Weekend Happenings

Not intended to be comprehensive, just some things we’ve noticed happening this weekend:

Scat Jazz Lounge has the great Ricki Derek and the Vegas Six tonight at 9:00 PM, an Adonis Rose Cd Release Show Saturday at 9:00 PM, and Mi Son, Mi Son, Mi Son on Sunday at 8:00 PM.

The T&P Tavern has Friday Happy Hour from 4:00 PM to 9:00 PM, with all Texas Beers just $2.75 (draft or bottled). On Saturday, the T&P has free live music, featuring folk rock band Trinity Dogs this weekend. And on Sunday, there’s summer drink specials and free movie night. $2 Mimosas, $3 Margaritas, $4 Bloody Marys. This Sunday’s movie is the the Coen Brothers’ cult classic “The Big Lebowski,” starring Jeff Bridges, John Goodman, Julianne Moore, Steve Buscemi, and Philip Seymour Hoffman. The movie starts at approximately 7:30 PM. Because it wouldn’t be “The Big Lebowski” without them, the T&P will be serving up $3 White Russians on Sunday.

Fred’s has Gravity Feed tonight at 7:00 PM, Kate Hearne tomorrow at 12:00 PM, Electric Mt. Rotten Apple Gang tomorrow at 5:00 PM, Wino Vino tomorrow at 7:00 PM, and a Sunday lineup consisting of Kurt South at 12:00 PM, Garrett Heinrichs Band at 3:00 PM, and Terry Rasor Band at 6:00 PM.

The Omni Theater is showing “The Alps,” about Europe’s greatest mountain range and one man’s quest to climb the infamous North Face of the Eiger. “The Alps” runs today at 1:00 PM, 3:10 PM, 4:15 PM, and 5:20 PM, Saturday at 11:00 AM, 1:05 PM, 3:15 PM, 5:25 PM, and 7:35 PM, and Sunday at 12:00 PM, 3:15 PM, and 5:25 PM.

Arts Fifth Avenue is putting on “You Gotta Laugh” on Friday and Saturday, featuring performances of Steven McGaw’s Baitshop Confidential, Brian Farish’s Dry Gulch Zeal, Rey Debalsa’s Urges, and McGaw and Nicholas Irion’s B&B. Admission is $12, starts at 8:00 PM with pre-show music at 7:30 PM.

Urban Fort Worth Weekend Happenings

Not intended to be comprehensive, just some stuff we’ve noticed:

Spiral Diner has new Blue Plate specials: the Summer Spring Salad (mixed greens topped with strawberries, oranges, agave roasted pecans, almonds, garbanzo beans, carrots, zucchini, peas, tomatoes, red bell peppers, cucumber, avocado, and a touch of fresh mint, topped with raspberry poppyseed vinaigrette) and the Mushroom Ceviche (three types of mushrooms in a lime marinade enhanced with tomatoes, jalapeno, garlic, onion, ginger, and cilantro, topped with avocado and served with a side of corn chips). And of course, Sunday brings their all-you-can-eat pancake breakfast.

The new Love Shack location at the SoSeven development has its grand opening today. Regular hours are 11:00 AM to midnight. Josie at Eat This Fort Worth takes a look at Tim Love’s newest.

The T&P Tavern has a number of things going on. Friday night happy hour from 4:00 to 9:00, with all Texas beers (draft or bottled) at $2.75. By the way, we noticed that the T&P has an exclusive Rahr beer not found anywhere else – the Red Ale. Brewed for competition, the only place to find it currently is at the T&P Tavern – but they’re almost out. Check it out while you still can. EDIT: And just to be clear, this is not the same as the long-time “Rahr’s Red” amber lager. This is an ale, exclusive (as far as we know) to the T&P. On Saturday, the T&P will have Mike Richardson providing live music again – starts at 8:00. On Sunday, it’s Movie Night. The T&P Tavern opens at 2 and will serve $2 Mimosas, $3 Margaritas, and $4 Bloody Marys all day. This week’s movie is U571, starting around 7:00.

Scat Jazz Lounge has got Shawn Pickler Trio featuring Melissa McMillan tonight at 9:00 PM, Big Daddy Alright tomorrow at 9:00 PM, and Mi Son, Mi Son, Mi Son on Sunday at 8:00 PM (the Sunday show has no cover).

Museum Place Condos is having an Open House on Saturday, from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM. Free hot dogs and lemonade, and tours of the condos on the top three floors of One Museum Place.

Fred’s has Fort Worth Nationals tonight at 7:00 PM (no cover), Bastard Sons of Skoalfield tomorrow from noon to 3:00, My Wooden Leg tomorrow at 7:00 PM (also no cover), and on Sunday they’ve got Kurt South at noon, Darren Kobetich at 3:00 PM, and Graham Wilkinson & The Underground Township from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM (also no cover).

The Modern has the 2009 Guitar Guild Music Festival going on right now through August 1st, at 8:00 PM. Admission is $20. They’re also showing “Summer Hours” in the theater, on Saturday at 6:00 PM and 8:00 PM and on Sunday at 5:00 PM. The museum’s current exhibitions are “The Collection and Then Some,” and the recently added “William Kentridge: Five Themes.” Also, the Modern has let us know that they now have bike racks for visitors who ride to the museum.

The Kimbell currently has “Butchers, Dragons, Gods & Skeletons: Film Installations by Philip Haas Inspired by Works in the Collection.”

The Carter is currently exhibiting: “The Harmon and Harriet Kelley Collection of African-American Art: Works on Paper,” “Masterworks of American Photography: Moments in Time,” and “Rufino Tamayo: Tamarind Lithography Workshop.” Starting Saturday, they’ll also have “Circle of Friends: Portraits of Artists.”

McKee vs. Shlachter: Blogger vs. Startlegram

Forgive the diversion from our usual content, but this was too odd to pass up.

We consider ourselves to be fairly “hip” and “with it” people (NOTE: no actual quantity of hipness or with-it-osity is conferred with this sentence. Offer void in Utah), but we were surprised to learn of a butting-of-heads between a friend of ours and one of the folks at the Star-Telegram.

Fellow local blogger Robert McKee, whose DowntownFortWorth.com we also just noticed is back to life and looks pretty darned cool, runs a scavenger hunt on the site where contestants must match photos of each letter of the alphabet to the sign in Downtown Fort Worth that the letter appears on. As blogged about over on the Weekly, Robert had to delay announcing the winner of the most recent scavenger hunt due to his being in Scotland to put on a proper funeral ceremony for his father, who passed away a year prior.

Apparently, a delay in announcing the winner of a free contest on a web site so upset a participant, one Kevin McCambell, that he e-mail Robert several times to find out what the deal was. After a series of exchanges, Robert finally wrote back “I AM AT MY FATHER’S FREAKING FUNERAL,” and McCambell went on a crusade, complaining to the contest’s prize donors and to one Barry Shlachter, the Star-Telegram’s business writer.

Shlachter ran a story nit-picking Robert’s funeral story (choice quote: “scattering ashes in an Aloha shirt (he sent us a picture) may not be the same as a funeral (his father died in December), but why quibble?”). Being put on the defensive over what should be a harmless fun game and his providing closure for his father’s life understandably bothered Robert, and he demanded an apology from Shlachter.

He got a private apology from S-T editor Jim Witt, who said that the paper couldn’t give a public one. Unsatisfied, Robert decided to take things to the next step in getting an apology out of Shlachter, as also blogged about at the Weekly:

Well, an apology has not come (save for the two hilarious half-ass attempts to humor me by publishing the winner’s name in his column yesterday but ignoring the 900 pound gorilla) and therefore Wave II of Operation: Pepperspray has been launched. Observe: http://www.barryshlachter.com that’s right! Knowing he’s probably not savvy enough to have thought to secure it, I bought the domain of the mother-fucker’s name. And now, while he can print his stupid editorializing of peoples’ burial services, sit back with his tenure, and dismiss the whiny ‘letters-to-the-editor’ assuming people will just ‘move on,’ forever emblazoned on the internet, his name will be associated with his epic journalistic fail. At least until he apologizes in his column. Fucked with the wrong guy.

We wish Robert luck in getting an apology out of Mr. Shlachter. We can sympathize with him over the whole incident, at least to some extent – we know how the degree to which people (such as Mr. McCambell) can get very emotional, demanding, and downright rude over what is essentially a free, no-obligation-to-read-in-any-way web site can truly be bizarre.

On Leon Krier And Cities For Living

This link will take you to an outstanding piece by Roger Scruton in the City Journal talking about designing livable cities and towns and famed European antimodernist Leon Krier’s soluitons. Krier’s thinking is along much the same lines as mine. Here’s an excerpt:

Krier’s solution is to replace the “downtown plus suburbs” system with that of the polycentric settlement. If people move out, then let it be to new urban centers, with their own public spaces, public buildings, and places of work and leisure: let the new settlements grow, as Poundbury has grown next to Dorchester, not as suburbs but as towns. For then they will recapture the true goal of settlement, which is the human community in a place that is “ours” rather than individual plots scattered over a place that is no one’s. The towns will create a collection of somewheres instead of an ever-expanding nowhere. This solution has a precedent: the city of London grew next to the city of Westminster in friendly competition, and the residential areas of Chelsea, Kensington, Bloomsbury, and Whitechapel arose as autonomous villages rather than as spillovers from the existing centers.

Inside the TRV – Neighborhoods

Kicking off a series of posts looking at the finer points of the Trinity River Vision’s Trinity Uptown plan, I’m starting today by examining the four neighborhoods of the TRV’s new urban district just north of downtown, and what each will be geared towards.

The Trinity Uptown district will be divided into four distinct neighborhoods – the North Neighborhood, the Southwest Neighborhood, the Southeast Neighborhood, and the Urban Lake Neighborhood. Each will feature a mix of uses, but each also mixes those uses in their own way.

The North Neighborhood

The North Neighborhood will feature some of Trinity Uptown’s most varied mix of commercial and residential uses. The North Main Street Corridor will be lined with buildings a minimum of 3 stories high and a maximum of 96 feet high, which will feature ground-level retail topped by office or residential uses. North Main itself will feature four travel lanes, two dedicated parking lanes, and wide 18′ sidewalks to encourage pedestrian activity in what will likely be the district’s most retail-heavy street and primary commercial corridor. Buildings will build to the property line for proper street wall creation (this is a rule that applies to the entire district). North Main will be lined with a double row of trees.

Once off the North Main corridor, the North Neighborhood falls into four different zoning applications. Streets in the North Neighborhood off of North Main will be very different in character from North Main, falling under the district’s Local Streets design designation. These streets will feature narrow 24′ 2 travel lane designs with two dedicated parking lanes, and sidewalks which will be a mixture of 11′ sidewalks and 9′ residential patios. Buildings are required to be built to their property line to maintain a proper street wall. Residential developments will feature street-oriented townhomes with raised patios on the sidewalks. All local streets will be lined with a row of trees.

Beyond Local Streets, there are Access Lanes which are even narrower and also tree-lined, and each block will have a mid-block Pedestrian Street devoid of cars.

Just off North Main will be the LaGrave Field zone, which will feature a mix of uses and feature buildings of a minimum of 16 feet and maximum of 72 feet in height. Activities in this zone will be tied to LaGrave Field in many ways. East and south of the LaGrave Field zone is an area designated N1. N1 will be primarily residential in character with ground-floor neighborhood retail where appropriate. Buildings in the N1 designation will be a minimum height of 3 stories and a maximum height of 72 feet.

West of North Main and along the bluffs on the northeast edge of the neighborhood, development is designated N2. N2 is another zone that will be primarily residential in makeup with ground-floor neighborhood retail where appropriate. N2′s minimum height is also 3 stories, but its maximum height will be 96 feet, enabling taller and denser structures here.

At the northern tip of the North Neighborhood is an area designated N3. N3′s minimum height is raised to 6 stories, and its maximum height shoots up to 288 feet. This is one of only a handful of areas of Trinity Uptown where towers are allowed.

The North Neighborhood features water frontages along the new Bypass Channel, the river on the east, and the interior canal system. The Bypass Channel will be fronted by terraced public walkways, leading from the water up ramps and stairs to patios and outdoor dining areas. The eastern river channel will feature flatter access with large public sidewalks and plazas and boardwalks. The narrow canals will feature public walkways, plazas, and pedestrian bridges.

Open space in the North Neighborhood will take the form of several parks and plazas. Three parks will be located near LaGrave Field, near the northern point of the neighborhood, and on its western bank with the bypass channel. Plazas (all plaza in Trinity Uptown front water) will be located 1) where North Main intersects one of the canals, and 2) at the neighborhood’s southwest point where it fronts the Urban Lake.

The Southwest Neighborhood

The Southwest Neighborhood will be at its core primarily a residential neighborhood, with a variety of housing types. Main commercial uses will be located along the new alignment of White Settlement Road as it winds through the neighborhood towards the North Neighborhood. The majority of the Southwest Neighborhood will be N2, with its southern and western points designated N3 for towers.

Major open space in this neighborhood will be a large plaza on the neighborhood’s eastern edge where it front the Urban Lake, five small parks scattered around its edges, and a large “Central Park” in its center. This central park will be surrounded by two canals and six-story buildings across the canals. At its northeastern end, this park will be capped by a new elementary or high school between the park space and the Urban Lake.

Streets in the Southwest Neighborhood will be of the narrow Local Streets design, with two exceptions – White Settlement Road will be a four-lane street with on-street parking during off-peak hours, with a sidewalk/patio arrangement like the Local Streets. Henderson Street will be a larger six-lane design owing to its being part of the State Highway System.

The Southwest Neighborhood will front waterways in a similar manner as the North Neighborhood, and will also include Urban Lake frontage in the style seen in the illustrations.

The Southeast Neighborhood

The Southeast Neighborhood’s character primarily comes from the new Tarrant County College campus. Development around TCC will be a minimum of 3 stories and a maximum of 72 feet. The northeastern section of the Southeast Neighborhood will be N1 for smaller scaled buildings.

Open space in the Southeast Neighborhood will take the form of a large central park on the canal border between this neighborhood and the North Neighborhood. This central park will also have a new elementary or high school associated with it. A plaza is located at the TCC site as well. Water frontage takes the form of the River Channel and Canal types.

In this neighborhood, the old river channel on the east will be significantly wider to allow for a large area of on-water activities, such as waterfront restaurants and houseboats.

The Urban Lake Neighborhood

Finally, the Urban Lake neighborhood will be a primary focal point of the district. It will be surrounded by a mix of uses including institutional and cultural. A large plaza and boardwalk is planned here alongside the old TXU power plant, along with boat docks and ramps. Another plaza is situated across the lake in front of the Radio Shack campus site. All development in the Urban Lake neighborhood is of a special UL designation, meaning a minimum height of 3 stories and a maximum height of 96 feet.

This concludes our first look into the details of the Trinity River Vision and the Trinity Uptown plan. I’ll be writing more of these in the near future, as we move closer and closer to seeing physical work commence on the project. Future installments will examine the Trinity Uptown urban design guidelines & standards and other aspects of the project, which will forever change Fort Worth’s character and central city.

Another note: much of what you’ll be seeing in regards to the urban design aspects of Trinity Uptown is the result of work by Fort Worth’s own Gideon Toal, the local architectural & planning firm which, for some reason, never gets the press they deserve on these matters. Consider these posts a way to rectify that.

Scenes From The Fairmount Home Tour #1 – New Traditional Architecture

During the past weekend’s Fairmount home tour, I had the opportunity to walk through several historic homes in the neighborhood. Over the coming week, I’ll be talking a bit about those homes. Today, though, I’d like to talk about one of the two “bonus” homes on the tour – a brand-new home that serves as an excellent example of infill in a historic neighborhood.

For the uninitiated, Fairmount is a neighborhood in the Near Southside. It’s a classic “streetcar suburb” – developed along major streetcar lines, the neighborhood is essentially a traditional small town on its own. It is a mixed-use neighborhood on a compact, walkable street grid. The majority of structures are single-family homes of traditional bungalow design (most in Arts & Crafts, Four Square, or Prairie School architecture), but there are also numerous apartment buildings, retail structures, churches, and schools mixed in, all together in a fantastic example of traditional small-town urbanism. Here’s a description of the neighborhood from its web site:

The Fairmount/Southside Historic District is a large, early 20th-century neighborhood on the near south side of Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas. The Fairmount area is set on a flat prairie, slightly higher in elevation than the surrounding area and approximately two miles south of downtown Fort Worth. Forming a rectangle of about 360 acres, the district is bounded generally by Magnolia Avenue on the north, Hemphill Street on the east, Jessamine Street on the south, and Eighth Avenue on the west. Fairmount was developed as a middle-class residential area between 1890 and 1938, with the largest concentration of houses dating from 1905 to 1920. The predominant building type is the single-family residence, with wood-frame bungalows being the most common configuration. Variations on the Four Square form are scattered throughout the district. The Southside’s grander homes are concentrated in the eastern sections of the district and reflect a variety of stylistic influences. Chase Court, a private, deed-restricted street, contains a small pocket of these finer homes within a distinct streetscape. The Fairmount/Southside district includes many early 20th-century commercial buildings, which were developed along the streetcar lines. Also included are church, school and apartment buildings, which represent the continuing development of the area as a neighborhood in the 20th century. The nominated Historic District contains 1,016 Contributing buildings, one Contributing structure, and 425 Non-contributing buildings, amounting to a ratio of 71% contributing structures.

A neighborhood that declined sharply due to suburban flight, Fairmount is headed back to its glory days with the increased interest in urban living in Fort Worth. As a protected historic district (the largest in the Southwest, and called by some the largest collection of bungalow architecture in the country), Fairmount’s historic homes are being restored and reoccupied at an amazing rate. There are some vacant lots (and incompatible newer buildings), though, and for those sites, infill housing must maintain the district’s integrity.

Which brings us to this house. The Mathis House, at first glance, is nearly indistinguishable from the historic homes that are being restored around the neighborhood. Look closer, though, and you’ll see that this is, in fact, a brand-new home built to be an integral part of the neighborhood’s architectural integrity.

On the exterior, the home’s big front porch, traditional bungalow shaping, and attractive color scheme are typical of the neighborhood’s classic homes. While not built on a pier-and-beam foundation as the historic homes were, the home’s raised slab foundation has a similar appearance. Moving inside, the home’s appearance is an attractive blend of modern (and I must point out, I mean “modern” definitely *not* in the sense of a tract house in Burleson) and traditional.

Layout and detailing are similar in many ways to the classic homes, perhaps with a slightly more open feel (especially apparent in the kitchen area). One interesting touch is that, because the home uses a slab foundation, the flooring is simply the slab – scored & stained for effect. This cost-effective design also imparts a cool urban feel to the interior.

The kitchen, while again more open in design than many of the historic homes, does an excellent job maintaining the look and feel of the traditional bungalow kitchen design. I was particularly pleased to see real tile and wood counters – no granite in this kitchen. I know this seems odd in this day and age, but I’m not a real big fan of most granite counters, and in traditionally-designed homes doubly so. Big thumbs up from me on this kitchen design.

Another wonderful aspect of this home is its use of color. Many of the traditional homes in Fairmount have absolutely wonderful color schemes, and often each room has its own striking color. This home maintains that sort of feel. Compare and contrast with the usual beige-and-taupe-dipped interiors of the typical suburban home.

At the rear of the property, the detached garage (thank you!) has a wonderful garage apartment above. These extra dwellings, once so integral to the fabric of the urban neighborhood, have long been banished by planning departments. It is fantastic to see them being allowed to return here in urban Fort Worth. Useful as apartments to lease out, or as office/studio space, garage apartments are great to have – and the presence of one at this modern house was another wonderful traditional touch.

The Mathis home shows that traditional architecture is alive and well and still absolutely relevant to the modern world (and that, contrary to the typical attitudes of today, you don’t need 7,000 square feet to live in the modern world). It has some wonderfully creative touches and is of attractive design. This is a perfect example of the sort of neighborhood-scaled infill that has slowly but surely been turning the Near Southside into an incredibly cool part of town.

Look for more discussions of homes from the Fairmount tour throughout the week!

Opening Night for the Scat Jazz Lounge

So, the West and Clear team (yours truly included) settled into our booth in the Scat Jazz Lounge for opening night last night. You might be wondering – how was it?

Short answer: Outstanding. Best thing to happen to downtown Fort Worth in years.

For the long answer, head over to West and Clear to read Steve-o’s write up and check out the quick podcast live from opening night.

Grand Opening of Scat Jazz Lounge tonight!

Just a reminder that Ricki Derek’s Scat Jazz Lounge downtown opens tonight! The lounge is in the basement of the Woolworth Building on 4th Street (same building as Jos. A. Bank and Milan Gallery). Myself and the rest of the West and Clear team will be there tonight for a podcast from the gala affair – look for it tomorrow!

Podcasting from Scat Jazz Lounge tomorrow

Just a note – myself and the rest of Team West and Clear will be doing a podcast tomorrow night…

…from the grand opening of Ricki Derek’s Scat Jazz Lounge in downtown!

If you’re attending, stop by and say hi!

Scat Jazz Lounge Opening Dec. 6!

Great news, sent via Steve-o at the Caravan of Dreams – Ricki Derek’s Scat Jazz Lounge is opening December 6th! The new lounge will be located in the basement of the Woolworth Building at 4th & Houston (where Jos. A. Bank and Milan Gallery are located). Personally, I can’t wait for this place to open – it sounds right up my vintage-minded alley. Check the lounge’s site for the current lineup for December.

Staying hungry and foolish.

One thing a lot of people may not know is that I don’t make a living doing Fort Worthology. I have a day job, one I’m not particularly enthused with most times for various reasons, in IT. It’s not awful, and it pays the bills, but it’s not really something I want to do for the rest of my life.

What I would love to do is work in one of the fields related to urban development: architecture, planning, design, development, that sort of thing. Another dream would be to do Fort Worthology (and help with West and Clear) for a living.

Thing is, there’s a reason why you can’t say, “Wow, look at all those people supporting their families with their blogs devoted to deeply intricate city-specific architecture and planning nerdery,” or, really, why there aren’t that many people supporting themselves full-time from their blogs, period. That reason is because it isn’t easy.

I’m not jumping off the employment bandwagon to concentrate on Fort Worthology (not yet, anyway). Essentially, all of this is just a way for me to say two things:

  1. Check out the Fort Worthology Store, now open!, and
  2. Don’t buy out of pity.

DO buy, though, and buy because you like Fort Worthology and want to support a web site that supports our city. Buy because you like my photography – there are framed prints available in the store (currently a run of black & white, with many more coming soon). Buy because you’d like a Fort Worthology t-shirt (two designs now – a nifty Fort Worthology logo surrounded by small photos of urban Fort Worth, and a Support the Streetcar design as well, with several more designs on the way). Buy because you rock like a quarry.

Not only are there several SUBTLE links scattered throughout this article, there’s also a nice, shiny “Fort Worthology Store” button on the left, above our Google Ads.

As for me, my goal is to make progress towards doing this site (and W&C) for a living, and/or move into one of the fields related to our subject matter. What makes me desire following what I love is a commencement speech, delivered by Steve Jobs of Apple to Stanford. One quote in particular stands out for me:

Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work, and the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking, and don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it, and like any great relationship it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking. Don’t settle.

You’ve heard things like this before, but coming from Jobs it has a certain ring of truth to it. Jobs loves what he does.

I love Fort Worth, trying to make it better, and writing for Fort Worthology.

Thank you for being a reader. Oh, and…VISIT THE STORE! :)

Scat Jazz Lounge to open in Woolworth Building

The Scat Jazz Lounge, which was originally supposed to open in the basement of the Burk Burnett Building, will now be opening in the basement of the Woolworth Building next door. This will put the jazz lounge under the Joseph A. Bank store and the Milan Gallery. Lounge singer Ricki Derek has said the club is on track for an October opening.

This promises to be a great addition to downtown, and we’ll be watching its progress!

Scat Jazz Lounge on track for October

According to lounge singer Ricki Derek, the Scat Jazz Lounge going in to the basement of the Burk Burnett Building in downtown is back on track after a few delays. The lounge is now scheduled for an October opening. This promises to be a nice venue that, hopefully, will bring back some of the cool we lost by the departure of the Caravan of Dreams. We’ll keep you up-to-date on the progress of the Scat Jazz Lounge in the coming months.

Hat tip to, ironically, The Caravan of Dreams.

Advertisements