For years, there's been a "Carbon-izer.com" button at the top, and I've decided that to better serve this site I should integrate those a bit better. What I've essentially done is created a whole webpage for everything on Texas Avenue that does NOT have a blog post, and for most of it, never will. The Texas Avenue page, as of this writing, will be updated by the end of the month (yes, it does have some rough edges), but also serves as a landing page for all the other categories that fit into it. I verified everything below to go in...couldn't find [bars and nightclubs] though...and more will likely be added.
This page is not on the Index.
Because of the limitations of Blogger, this particular post just covers brands. More pages to cover soon.
Tags currently on this post:
Exxon,UtoteM,Circle K,AutoZone,Church's Chicken,Dairy Queen,Texaco,McDonald's,Whataburger,Starbucks Coffee,Sonic,Taco Bell,O'Reilly Auto Parts,Dollar General,Shell,7-Eleven,Conoco,CVS,Enco,Max Food Mart
Buildings & Businesses of the Brazos Valley (College Station, Bryan, and Texas A&M) from the famous to the obscure.
Showing posts with label Max Food Mart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Max Food Mart. Show all posts
Friday, June 5, 2026
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Max Food Mart at Deacon
Max Food Mart/Texaco at 3300 Texas Avenue South opened in 1996 (part of a small chain of convenience stores in the area).1 I should note that as part of this post, originally, the frontage road in front of some of the businesses just north of here connected to the frontage road of Highway 6 South. Since the Highway 6 bypass was built in the 1970s, prior to around 2006, there was an intersection here with the southbound one-way traffic from the bypass intersecting with Deacon. To the south was Texas Avenue turning into an entrance for Highway 6 south with the northbound lane going from Highway 6. To the south at Deacon was a two-way frontage road that paralleled Texas Avenue up to Wal-Mart and became the southbound Highway 6 frontage road for the section south of Texas Avenue. Yes, for a time, you could drive straight from Nantucket Drive to the Wal-Mart parking lot and back without making a single turn or getting on the highway.
Around 2006, that all changed, and the set-up was altered. The road that paralleled Texas Avenue was cut off just past what was Petal Patch at the time, redirecting all traffic down an alleyway that had access to Pepper Tree Apartments (in the early 2020s these were fenced off) and Wings 'N More, with the two lanes from Texas Avenue went to the frontage road south (now all one-way) or the highway. As a kid, the frontage roads meant that we were getting close to the highway, and at that time if we were going that far it meant a trip out of town. Even into the early 2000s when there was commercial activity at Rock Prairie (most notably the Kroger shopping center) and Greens Prairie Road (the school, the McDonald's/Exxon), that was pretty much it, and nothing much until you got to Navasota.2
In any case, the other thing that made this Max Food Mart unique was a Subway counter inside the store, which remained up until 2010 when it was relocated to Tower Point. The space has been partially gutted for a beer cave but most of it just remains boarded up as a poorly-utilized backroom. The Max name had already been dropped by 2007 (and had converted to Shell from Texaco in 2003).3
1. I don't know what happened to Max, as late as around 2019 they built that new Chevron in Wellborn, but have since removed that branding. The only one I know of that still uses the name is the one at FM 2154 and Rock Prairie Road.
2. Some of this was taken from this post, though has been updated. As of this writing, that post is to receive a major re-do.
3. You may also remember that Max Food Mart had a deal with Krispy Kreme to provide donuts in their stores around 2003-2005. This stopped when franchisee Lone Star Doughnuts collapsed. More information on Houston Historic Retail.
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