Sunday, February 15, 2026

Ken Martin's Steak House, Original Edition

Of course, this restaurant didn't actually start out as Ken Martin's... (source)

The [Ken Martin] label now covers almost every single restaurant M&W Restaurants was involved in that had a College Station/Bryan address (except for Pepe's Mexican Food, which is still open).

Our look at 1803 S. Texas Avenue begins around 1964 when it opened as a location of The Chicken Shack (Leslie's Chicken Shack) originally and at one time, you could access the restaurant next door with the parking lot. In 1971 it closed and became "The Steak House" later that year, owned by Ken Martin and Joe Ruiz (see article). By 1974 it was advertised as being "Ken Martin's The Steak House" and then, Ken Martin's Steak House. The first incarnation of Ken Martin's had what I've heard was the "cave room" (a dark dining room area) but don't have any pictures of it.

In 1985, the restaurant relocated to the former Pacific Coast Highway at 3231 East 29th Street where it would remain for almost the next thirty years.

In 1992-1993 it would briefly serve as one-off Sparkey's Pizza before Allred Motor Company in 1996, which gave way to Eastep Auto Sales in the late 2000s, which abandoned the location in the mid-2010s to move across the street. Finally, there's this Loopnet with some great aerials. I've got them all backed up for posterity.
From Loopnet. I don't want to see this showing up on Facebook.

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

A North Bryan Family Legacy

The former J.J.'s Liquor as it appeared in January 2026. (Picture by author).

Sometime relatively recently, I had a very brief conversation with Ms. Ferreri, whose late father, Joe, built a number of restaurants and a few hotels in the area.1 But among those, Sugar 'N Spice, the other drive-in, was missing from my site, so like Wendy's and H-E-B Pantry, lets go for covering a complete set. From what I can put together, 1215 N. Texas Avenue was the original address of the location and aerials back this up.

It was in 1951 that the drive-in opened (as a North Bryan counterpart to the Triangle) by 1968 was under new management as Ferreri moved on with bigger projects (the hotels). By fall of 1970 it was closed permanently but Luke Court was to reopen the store as "Sugar N Spice Drive In Grocery", now at 1219 N. Texas Avenue, likely reusing signage.

A second location of this "new" Sugar & Spice soon opened at 601 W. 28th Avenue as well, and by 1972 two more locations were in planning or operation, 1402 W. 25th Street and 300 W. 19th Street.2 In 1974, Court sold these to Southland Corporation, which first had advertised as 7-Eleven in spring of that year (with a few locations of its own also being built), and by August was holding grand openings for what would be eight locations.3 Apparently, 7-Eleven did add gas to this location, but its time as a 7-Eleven was short-lived. By 1978, it was sold and reopened as J.J.'s Filling Station, owned by J.J. Ruffino (the son of whom I have also briefly spoken to), which by 1981 would ditch the gasoline and become J.J.'s Liquor, which it would remain for almost the next thirty years.

This garage door faces Texas Avenue. (Picture by author, 1/2026)

As I previously mentioned in another post, Spec's bought the three JJ's Liquor stores in 2010. The one on Texas Avenue in College Station was their wholesale warehouse for a while, while Rock Prairie Crossing and this one continued to operate. But within a few years of that, the JJ's at Rock Prairie doubled in size when it rebranded, and this location simply closed up shop (around that time the H-E-B was rolling out its full size store, and it's a mystery why Spec's couldn't have replaced its store with something there, or expand the Bryan store).

While part of the lot was redeveloped as a self-service car wash at some point that continues to be in operation at 1217 N. Texas Avenue, the building, which had served under Ruffino, Ferreri, and 7-Eleven, was abandoned.4

1. Most notably Ramada Inn, Ferreri's Italian Cuisine, and Triangle Drive-In. This post should finish them.
2. The addresses, 1402 W. William Joel Bryan Parkway and 300 W. Martin Luther King Jr. Street respectively, are no more. The latter was demolished in the late 2000s while the former disappeared between 1995 and 2003. 601 W. 28th Avenue is still in operation as a convenience store, but not a branded one.
3. The local 7-Eleven stores were sold to E-Z Mart in 1993 after Southland's 1990 bankruptcy. By that time, none of the Luke Court-era stores were in business as 7-Eleven.
4. Abandoned on paper, maybe. There was a truck parked outside the building when I was taking photos and I could music coming from inside (which was crammed with boxes and other junk), so I'm hoping it was just security of some sort...but I wasn't about to find out! It's why I don't have too many pictures of the property.

Editor's Note: I've been trying to make a post for days that weren't previously made but this has created a problem of tightly packing too many in at one time, or outright missing deadlines. As a result, the updates of this blog will be uneven. There are about five or six posts that I've been meaning to re-do that I'll be working on, as well as upgrading stuff relating to Post Oak Mall. Join me at Numbered Exits in the meantime.

Tuesday, February 3, 2026

The Shipley's That Sold Hamburgers

The little "Entrance" sign doesn't light up anymore. When did it ever? When was it installed? (Picture by author, 1/2026)

Picking up immediately after The Now-Defunct Dairy Queen on Highway 21 is another Bryan restaurant that deserves to be covered, 3310 South College Avenue. The first reference I can find for 3310 South College Avenue (subject of today's post) is in 1970 with Shipley Do-Nut Shop, a significant departure from the modern Shipley's in that it had a more complete menu including hamburgers ("Flame Burgers") and milkshakes. This did not seem to be a corporate decision out of Shipley's Houston headquarters (none of the Houston locations seemed to do this, even in that time) and more of a liberty taken by the franchisee1; continuing to do this even as of 1981. In 1982 Shipley moved out to its current location at Villa Maria and Cavitt and dropped the hamburgers from the menu, with the College Station location opening in 1984.

After sitting vacant for nearly a decade it reopened as Archie's South College Grille. Teaming up with E.C. Archambault of Archie's Hamburgers and Archie's Taco Bell, the restaurants operated as essentially a dual-branded operation...with two restaurants and dining rooms. For whatever reason it did not work out in that form. In fall 1992 this was retooled as The Country Diner (without Archambault) but that too closed within a few years. In August 1994 Wok Express, a Chinese buffet, opened (closed in late 1995). Golden Dragon replaced it in early 1996 but didn't make it more than three months. Bruegger's Spuds opened in 1998 but also failed within a matter of months. Burger House, however, opened in fall 2000 and became far more successful, lasting 25 years and counting, more than any other establishment in the spot combined.

1. As I understand it, this wasn't uncommon for product-based franchisees back in the day. Kentucky Fried Chicken was notably a menu item originally, not a full restaurant, with a lot of variations and options for Orange Julius, too.

Monday, February 2, 2026

The Now-Defunct Dairy Queen on Highway 21

Music for the Funeral for Queen Dairy

If you read my stuff on Houston (you should) there's a lot of stuff on there that have fallen victim to TxDOT's highway expansion plans. In addition to covering some of Northwest Freeway's lost businesses, there's also a big section on Katy Freeway, which had some major clearances, like a whole strip where five restaurants (including McDonald's, Whataburger, and Denny's), La Quinta Inn, the entire REI parking lot, and an independent car dealership just got wiped off the map (and that's just one section). While Highway 6's expansion has generous ROW for TxDOT to work with, a few businesses on Highway 21 aren't so lucky. One of those is Dairy Queen at 3003 Highway 21 East1, which closed January 27, 2026.

The sloppily copy-edited press release.

This particular Dairy Queen opened in 1977 (judging by the one-year anniversary) as the 6th Dairy Queen in the area2 and other than that there's not much I can say about it with other than update in the early-to-mid 2010s. Of course, Smith Dairy Queens, the current area franchisee, is not going to replace it, of course, blaming medians but while Wendy's, McDonald's, Jack in the Box, Whataburger, and others have since expanded out locally to varying degrees of success (medians or not), Dairy Queen hasn't.

All pictures were taken by the author, January 2026.


1. For years, up until at least the mid-1990s, the address was erreoneously written as "3000 East Highway 21". It was never on that side of the street.
2. The five others were the ones that still exist today (minor relocations excluded), with the exception of a store near what is now William Joel Bryan Parkway and North Parker Avenue.

Editor's Note: Several more posts have gotten major upgrades. Walton Shopping Center replaces the Primo Pizza article and the old "Eastgate" article while FedMart has been fully rewritten.

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.

Wednesday, January 7, 2026

The Newer Shell at Villa Maria and Its McDonald's

Picture from June 2019 by author. The McDonald's sign looks significantly worse now.

We are back in business in 2026. There are many things that are yet to be covered, and there are many things that have already been covered. If you look at the picture for the Map, it's substantially emptier than what it looks like today, which for future-proofing purposes is illustrated below.
This picture doesn't show how anemic the Bryan posts were until a year or so ago.
Like many of the posts from last year, we're doing another Bryan post. I've talked about fast food restaurants in the area that have since passed on, last year I covered the following former fast food restaurants: Taco Bell, Roy Rogers, Zaxby's, Pizza Hut, Popeyes, Wendy's, and Bush's Chicken, plus an unusual "gas station Wendy's" and the Long John Silver's before it was rebuilt. Today's post is on a McDonald's, a subject that has been previously explored It hasn't closed yet but is on the list to be replaced, which makes sense as the sign is falling apart and despite often playing up the nostalgic angle, is a "mansard roof" McDonald's which the company is trying to eliminate.

The new location is already drawn up to be at the currently-undeveloped wooded northeastern corner of Villa Maria Road and Harvey Mitchell Parkway. It's not the first thing to be drawn up in the corner, in 2017, it was slated to be a 36,000 square feet Lidl store before they aborted their Texas expansion plan a few years later.

The current gas station as-is hasn't changed much in the almost twenty years it was built (all references say 2005, I'm guessing McDonald's had a ground lease that was for 20 years), with Shell gas, Space Liquor, a convenience store, and of course the McDonald's. I've mentioned this gas station on an old page called "Stories of the West Loop" or something along those lines, and in a comment someone said that Space Liquor was delayed for several months due to some issue by the TABC but their "Public Enquiry System" suggests their license was secured in a timely manner with the other stores.

It's not a good picture but it kind of shows the McDonald's facade (and prices before post-COVID price gouging). Picture from June 2019 by author.

I do remember when it opened, though, it felt less of a modern complement to the "other" Shell which at the time was not actually located at the intersection at the time, and felt more like a direct competitor to the Exxon across the street (which felt different enough than the nearby "La Brisa" Exxon). The McDonald's there at Greens Prairie Road and Highway 6 South had a "two-pronged" sign like what I had seen on road trips (if significantly shorter) but the one at 2818 did not, likely owing to sign restrictions (the older Shell and the older Exxon had taller signs). Even the Highway 6 one was shorter than what I had seen on trips.