbon-izer.com is soon to be dismantled (see this archived version), I should discuss the next restaurant just to the right of 830 University Drive East, this time 820 University Drive East. It's current tenant has been Razzoo's Cajun Cafe since August 2015, but opened in August 2006 as "Boston's The Gourmet Pizza", an export version of Canadian-based Boston Pizza (I believe it was to prevent conflicts with Boston Market, but as Boston Market's star fell, the trademarks eventually changed). This closed around summer 2014.1

This post as currently written may have an update forced before year-end, as earlier in October, Razzoo's parent company has filed for bankruptcy, and while the restaurant chain may live on in some form, most of its locations won't. (It already closed three locations prior--Oklahoma City, Pasadena, and Corpus Christi, a store in Winston-Salem closed last year).

1. Boston Pizza closed their stores in San Antonio and Houston, but in Dallas, it lives on and you can see it retired the "Boston's The Gourmet Pizza" for just Boston's Pizza in around early 2018 if not the tail-end of December.

UPDATE 01-01-2026: On December 29, 2025, Razzoo's Inc. was acquired by M Crowd Restaurant Group (owner of Mi Cocina...no, not the ones here locally) and while they moved forward with 11 restaurants, nine of them weren't, including (according to online sources), Burleson, Far North Dallas, Garland, Irving, Lewisville, Lubbock, Spring, Tyler, and College Station. These restaurants were shut down immediately.

Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Holick's on College Main

Picture from Flickr user "treyerice". Unfortunately it's just a thumbnail salvaged from an archived version of this website, the original was deleted.

While it is the least interesting history of the buildings in the block, it's perhaps the most important, and the only one that hasn't been covered in detail yet. 106 College Main was the longtime home of Holick's (which makes the famous Corps of Cadets Senior Boots) for many years. The longtime home of Holick's was built in the 1930s and definitely operating by the 1950s, but in 2005 it was sold out of family ownership and moved to Westgate Center in 2006, which is about when that picture above was taken. By 2007, a sign hung over the facade for "Hookah Station" (looking even worse than the photo above, and lacked the maroon-and-white awnings), which closed in the early 2020s for One15 (moved from 115 College Main, a bit of a misnomer now).

EDITOR'S NOTE: I have been trying to clear out the queue of posts to be updated, which is why this post may seem a bit lackluster. Significant updates have been done to Texas Avenue Crossing and Under the Water Tower (renamed to "Former Bud Ward Volkswagen"), in addition to smaller updates on other posts. Westgate Center is another post that is to be updated in the future.

Friday, October 3, 2025

Aggieland Outfitters

Picture by author, April 2014. I had to touch it up to make visible.

Moving down University Drive to University Drive East from our last post we get to 303 University Drive East. (All these years later and I still have University Drive East photos from 2014...and more to come!). I wanted to briefly touch on this Aggieland Outfitters location as part of phasing out the Carbon-izer.com City Directories (of College Station-Bryan). Originally, there were two buildings here, and Aggieland Outfitters opened in 303A University Drive East in 2010 (there were two other locations; one on George Bush Drive, the other at Post Oak Mall). A few years later (2013), both buildings were torn down for a new Aggieland Outfitters store. New parking was soon added after that, but it was reconfigured (mostly torn up) to build a new office building to replace the parent company location (Kalcorp Enterprises) at Graham Road. I can't find too much on the original pre-2013 buildings as they were mostly intended for non-retail use from the looks of it. In 1984, 303-B was home to Sun Shield Applications, in 1993 and 2001 WTA Leasing (apartment locator service) and I can't find anything for 303-A. This Yelp review suggests it might have been a dental office at one point which would make sense...if the review wasn't from 2018. In any case, the former buildings are one of the things in town that I still know little about.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Recently I went back and updated Taco Villa's article which goes over its history as Del Taco and Quick as a Flash. And always, if you like this blog, don't forget to donate!

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

University Book Store on Northgate

There have been a few changes since this June 2013 picture (picture by author), Domino's changed its font, its logo, and painted the building tan, Potbelly changed the logo and is now "Potbelly Sandwich Shop". Oh and Starbucks closed!

By now you may have heard that Starbucks at 409 University Drive is closing. With this blog's current policy on what can be included, that would qualify it alone, but it goes back farther than that. From what I can tell the building was built in the late 1950s per Brazos CAD hosting Shaffer's at 409 Sulphur Springs and a few other tenants, most notably in the 411 space where Starbucks later lived for years. (I have heard the original tenant was a second location of a Bryan jewelry store called Varner's, but have yet to verify that).

In any case, at the 409 space was Shaffer's, a bookstore that had other items like music, hobbyist items (boats, cars, and airplanes), and a few other items.1 By 1967 the store had become Shaffer's University Book Store and by 1973 had dropped the Shaffer's moniker. University Book Store didn't occupy the entire space during its nearly fifty-year lifespan. Aside from the supposed Varner's location, in 1969, 411 University became home to the A&M Agency of the National Farm Life Insurance Company and in the early 1980s changed hands to The Yogurt Pump, a frozen yogurt shop (possibly the first of its kind in College Station). The parent company of The Yogurt Pump, Lone Star Yogurt Company, retooled the business for fall 1983 as Sweetlix Creamery (after actually going under the Lone Star Yogurt Company name in summer 1983), but that closed in 1984 and reopened in fall 1984 as Mignone's Italian Ices (which also sold some pasta dishes too). By 1986 it was going as Mignone's of Philadelphia (was there even a Mignone's in Philadelphia? Who knows!). After 1986 there's no more references to it; I guess University Book Store did absorb the extra space.

From what I can tell around 2001 they sub-leased a portion to Domino's Pizza (which moved from their old location at 1504 Holleman Drive (part of that was to help move them closer to the university, as their 3104 Texas Avenue South location was doing business in College Station) and the whole chain collapsed (with their other locations like their University Drive East store and their extremely short-lived Wellborn Road location) in early 2006. After it closed, part of it was filled with Domino's, which moved from their old location at 1504 Holleman Drive (part of that was to help move them closer to the university, as their 3104 Texas Avenue South location was doing business in most of the growing south College Station area).

The vacant space was redeveloped in time for fall 2006 with Potbelly Sandwich Works as it was called back then (now it's just Potbelly Sandwich Shop2) occupying most of the space and the corner hosting Starbucks Coffee in August 2006. (It was the second "real" Starbucks in town after the opening of the Texas Avenue and Holleman location which was the first).

The Starbucks would operate for the next 19 years but in September 2025 it would announce its closure effective on the 27th. Despite being the most easily accessible Starbucks to foot traffic, the store had its challenges. It closed early (7 pm, not good for late-night studying), wasn't really unique anymore (as licensed Starbucks now operate throughout the campus), had what was likely the highest rent among the other stores, lacked a drive-through (only the 2002 Holleman/Texas location lacks a drive-through, and that has lower rent...plus parking). Plus, it's just not unique anymore. It was fun when it was one of only two Starbucks shops in town, but now (after this closure) there will still be nine others, all located strategically around town. It is still Northgate though, so I expect it to be replaced with something, perhaps another coffee shop or cafe, in short order.

1. Shaffer's had moved from a smaller location.
2. It should be noted that earlier in September, Potbelly announced its sale to convenience store/gas station operator RaceTrac but I didn't think that to be significant enough to be included in the prose.

Tuesday, September 23, 2025

What was on Texas Avenue before Super 8?

A nice picture of the original 301 Texas courtesy The Eagle. Note the Red Barn Cafe behind it.


Will I ever run out of things to talk about on Texas Avenue? Not yet! Much like the Fairfield Inn next to it (well, it's Best Western as of this writing), the College Station Super 8 was a 1990s redevelopment of older businesses on that lot. While the Fairfield Inn, er, Best Western, is in Bryan, the Super 8 (301 Texas Avenue South) is in College Station. But before we get to the Super 8 there's what needs to be covered before that.

301 Texas Avenue was originally A-1 Auto Parts when it opened in 1976, a NAPA parts dealership, but closed in the mid-1980s to be replaced with Brazos Valley Small Engine in spring 1986, which then became Aggie Solar Guard in 1989 (renamed to Ag Solar Guard by late 1990) but in 1993 it relocated to 3410 S. Texas Avenue. (More on that another time.)

But of course, before A-1 Auto Parts, one door down was a business originally home to Tastee-Freez. Tastee-Freez was here starting in 1957 to the early 1970s. Tastee-Freez counted about 1,800 units in the 1950s and 1960s but imploded as they couldn't control franchises. (Good luck finding a Tastee-Freez that's not part of a Wienerschnitzel or Original Hamburger Stand). Tastee-Freez (315 Texas Avenue S., but I have seen the address given as 209 originally) soon gave way to Discount Liquor No. 2 around 1971-1972, and by 1974 was home to The Grapevine (see this post). By 1977 The Grapevine had moved for The Senter-Piece (a floral shop). Despite this rapid changeover in tenants, the Tastee-Freez was still on many peoples' mind and the Grapevine mentioned it was in the former building. The Senter-Piece closed in 1981 and by 1983 it had given way to Brazos Valley Pools & Spas which seems to be unrelated to both a 1999 business off Highway 21 and the current (since 2008) Brazos Valley Pools & Spas mentioned when this site covered Barry Pool Company down near the end. A few years after that the pool company, it was campaign offices for Peter Geren's 1986 run for office, then became Discount Bike Company (also known as Discount Bike Repair) which operated from 1987 to 1993. (There isn't much on Discount Bike Company other than one ad at the very end selling Rollerblades). Discount Bike Company was the last tenant here, closing in 1993.

I've never been to the local Super 8 before, so I can't say much on it (looking around on the Internet it does say there are 89 rooms on three floors). It did receive a new logo after 2008 when then-parent company Wyndham Worldwide changed the logo...and sometime around 2024-2025 received red accents on the exterior.

UPDATE 01-22-2026: I do have a picture from 2021 (which did not get into the post as written). The old Editor's Note advertised a few then-current things on the blog and the Ko-fi link.

Sunday, July 20, 2025

Former Zaxby's

This is not a great photo of the restaurant and more surprising that The Eagle still did blurbs like this as late as February 2017; albeit with no description.

Here's another vacant fast food restaurant that failed near Highway 6 and Highway 40 with questionable access, much like the old Bush's Chicken we covered a few months ago. Coincidentally, it also served fried chicken.

Where the old Zaxby's building is today (952 William D. Fitch Parkway) was originally the right of way of (Old) Arrington Road, before it was cut off circa 2013 and re-established about seven years later with a slightly modified right of way (Spice World Market sits on the re-established portion that was on the right of way).

Zaxby's (with a fully-functional weather vane on the store) operated from November 2016 to December 2024, but while Texas may be losing its taste for the chain1 (a number have closed in the Houston area and others), highway access wasn't easy from either direction, nor was there good signage for it; it never graced the logo sign for the Highway 40 exit either.

1. The chain has since dropped the apostrophe.