Showing posts with label Rodeway Inn. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rodeway Inn. Show all posts

Friday, January 10, 2025

Rodeway Inn of Texas Avenue

Official picture...probably taken before it became a Motel 6.
Welcome to 2025! I meant to retire the blog a decade ago but ended up fixing it up and adding over 150 new posts, even if the release is spotty (2019 and 2020 got over 40 posts, 2021 and 2024 had around two dozens posts, some had less than ten, and a conspicuous absence for 2018).

Speaking of lack of activity, the [hotels and motels] tag hasn't seen much since I covered Hampton Inn and predecessor Sands Motel back in 2021. Several of them got updates (most notably relating to the original Holiday Inn in College Station, but a true new post has been lacking.

We've mentioned Joe Ferreri before, who passed away in 2023 at the age of 103 and some of his ventures over the years including Ramada Inn, the Triangle Drive-In, and Ferreri's Italian.

First announced in 1965 as a Rodeway Inn (opened in 1966) with a Kettle opening a year later (24 hours—though it looks like the "separate luxury restaurant" never came to fruition).

The motel stayed as a Rodeway Inn under Ferreri's ownership and was lost in 1988 to foreclosure and in the early 1990s rebranded as Preference Inn. In 2004, it changed names again to Americas Best Value Inn & Suites. For a very brief time in the mid-2010s was a Rodeway Inn again, before becoming a combo Motel 6/Studio 6 by 2017. Unlike other combo hotels, they operated as one business with no difference in rooms, nor had the old Studio 6 logo before it changed to look more like the Motel 6 logo (which also got a slight redesign).

I did visit here a few times in the late 2010s as a Motel 6 (knew someone who lived there for months), it wasn't great. (This is the motel's current website under Motel 6 where the picture came from).

Obviously the Kettle doesn't exist anymore. While it did briefly co-exist with the Kettle at 2712 South Texas Avenue, it appears to have closed sometime in the late 1980s and appears to have been vacant until Coco Loco moved in around 1998. Also at some point Coco Loco got its own address (1607)...

Tuesday, August 13, 2019

La Quinta next to Denny's

The current La Quinta as of August 2019 by author. Will it continue to be a La Quinta when the new one on the freeway opens?


Both of these buildings have the address of 607 Texas Avenue, thus they'll be covered at the same time. The restaurant at the corner of Texas and Live Oak was built in 1980 (Brazos CAD says 1978 for some reason) with La Quinta Inn built behind it in 1979 (originally "La Quinta Motor Inn", later "La Quinta Inn", before branded as simply "La Quinta") right behind it. The original restaurant was Julie's Place (#139), operated by Associated Hosts Inc. of California, which ran several hotel-affiliated restaurants. Boasting a large menu including hamburgers and onion soup, Julie's Place became notorious after a January 1987 murder (there was a story on MyBCS, though I'm sure I had heard it elsewhere about how the manager actually swallowed the key to the safe and the stabbings were to retrieve the key, but I'm not sure on that since that's just a comment on the forum and the official court summary makes no mention of the key-swallowing incident). That said, an article from the Houston Chronicle did mention the body was cut from the sternum to the pelvis, which lends credence to the statement.


In May 1988 Associated Hosts closed the restaurant and reopened it as Bombay Bicycle Club a month later, but in 1995 it closed permanently and became a Denny's in 1996.

August 2019 picture of Denny's by author. Until about a year or so prior, it had green trim.

Additionally, the La Quinta has some additional buildings (which appear to have been shuttered) behind what used to be Rice Garden and the La Quinta Inn was previously home to a "super slide" of some sort, but I can't find much information on that. (Parts of this post originally appeared here).

UPDATE 09-13-2024: Update with new opening dates and links.
UPDATE 01-03-2025: The two buildings on the other side of the street, 112-114 Live Oak, have been selected to be torn down and redeveloped. Surprisingly, these weren't permanently shuttered after 2020, Street View from 2023 still shows activity.
UPDATE 02-25-2025: After co-existing with two other new La Quinta Inn sites on the freeway, reports are that now severed from the auxiliary buildings, the hotel has been rebranded as Rodeway Inn. [Rodeway Inn] has been added as a new label with the now-Motel 6 in Bryan (as well as adding [College Station] to the post as well).