Wednesday, December 11, 2013

103-105 Boyett

I don't think "billiards hall" went with "wholesome", even in the 1960s (from the Battalion).

Part of this post has gotten split off as a new post and the resulting new edit focuses on 103-105 Boyett (one building) and checking on the history of that through Battalion archives (it's possible that stuff will get missed, but for Northgate, the Battalion is the most reliable).

Based on what I could find, 103 and 105 were originally two separate businesses, with both being combined at a certain point.

The oldest reference I can find for 103 Boyett is a short-order restaurant called Grannie's Restaurant (closed on weekends). (I'm putting [1950s] on the opening of the building) and the oldest reference I can for 105 Boyett is for Leon B. Weiss apparel in 1951.

For 103 Boyett, in summer 1963 the Aggie Cue Club opened, a restaurant/pool hall, by 1966 it had become the "University Restaurant and Recreation Center" before becoming El Ranchito in a matter of months, not to be confused with the El Ranchito that appeared at 1037 Texas Avenue South decades later...but then went back to being University Restaurant within the same year.

For 105 Boyett, between 1960 and 1962 it changed to The Discount House (also apparel) which went under in March 1963. In 1966, Sarge's Recreation is mentioned, which took the spot of 103 Boyett. It is likely at this point where the two spaces, Leon B. Weiss/The Discount House and Grannie's/Aggie Cue Club/University Restaurant became one.

There's no reference to 103 Boyett for five years until 1971 with Raywell Laundry & Dry Cleaners. While Raywell appears to have disappeared in the 1970s they did run the dry cleaning operation at the "old hospital" on campus (later picked up by FabricCare Cleaners, which remained until the building's demise). In 1973 105 Boyett was used for University Cycles (motorcycles, not bicycles). Then in 1981 105 Boyett is used for the College Station location of Whole Earth Provision Company which was inspired off of the late Whole Earth Catalog (the about page for Whole Earth Provision Company says as much) and it wasn't even the only chain to do so). While WEPC continues to operate elsewhere the local store closed in 1986.
From the Bryan-College Station Eagle, 1985

The 103 Boyett address re-emerged for its next tenant, Brazos Landing. In 1989 it moved to 4410 College Main) and became Waivers, a nightclub by the end of the year. In 1990, the spot changed hands again to AnNam Tea House...no references after 1992 and re-emerging in 1995 as "The Cue", another billiards hall. Switching over to The Eagle archives, O-Zone first appeared in January 1997 (though The Cue lingered on in advertising), though these were functioning as the same business ("Ozone/The Cue") and briefly becoming Vertigo (c. 1997) before Hole in the Wall took over in 1999. This disappeared between 2004 and 2005. I recall reading that they had common ownership with Shadow Canyon next door (with a connection to it), and the shutdown of Shadow Canyon in December 2004 seems to back that up. Since 2005 it has been O'Bannon's Taphouse, which uses the 103 address, even though actual door was once used for 105 Boyett. O'Bannon's is the most stable tenant of any of these, lasting for twenty years; nothing else got close to that.

UPDATE 06-06-2025: Extensive updates made. Many new businesses have been added to the site for the first time.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Post Oak Square, featuring Weingarten


Picture by author, c. 2019. This shopping center's success hasn't always been here.

Like some of my other older posts, this one has gotten numerous rewrites and updates, and initially the original version of the post actually had some wrong information. This was because the supermarket in question only lasted two months. Post Oak Square was built in 1983 as a strip mall companion to Post Oak Mall. The center struggled in its original incarnation because it was built by different developers than the mall and had very few inlets and outlets. An attempt to connect to Post Oak Mall's ring road was also shot down as the mall decided to take advantage of their property rights and put barricades blocking the access road, and eventually posting guards there before the driveway was removed. (A shout-out to Henry Mayo who helped me nail down where Grandy's was, and also gave information about the ring road access).

Post Oak Square had just one main anchor when it opened, an outlet of Weingarten. The intrigue I've had with this plaza goes back some time, as according to the HAIF's DrFood, "Weingarten's in College Station in the shopping center next to Post Oak Mall. The store was very upscale when it opened. They had gourmet food like Central Market does, a coffee bar, and a huge candy/nut bar. They had a bakery that today would rival Central Markets. Being a Weingarten's they had the only Kosher section in the [greater area]. It then became another name when Weingarten's sold out on the verge of bankruptcy."

When it opened in November 1983, Weingarten was on the small side, but relatively upscale

This was because Weingarten opened in November 1983, just a month before parent company Grand Union decided to divest the company. The older Weingarten near downtown Bryan got sold to Safeway but no such luck for this store.

Definitely some resent there. This has to be the shortest-lived supermarket in Texas.
After some seemingly conflicting information, the supermarket did reopen under a new name, Mariel's Fine Foods, in May 1984 (a second location of a Conroe-based independent). By November 1984 (when the ad is from) they had rebranded as Mariel's Home Town Foods associated with Schepp's Grocery Co. of Houston. Note that it offered video rental (rare in 1984) and delivery (also rare, and before 2020 had long fallen out of fashion for smaller markets).

The Conroe location operated until 2003 but the College Station location closed in 1985 as Schepp's Grocery and the Home Town Foods co-op collapsed.

As I said before, there was also a Grandy's between the two entrances.
At some point in the 1980s or 1990s, Grandy's as a chain lost the "Country Cookin'" name.

I'm not sure if Grandy's closed for the shopping center redevelopment or just some other reason. (It closed around April 1992), after all, the next twenty years would see the chain lose a lot of locations and even now continues to drop. I've added an article that adds a picture of the restaurant (which is nearly identical to most of its stores in the region, though a green color rather than a red color these days).
From The Eagle, 1991.
Right below the article was an ad for the "Summer Fun" pack. Do fried chicken places even offer any sort of fruit these days?!
With a second attempt at a supermarket dead, in the late 1980s and early 1990s it began to transition to a modern power center.

In 1986, Cavender's Boot City was built at 1400 Harvey and a new retail building was built in 1987 close to Harvey Road on the west side of the property. In 1990, Pier 1 Imports was built in front of Cavender's in a new building (making Cavender's impossible to see from the road). Grandy's was closed in 1992 for the biggest redevelopment of the center which demolished a good part of the main building for Toys R Us (opened c. 1993, this was the address for Linen Warehouse from 1984 to 1987), T.J. Maxx (opened 1994), and Hobby Lobby (opened 1993 in Weingarten's former space). As a result, the shopping center finally saw success over the next decade. Hobby Lobby moved out in the early 2000s and of course Toys R Us failed with the chain in 2018 (keeping the original logo until toward the last few years), but the center has done well, all things considered. Going clockwise from the former Pier 1 Imports closest to the mall...

1402 - Mattress SleepCenters - Formerly Pier 1 Imports until the early 2000s when it moved to Texas Avenue Crossing at Texas Avenue and George Bush. This building was built in 1990 but is considered part of the shopping center.
1400 - demolished - Former Cavender's Boot City, moved out around 2006 and NEVER retenanted (it's the blank spot behind Mattress SleepCenters, and nearly impossible to see). Brazos CAD (had to go back in the archives to see) says this was built in 1986.
1306 - Ollie's Bargain Outlet opened in April 2020 following the closure of aforementioned Toys R Us.
1200 - The aforementioned former Weingarten, Hobby Lobby was in the location for much of the 1990s (since 1994) and left for its current location as soon as the center at Texas and Holleman was built (around 2003). After it left, it was divided into two stores (1200 Harvey and 1210 Harvey), which at the time was a store called "The BOUNCE!" and the 99 Cents Store, which was expanding heavily during that time. The BOUNCE! (hereafter referred to "The Bounce") was a bit overlooked, though it had a colorful facade. According to a surviving ad I found, The Bounce was a "locally owned and operated 12,500 square foot party facility featuring your favorite inflatable castles, obstacle courses, huge slides, rock climbing walls and more, all in a safe, climate controlled environment" and featured "four private party rooms with a private jump arena are available" along with "diner seating with drinks, coffee and snacks plus WiFi access."
These things tend hinge their existence on birthday parties, and for whatever reason, it failed within a few years (maybe lasting from 2006 to 2009), and I think that it's the same reason why Putt-Putt and Gattitown declined and ultimately closed.

Burkes Outlet opened in 1200 in 2013 but closed a decade later (being replaced with an O'Reilly Auto Parts in 2024) and 1210 Harvey is still vacant. Tuesday Morning had moved there in 2012 (from their location off of East 29th) but closed it in an early 2023 bankruptcy round with the remaining chain going under a few months later.
1140 - LL Flooring, formerly - This used to be Avenue (with the address of 1200A), opening in 1994 as part of the center re-do, but it eventually closed. LifeWay Christian Stores opened in spring 2014. It may have absorbed two smaller stores at some point in the past. The store announced closing in February 2019 shortly before the remainder of the chain one month later. In 2020 this became Lumber Liquidators (under the name "LL Flooring" as the company had been during this time) but it too, filed for bankruptcy. While the company was spared this wasn't one of the ones that lived through it.
1128 - TJMaxx - Here since 1994 in the corner.
1120 - The current space combined the former 1112 (Wild Birds Unlimited was here from 1997 to 2004) and 1120. It has held GR8 Laundry since November 2019. 1106 - This has been Once Upon a Child since early 2019, which relocated from Brazos Square. From about 1996 to 2010 the space 1108 was Treasures Gift Shop, later home to Q Beauty. Q Beauty later moved to the former Taste of China building.
1104A - Plato's Closet - This opened around 2009 and still remains open.
1102 - Gumby's Pizza - My records say that this was Imperial Chinese Restaurant from 1984 to 1994, related to the later Texas Avenue location but unrelated to the one on the bypass today). Ninfa's opened in January 1995, according to InSite Magazine. When Ninfa's moved in 2008 to a new spot on the bypass, the space was vacant for a few years before Houston-based Wolfies Restaurant (2012 to September 2016).

The 1100 building as of August 2022 features, from east to west, Victoria's Variedades y Tipicos (this was Merle Norman from about 2006 to 2015, suite D), Bea's Alterations (Suite C, home to Merge Boutique before it moved to Century Square), RA Salon Spa (suite B, Edward Jones until the early 2010s), and Al's Formal Wear (from 1987 to its abrupt August 2023 chain-wide closure).

Finally, for a long time it was rumored that Grandy's was torn down for visibility issues: it did not seem to be stop current management from signing a genuine Krispy Kreme Doughnuts store to be built in the parking lot closest to Mattress SleepCenters. Previously, the closest College Station-Bryan had to Krispy Kreme was some products sold in Shell gas stations around 2003 and 2004, which were made in Houston (as it had a small handful of stores at the time). If you want to hear about the Krispy Kreme's first attempt in Houston, I suggest you visit Houston Historic Retail, which is not my site but I recommend it anyway. Krispy Kreme opened in April 2019 at 1312 Harvey Road, but in the early morning hours of May 13, 2025 burned down, an act perprepated by its own franchisee. After the ruins were cleared it became an empty grass pad for lease, though the medians of Harvey Road make access even more difficult.
"Krispy" and "hot" were certainly puns of the day when the place burned down, but certain forum moderators hated it.


UPDATE 06-15-2025: Updates were reset with changes integrated particularly with Krispy Kreme. Coding was fixed, the Grandy's section was expanded, and a few other things.

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Former Square One Bistro

Picture taken by author, 2013.

This historic building was built circa 1924 as the McCulloch-Dansby Funeral Home and by 1940 was known as the Hillier Funeral Home after the director. (The first floor was the home of the business, with second floor used as a small apartment for the family and presumably extra storage)1 having just added air conditioning a year prior.

In 1945 it moved out and the McCulloch-Dansby name was revived as it reopened a few years later as the McCulloch-Dansby Appliance Store which by 1949 was going as McCulloch-Dansby Complete Home Furnishers Company (specializing in small appliances).2 Around 1957 McCulloch-Dansby Complete Home Furnishers Company moved out and The Scribe Shop, a shop specializing in writing supplies and printing, moved in by May 1957.

In 1965 the business was renamed "Wallace Printing Company and the Scribe Shop", reviving the former name which was previously used as a different business by the same owners prior to the company. The Scribe Shop name was dropped by the late 1960s, but the owner, Madge Wallace, kept the store. She later sold the business (but kept the building) until it closed in spring 1985. From then on appears to have been vacant until January 1996 when Square One Bistro (serving primarily Italian cuisine) opened (by now the address was 211 W. William Joel Bryan Parkway, the road was renamed in the late 1980s or early 1990s). In early 2009 by local restaurateur Charles Stover purchased the restaurant as was what he wanted, a small fine dining establishment.

However, as it turned out, the Square One Bistro building in horrible shape: wiring was antiquated (the building was built in the early 20th century, expansions to the building were powered with extension cords) and the plumbing was in poor shape (pipes went up before going down--which has all sorts of potential problems, including grease build-up and sewage backups), and Stover had to spend an astronomical amount to fix those problems.

Unfortunately, this renovation marked the beginning of the end. While Stover Boys and Square One were both profitable (Square One's wine list grew from 10 to 110, and offered class and variety like no other area restaurant did), the problems stemming from Square One's renovation caused the owner to go into debt and it just got worse. Instead of turning profits and fueling what could be a prosperous chain bound for great places, the profits were funneled into debt payoffs. According to an old The Eagle newspaper, in October, Square One closed down and converted to the lower-end but more profitable Stover Boys brand, but it was far too late. Stover Boys was crushed under debt by late 2010, and the Westgate and Downtown Bryan location shuttered.3

After the shuttering of Square One Bistro, the building was reopened in Summer 2011 as Square 1 Art Studio with lofts above. It appears that the art studio closed around 2020, but it reopened as The Tipsy Trinket (a wine bar) a few years later, though that also closed in December 2023...and today is the Bryan location of Elevated CBD Smoke Shop.

1. This was according to a comment I got in the old version of this page and corroborated with newspaper archives.
2. The name appears to be a coincidence, as the store had existed since 1919.
3. From personal interviews.

UPDATE 05-15-2025: Massive post overhaul done (slight update to the name, used to be just called "Square One")

Wednesday, October 30, 2013

The Rise at Northgate

Not there yet...this view may be impossible in a few years when the apartments replacing BB&T get built.

I can still remember sitting on the "porch" of the A+ Tutoring and Fat Burger building (profiled here in this post, which is undergoing changes, but that's okay), looking out at the abandoned building that once held a BBVA Compass Bank (formerly Guaranty Bank until they were bought out) and United Realty. United Realty is now on Graham, and BBVA Compass moved out as well. I don't know when or where they took off too, but I'm pretty sure that BBVA Compass disappeared in 2010 or so.

They were to be torn down for a huge building known as 717 University. This was spring 2012. At first, I couldn't really comprehend a building being there. After all, the Plaza was coming down, and the Plaza occupied a much bigger footprint. I wondered if they would close off Church Avenue for additional space. Turns out they didn't. When they filed something in regards to the airport ordinance, I knew it could be good.

Initially, there was talk of a gourmet grocer (Whole Foods was the rumored choice, and supposedly they even signed a letter of intent), but that eventually fell through as the building was renamed The Rise at Northgate and ultimately CVS/pharmacy would take the place of the lower level tenant, which was just as well.


Early concept. It looks substantially different in real life. (snagged from local news site)

Over the fall semester, I watched from the Evans Library them build the large structure, adding a new floor every week or so before it was visible on the skyline.

Anyway, the bank was home Community Savings & Loan Association which surprisingly lasted from the 1970s until 1989. Later, it became Guaranty Bank and United Realty (sharing the bank), the former becoming BBVA Compass and moving out. By 2011, it was boarded up and vacant.

I know I had once parked my bike in the lot in the overgrown grass there, but didn't get any good ground pictures at the time.

Not too long before, this is what was there.

I don't live in the Rise, but a friend and I checked out the CVS and explored around. It's smaller than a real CVS...there's a selection of food that's generally better than a convenience store, and of course a full HBA (Health & Beauty Aids) department, something convenience stores don't have. The best thing, at least to Rise residents, is a little hallway in the back that links the elevator to the complex (and the parking garage) with the CVS, so in theory, you could make a midnight run for snacks...or at least, it would be midnight, if they didn't close at 12 (that might change in the future).

It's a bit of a bummer that they don't carry any fresh fruits or vegetables, as that would round out the neighborhood nicely. After all, just literally outside used to be the old Albertsons which did have not only a pharmacy since the early 1970s but all manners of produce as well. 24 hours, too. A sad day when it finally closed, as for the next 31 semesters, Northgate lacked a pharmacy (that's spring 1998 to spring 2013, for those keeping count).

A few more pictures that I took...


Due to the orientation of perhaps the parking garage ramps above, the CVS isn't flush with ground level, requiring going up a several steps or using a (rather narrow looking) ramp. Still, the potential is great: a huge (at least by College Station standards) apartment building, and streetside retail in a pedestrian area (something the Lofts lacked).

Around spring 2014, they replaced their bike racks with bike racks designed for the MaroonBikes rental bikes, requiring people to hook their bikes to trees or other things (way to screw over your main audience) but you could still hook it on a bench or a tree. As of 2016, they've posted signs not to park bikes in the vicinity but rather put them in bike racks in the upper levels of the parking garage, which made the CVS and its other tenants definitely less accessible.

The first tenant here was CVS/pharmacy (Ste. 101), the largest store, which opened September 29, 2013. It faces University and while it is a smaller CVS than most of its more suburban counterparts, it is merchandised to the neighborhood by having a mix of at least 50% food, though only has a very abbreviated mix consisting of a few dry foods, frozen foods, and a few other items, all priced higher than grocery stores. The best thing, at least to Rise residents, is a little hallway in the back that links the elevator to the complex (and the parking garage) with the CVS, so in theory, you could make a midnight run for snacks...or at least, it would be midnight, if they didn't close at midnight.

The second tenant is "YAKU Japanese Eatery" (Ste. 171), which replaced Great Wraps. Great Wraps opened in spring 2014 but didn't match up with its Houston counterparts. My quest for a good chicken caesar wrap on or near campus was foiled when the wrap was stuffed with croutons, and that was enough to put me off forever. By the end of 2014 it was gone, with YAKU taking its place next year. By the time YAKU opened, I was out of college, and while I was dubious of the sign offering chicken fingers and ramen (having put off by Happy Yogurt and their store-bought garbage), it has lasted until sometime around late 2017 when it was quickly replaced with Shun De Mom, another Asian restaurant.

The third tenant, located at the end, is the BB&T (Ste. 181), which opened August 2016. It has an ATM outside of it. The BB&T moved here after their old location was demolished. By late 2018, however, they moved back to their original address, this time occupying a ground level location.

July 27 2014 - Updated.
October 09 2016 - Updated a second time.
May 16 2019 - Updated a third time to account for new tenants and gone ones.