Tuesday, December 10, 2019

Greensworld

Most of the former Greensworld has been reduced to just green again.


One story along Highway 6 that's worth telling is GreensWorld, a short-lived golf course near University Drive and Earl Rudder Freeway (or East Bypass as it was known back then) opened in July 1991. With nine holes accessible by a concrete bridge beyond Carter Creek, a small clubhouse, and a putting green in the part closest to the freeway (though unlike the driving range where At Home is now, I don't remember any netting or fences), GreensWorld was unfortunately not a big success. While it was a lit course and considered good for beginners, a full miniature golf course (the type with the windmills) was planned for construction shortly after opening but was never built (likely due to financing issues, it was built out of pocket). The actual greens were accessed by a concrete bridge, and at some point, a flood washed out the other side's connection. I remember getting a picture of said bridge a few years ago (it's still behind Hampton Inn) but I can't seem to find it in my "file morgue". Sometime around 2000, GreensWorld closed and most of it was redeveloped as Douglass Nissan (1001 Earl Rudder Freeway). Douglass Nissan purchased a Waco dealership in 2016 and rebranded it but in 2020 disposed of this dealership (now College Station Nissan). The club house remained into 2005, with Douglass Nissan tearing it down by 2008 and developing it as an expansion in 2012.

In 2005, a new Hampton Inn & Suites opened (complementing its older cousin on Texas Avenue, the hotel at 925 Earl Rudder Freeway is still here to this day. In 2008, Ninfa's Mexican Restaurant opened at 1007 Earl Rudder Freeway (moved from Post Oak Square. It closed in 20191 and in May 2022 reopened as Maria Mia TexMex Cantina (more of the same, with decor exactly the same, even the same neon parrot of Ninfa's). With the front part of Greensworld fully redeveloped, there's not much that remains, though there are still light fixtures on the other side of Carter Creek...

1. Ninfa's was essentially two restaurants, "The Original Ninfa's on Navigation" and a franchised operation with different food. In the late 2010s that started to change, with The Original Ninfa's expanding and the franchised stores closing or changing names. Franchised "Ninfa's" operations still exist in the Waco area and Memorial Drive in Houston.

UPDATE 06-12-2025: Major update; this post was basically rewritten from scratch.

Sunday, November 10, 2019

Plantation Oaks Apartments


For many years, Briarwood Apartments composed half of the former Plantation Oaks. Click on it to see the full resolution!


Back at Harvey Road once again, we're skipping directly from Kona Ranch down to Plantation Oaks (on account of either no information available or already covered). Plantation Oaks was built in 1972--before Post Oak Mall, before anything on Harvey Road worth mentioning, possibly even before what is now Earl Rudder Freeway opened. Plantation Oaks Apartments was initially an enormous apartment complex bisected by Scarlett O'Hara Drive and bounded by Rhett Butler Drive to the west (the theming not subtle), but by 1980, the western half section was sold off with a minor renovation done to turn it into Briarwood Apartments. True to many of the trendier apartments in Houston (or even College Station), it included a nightclub, Zacharias' Green House.

In 2018, the apartment complexes (neither in particularly good shape, judging by reviews) were re-combined under new ownership and renamed as Castlerock Apartments, which only listed a year before becoming The Grand 1501. The picture above is for Briarwood from 1980 (the Plantation Oaks ads from that era aren't nearly as interesting, and a color one from 2005 can't scan properly) and originally appeared on the old City Directories page from Carbon-izer.com, this blog's parent site.
UPDATE 10-07-2025: A few updates. First, I removed the link to Carbon-izer since a recent rework removed that page altogether. The other thing is that while Plantation Oaks took the 1201 Harvey Road (Highway 30) address originally, the split was done as early as 1975. By 2021, 1201 Harvey Road was back to being another apartment complex again, this time named The Ivy. It appears Zacharias Greenhouse closed around 1981-1982.

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Former Red Line Burgers

This car wash is built on the remains of a small hamburger restaurant that despite making an impression on me, didn't even last a decade.

Before continuing on the Harvey Road series (which will be restarted next week), there's a quick stop on Texas Avenue that I've wanted to cover. One of the "College Station of the 1990s" features that I do remember was a small hamburger restaurant across from Parkway Square (which, by the way, is the most popular page on this blog)...Red Line Burgers at 2401 Texas Avenue.

The restaurant has long been a mystery, since I only remember it being boarded up before being wrecked for Shammy Express Car Wash in the early 2000s (which around 2014 renovated into Drew's Car Wash), you can see the pre-Drew's on Google Street View.

Only did a December 2014 visit to the Dallas area spark my memory as I realized a small hamburger stand was almost the exact one I'd seen in my memories. Sadly, the aforementioned Red Line is now a memory itself, having been closed the following year and demolished for a 7-Eleven, but it did last long enough to make it to a Yelp review.

Further looks into the restaurant that predated Shammy/Drew's showed that Red Line built the College Station store around 1993, and was based out of San Antonio. Even by the early 1990s, they were having some trouble keeping stores, this Corpus Christi Caller Times article about a food truck taking the name has a photo of a closed Red Line in Corpus Christi in the early 1990s.

The picture in this post is taken by the author, October 2019.

UPDATE 04-25-2021: New title, mostly.
UPDATE 08-13-2021: This was Dogs & Such (#2) from approximately 1997 to 1999. Explains why I don't remember the neon hamburger on top...

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Circle K on Harvey Road

Taken October 2019.

This (603 Harvey Road) was a Diamond Shamrock originally (or within three years of building the station in 1986), and only in the mid-2000s did it become Valero due to a conversion by Diamond Shamrock's new corporate parent, Valero Energy. It recently updated its logo and convenience store (becoming a Circle K instead of Corner Store, as it was under Valero).

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Former Kona Ranch Steakhouse

October 2019 picture by author, showing the restaurant's second and more successful tenant, Ozona Grill.

520 Harvey Road originally played host to Kona Ranch Steakhouse1, originating out of Brinker International, spun off as Kona Restaurant Group, then getting bought as part of Fired Up, Inc., which also purchased Johnny Carino's off of Brinker.

The best description I could find of Kona Ranch was it was somewhat of a theme restaurant (like many chains), "[emphasizing] a Hawaiian cattle ranch theme with grilled and smoked meats, and specialties such as coconut shrimp tempura" but from what I could tell by 2005 the restaurant had totally disappeared so Fired Up could focus on Johnny Carino's, later named Carino's Italian Grill (but I think the name reverted back).

This one was in Oklahoma City (from Loopnet).

The Kona Ranch location in Oklahoma City was the lone restaurant that Brinker launched around 1990 and was the only Kona Ranch when Fired Up acquired it. Fired Up launched its first new location in Texarkana in 1998, followed by a location in Round Rock, and finally its College Station location in the spring of 1999.

Already Kona Ranch was in trouble as the Texarkana location shut down within a year and further attempts at expansion were scrubbed, but at least Johnny Carino's was doing all right and would continue to operate for years afterwards. In December 2002 Kona Ranch in College Station closed (the Round Rock location also closed around that time). In College Station, it was quickly picked up by Ozona Grill & Bar, a branch location of a single Dallas-area location, that based on reviews, appeared to be nothing to write home about, even in its heyday. Ozona was far more successful, but closed in June 2023 after a twenty-year run. It is still vacant.

It was tough digging up a "normal" logo of the dead chain, with only this ad from the Houston Chronicle as part of a group taking the restaurants to Kuwait. Chili's and Carino's continue to operate there, but Kona Ranch does not (if it ever did).



1. Not to be confused with Kona Grill.

UPDATE 06-18-2025: The post has been updated for the demise of both Carino's and Ozona, with previous updates archived. Some of Kona Ranch's history has been streamlined, dead links pruned, and quality-of-life updates.