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Stomping Grounds: Retail At 1225 W. 34th St.


Mab

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The retail and restaurant explosion on 34th Street continues. Last year The Leader visited with attorney Troy Blakeney, who put up for sale more than three acres at 1225 West 34th St., near the Harriet and Joe Foster YMCA. That ownership designation is now past tense because the property has been acquired by developer Bryan Danna with Houston-based Revive Development who is envisioning big things for the space.

Marketing materials indicate that designs for the property, called “Stomping Grounds,” incorporate a repositioned existing warehouse and a new building, both with ample windows and access onto 15 feet deep patios fronting the center lawn.

The lawn would be 8,000 square feet and is intended as a family friendly destination with a “thoughtful mix of eating and drinking establishments.”

“We always look for innovative ways to add familiar elements to our projects that complement the unique personalities of our neighborhoods,” said Bryan Danna, Principal at Revive, in a press release. “As a resident of this area, I’m even more conscious of the needs and desires of the residents, business owners and families who live and work here. This is a very personal project to me.”

The 224 parking spaces will surely be a draw for potential tenants.

“We’ve already begun scheduling neighborhood events and activities for 2018 [at Stomping Grounds] including farmer’s markets, music events, and festivals,” said Monica Danna, Director of Community Outreach at Revive.

“As a resident of Garden Oaks, I’m reaching out to neighbors to hear what’s most important in dining, retail, and recreation.”

Stomping Grounds will break ground this month and is expected to be completed by Labor Day 2018.

Danna is already developing 2.5 acres on the southwest corner of 34th and Ella, with signed tenants BB’s Café, Aladdin Mediterranean Cuisine, Pop & Pan and the Surfhouse so far.

4

http://theleadernews.com/danna-buys-3-acres-on-34th-street-for-stomping-grounds/

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The owner of the strip center that houses Slowpokes is supposed to be doing something on the adjacent property.  That caused a ruckus over plans to knock down trees and add parking by Slowpokes.  Is this development in addition to that or the same thing?  There is already site prep going on over there, but I cannot tell whether it is two different developments or one big one.

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  • The title was changed to Stomping Grounds at 12225 W 34th Street
  • 1 year later...
20 minutes ago, CrockpotandGravel said:

I might be in the minority here, but Revive missed the mark not leaning into adding more green space. A development like this benefits from lots of green space. It would also provide room for additional buildings in the future.

Structured parking is expensive but it would work here. I don't think there will be enough spaces with surface parking. A garage could accommodate more, because this place is going to be busy.

 

While I agree, its also on 34th Street. Its just not there yet and way beyond it in fact. These arguments can be made for stuff inside 610, but starts pushing it outside of it. I'm definitely on your side, but I'm also a realist, and this is next to Garden Oaks. I've been happy thus far with this sudden uplift of 34th street. It has a lot of potential. Revive has done a serviceable job of clean these areas up and giving them a refresh and in many cases thats all thats needed, a light touch. More heavy handed approaches can be taken later as this area will be the next growth area once The Heights packs in more.

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On 8/9/2019 at 5:55 AM, CrockpotandGravel said:


It's there. People I know who live in Oak Forest and Garden Oaks, in online groups, and just in casual conversations , all are excited about Stomping Grounds. That excitement is going to generate big crowds and a packed parking lot. Having a garage for a project like this easily accommodates the crowds.

A garage could go in the development in the future.There is always that possibility. If the funds were available to build one along with the rest of buildings, Revive should have considered it.

This project is going to be the go-to place in Garden Oaks. From what I've seen from passing by and the site plan, I don't the developer grasped the scope of this development.

 

 


I remain in constant mourning over Slowpokes' yard. It was an added feature that made it more than a coffee shop. 

Stomping Ground's  green space will be nice , my only wish would be for Revive to increase the green space. Maybe something like Heights Mercantile, where green space and landscaping is incorporated throughout.

 

 

Agree, however, going with our initial assumption of Garden Oaks and Revive not considering a parking garage instead of a parking lot shows that there are still initial misconceptions and presuppositions to overcome for this area. This always happens for every new area that goes in a new direction. I'm the opposite when it comes to areas like Near Northside and 3rd Ward. Most people I talk to, think I'm crazy that these are going to be the next it places, but yet there is something there that has a lot of potential. On the flip side I didn't really see that initially with 34th St. Even then though this area, because its so new regarding recent development is going to have some growing pains trying to figure out not only what it wants to be, but what others will want it to be. We can probably say now that a parking garage might have been better because we now know how many people are likely to go here, but that data was probably just not there yet for Revive to consider. I've seen all these new developments by Revive as initial experiments. Most of these are easy entry flips to see what can be possible. Its the evolution thing that was discussed at length in the Camden thread. An evolution has to start somewhere, but what does that initially look like...we don't know. What will it turn into....we also don't know. Looking forward to how it grows though. Its certainly flipped my initial presuppositions for that area of town, which I'm happy about.

 

EDIT: Further on the point of "evolution" and flipping assumptions, that is the current era we are in for our city. Every proceeding era was development for established or well know assumptions. This current era of development has been the opposite. This era has been all about flipping earlier, old, or misunderstood assumptions about the city. This area of town is also now getting that treatment.

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  • 4 weeks later...
On 8/10/2019 at 9:39 AM, Luminare said:

 

Agree, however, going with our initial assumption of Garden Oaks and Revive not considering a parking garage instead of a parking lot shows that there are still initial misconceptions and presuppositions to overcome for this area. This always happens for every new area that goes in a new direction. I'm the opposite when it comes to areas like Near Northside and 3rd Ward. Most people I talk to, think I'm crazy that these are going to be the next it places, but yet there is something there that has a lot of potential. On the flip side I didn't really see that initially with 34th St. Even then though this area, because its so new regarding recent development is going to have some growing pains trying to figure out not only what it wants to be, but what others will want it to be. We can probably say now that a parking garage might have been better because we now know how many people are likely to go here, but that data was probably just not there yet for Revive to consider. I've seen all these new developments by Revive as initial experiments. Most of these are easy entry flips to see what can be possible. Its the evolution thing that was discussed at length in the Camden thread. An evolution has to start somewhere, but what does that initially look like...we don't know. What will it turn into....we also don't know. Looking forward to how it grows though. Its certainly flipped my initial presuppositions for that area of town, which I'm happy about.

 

EDIT: Further on the point of "evolution" and flipping assumptions, that is the current era we are in for our city. Every proceeding era was development for established or well know assumptions. This current era of development has been the opposite. This era has been all about flipping earlier, old, or misunderstood assumptions about the city. This area of town is also now getting that treatment.

A lot of neighbors will walk and ride bikes to this development.   Not putting in a garage was not due to a misconception, and the presupposition was that people would walk.  

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2 hours ago, CrockpotandGravel said:


All true but there will also be a lot of people who don't live within walking or biking distance patronizing the businesses in this development. Surface parking won't be enough to handle the crowds, like surface parking isn't enough at the Heights Water Works redevelopment from Braun Enterprises. Developments like this need parking structures and work with the city to develop off-site parking structures for the many people coming outside the neighborhood to the surrounding businesses. 

 

 

How do you define when surface parking "isn't enough"? Are businesses at the Water Works failing due to lack of access?

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On 9/6/2019 at 7:39 AM, Texasota said:

 

How do you define when surface parking "isn't enough"? Are businesses at the Water Works failing due to lack of access?

Seems like personal preference for now.  Time will tell I guess, but, sure does not seem like that is the case at the moment.   

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On 9/6/2019 at 6:49 AM, CrockpotandGravel said:


All true but there will also be a lot of people who don't live within walking or biking distance patronizing the businesses in this development. Surface parking won't be enough to handle the crowds, like surface parking isn't enough at the Heights Water Works redevelopment from Braun Enterprises. Developments like this need parking structures and work with the city to develop off-site parking structures for the many people coming outside the neighborhood to the surrounding businesses. 

 

 

There is no shortage of parking near Heights Water Works, it's just (under-priced and therefore) poorly allocated. 

 

That said, given the current CoH parking rules, it may have been worthwhile for WW to have a parking structure to serve the various Braun developments in the vicinity, and allow additional retail of residential development of existing surface lots.

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5 hours ago, CrockpotandGravel said:

[...]

Despite recent policy changes eliminating minimum parking requirements near downtown and a growing social movement advocating for more biking and other alternative modes of transit, Bryan Danna, developer of Stomping Grounds, believes it’s vital to provide ample parking. In fact, he often builds more than what’s required.
 

“I don’t want to have a field of parking, but I’ve seen what it does to the sales figures of tenants. It has a massive impact,” said Danna, owner of Revive Development. “It’s a very real component of sales volumes we can’t ignore.”

...A shopping center’s lack of parking can be a deal-killer for a retailer looking to lease space there, said Lacee Jacobs, a leasing specialist with commercial real estate firm CBRE.

 

Customers crave convenience, she said, and Houston, after all, is still a driving city.
 

“Obviously landlords could save a lot of money by building less parking, but the truth of the matter is, tenants still need it for their businesses to survive,” Jacobs said.
 

That’s what keeps Danna from cutting down on parking at his centers. And it’s not necessarily the best way to optimize profits. More surface parking means less leasable space.
 

Outside of market-based parking areas, strip centers of less than 25,000 square feet must have four spaces for every 1,000 square feet, with additional spaces where there are restaurants or entertainment venues. The Stomping Grounds project, which will have about 23,000 square feet of retail space and 5,000 square feet of office spread throughout four buildings, will have an average parking ratio of 12 per 1,000 square feet — or 225 spaces.
 

 

 

So, remind me again why we need city-mandated parking minimums if developers and tenants are already acutely aware of the need to provide parking in places where personal vehicles are still the dominant mode of transport?

 

BTW, I don't disagree that the vast majority of customers for this development will need a place to park, and I'm skeptical that the land value here is high enough to justify structured parking. But there is already a massive amount of parking within 1000-ft of this site, most of which (YMCA, high school, Hare Krishna temple) will sit empty during peak hours for this development. It's not a case of not enough parking, it's a case of poor allocation. 

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  • 1 month later...

Originally posted November 10, 2017 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.


 

On 11/7/2017 at 11:32 AM, Mab said:

34thstreet-1.png


 

The retail and restaurant explosion on 34th Street continues. Last year The Leader visited with attorney Troy Blakeney, who put up for sale more than three acres at 1225 West 34th St., near the Harriet and Joe Foster YMCA. That ownership designation is now past tense because the property has been acquired by developer Bryan Danna with Houston-based Revive Development who is envisioning big things for the space.
 

Marketing materials indicate that designs for the property, called “Stomping Grounds,” incorporate a repositioned existing warehouse and a new building, both with ample windows and access onto 15 feet deep patios fronting the center lawn.
 

The lawn would be 8,000 square feet and is intended as a family friendly destination with a “thoughtful mix of eating and drinking establishments.”
 

“We always look for innovative ways to add familiar elements to our projects that complement the unique personalities of our neighborhoods,” said Bryan Danna, Principal at Revive, in a press release. “As a resident of this area, I’m even more conscious of the needs and desires of the residents, business owners and families who live and work here. This is a very personal project to me.”
 

The 224 parking spaces will surely be a draw for potential tenants.
 

“We’ve already begun scheduling neighborhood events and activities for 2018 [at Stomping Grounds] including farmer’s markets, music events, and festivals,” said Monica Danna, Director of Community Outreach at Revive.
 

“As a resident of Garden Oaks, I’m reaching out to neighbors to hear what’s most important in dining, retail, and recreation.”
 

Stomping Grounds will break ground this month and is expected to be completed by Labor Day 2018.
 

Danna is already developing 2.5 acres on the southwest corner of 34th and Ella, with signed tenants BB’s Café, Aladdin Mediterranean Cuisine, Pop & Pan and the Surfhouse so far.


 

http://theleadernews.com/danna-buys-3-acres-on-34th-street-for-stomping-grounds/




Cool find, Mab! Here's a hi-res rendering of The Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 3th St (on the corner of W 34th St and Alba):



6UeMe9z.jpg


 

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Originally posted November 10, 2017 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 

 

On 11/8/2017 at 10:08 PM, Mab said:




 

Text from the image above of The Stomping Grounds (so it's searchable on the forum through the search):


Overview

RE:VIVE Development presents a new kind of  retail in the heart of Garden Oaks.  Centered on a large 8,000 square foot lawn, this family friendly  destination will be a thoughtful mix of eating and drinking establishments. The 224 parking spaces give this development a parking  ratio unseen in other urban retail environments. The building designs  incorporate a repositioned warehouse and a new building, both with  ample windows and access onto 15' deep patios fronting the center  lawn. This development will attract patrons from across the city as  well as the affluent surrounding neighborhoods of Garden Oaks,  The Heights, and Oak Forest.


 

Location:
1225 W 34th St 
Houston, TX 77018 
Near Corner of 34th and Alba

SPACE AVAILABLE 
Building A:  1,350 sf 
Building B:  8,072 sf
Building 😄 5,006 sf
Building 😧 3,403 sf

 

PARKING 
224 spaces 
12:1 parking ratio 

ADDITIONAL INFO 
• 17,831 sf restaurant & retail
  8,000 sf shared lawn 
 5,006 sf 2nd floor office

 

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Originally posted November 10, 2017 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.


 

Site plan and other details from The Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St leasing materials

https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5215234ae4b0745af88f3c00/t/59fe502a652dea4f72dfa03d/1509838901282/Stomping+Grounds_FINAL.pdf (archive link)


hGMZTx7.jpg
(direct link to view full size and non-compressed image for zooming in)

 

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Originally posted March 20, 2018 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 

 

Facebook page for Re:Vive's  (Revive Development) Garden Oaks development Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St in Houston.

https://www.facebook.com/theSGatGO

 

 

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Originally posted June 2018 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 

 

Construction progress of Garden Oaks' Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St.

From Re:Vive in June:

vsN2DwE.jpg
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bjp6ejanWIi/

 

 

 

From Re:Vive's Instagram Story:

ykIlq3v.jpg


 

 

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Originally posted July 11, 2018 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

Camerata wine bar is expanding to Garden Oaks' Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St.



From Eater Houston:

 

The beloved Montrose destination for wine and small bites, Camerata, has announced plans to expand to the Oak Forest/Garden Oaks area.
 

Camerata in the Oaks, is slated to debut next spring at 1225 West 34th Street in the forthcoming Stomping Grounds development. The 1500 square foot location will mimic its sister outpost with a 10-seat space designed by Sean Garrison from Garrison Designs and Chris Nguyen. At the new 22,000 square-foot Stomping Grounds, Camerata will join other as-yet-unnamed retail and restaurant ventures within a revamped industrial indoor/outdoor space.
 

Designed as a retail wine store with a bar, Camerata will have a number of sommeliers on hand to guide drinkers, plus the shop will carry domestic and international beer. Drinkers can also take away pre-packaged food items from Paulie’s like cured meats, cheese, pasta, and sauces, plus sweets to eat at the bar or take home.
 

Camerata sommelier Tony Stein will be making to the move to Oak Forest to serve the general manager for the new location, which is opening five years after the original Camerata opened in Montrose (and 20 years after its sister restaurant Paulie’s debuted there).
 

“Camerata in the Oaks will mirror Camerata at Paulie’s commitment to small production, high-quality, minimal-intervention wine,” Chris Poldoian, Camerata Wine Director and General Manager, said in a statement. “Our goal with the wine shop is to introduce residents of Garden Oaks and Oak Forest to new varieties and regions in an approachable, friendly way.”

https://houston.eater.com/2018/7/10/17555246/camerata-garden-oaks-expansion

 

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Originally posted March 24, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

A sketch of wine bar Camerata in the Oaks opening in Stomping Grounds at Garden Oaks in Houston.


From the Instagram of Garrison Design Office in January:


 

Hand sketching concepts for wine bar project

4p6v7au.jpg
https://www.instagram.com/p/BsonckwnIeT/

 

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Originally posted March 24, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

rendering of wine bar Camerata in the Oaks opening in Stomping Grounds at Garden Oaks in Houston.

This is opening this summer.


From Instagram yesterday:

Thanks to @garrisondesignoffice for helping make @camerata_oaks a reality! Not pictured: the amazing patio to soak up the sunshine. Swing by our new location in the early summer to buy a bottle of wine, fresh pasta, artisanal cheeses and charcuterie, or enjoy a glass of vino.

9b9qkga.jpg
https://www.instagram.com/p/BvUkRXPA4p8

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Originally posted March 24, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

A higher res rendering (and clearer) of  The Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St (on the corner of W 34th St and Alba) in Houston.

There is a sign in the back for a Pizza slice shop and an ice cream shop. In the front possible health food restaurant and a neighborhood grill. So possible tenants they're looking for or have signed on.


From the developer's website.
http://www.gostompinggrounds.com/

 

 

f9pBv4T.jpg

(direct link to non-compressed, full-sized image: https://i.imgur.com/f9pBv4T.jpg )
 

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Originally posted May 18, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

I saw this on Facebook and it looks like a tenant for Re:Vive's the Stomping Grounds development in Houston. This is the development under construction in Garden Oaks at 1225 W 34th St.

From a photo posted to Facebook from Construction Concepts, The Original Ninfa's spin-off Mama Ninfa's Tacos y Tortas may be opening at the Stomping Grounds. One is also opening at Understory in Captiol Tower in downtown Houston (thread about it in the Going Up forum).

This looks like it could be part of the Stomping Grounds. Maybe in building D. It's a 3,402 SF space from the last site plan made public (posted above). Building D is not shown any of the renderings for the Stomping Grounds.



PaperCity magazine interviewed Legacy Restaurants last summer and discussed plans for more Mama Ninfa's Tacos y Tortas:

“We’re looking pretty hard in various locations — The Heights, Garden Oaks areas, the Rice Village area. Washington Avenue is a possibility as well,” Horowitz notes.


https://www.papercitymag.com/restaurants/original-ninfas-restaurant-expansion-houston-uptown-tacos-y-tortas/



There is also a company entity named TYT-34th from Legacy Restaurants (The Original Ninfa's on Navigation). It could be that it's for Stomping Grounds or somewhere else on W 34th St.




This was posted yesterday on Facebook:



(flipped image)
xa86S5b.jpg



(unflipped image)
s1DBJxh.jpg



 

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Originally posted May 18, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

Google Street View construction photos of  The Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St. This is the Re:Vive development on the corner of W 34th St and Alba in Garden Oaks, Houston.


From February:


96g8XT3.jpg


IXZFBxm.jpg


4hDeqs8.jpg


JSZRZkS.jpg


ZMNuz3Y.jpg


 

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Originally posted May 20, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

In a Facebook post to Re:Vive about the opening of Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St, Re:Vive responded with this last week:


Businesses will be opening in phases, beginning this fall.



 

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Originally posted May 21, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

More renderings of wine bar Camerata in the Oaks opening in Stomping Grounds, 1225 W 34th St. This is Garden Oaks in Houston.

Posted last month on Instagram:

e0p9H3t.jpg


kBHcmXG.jpg

https://www.instagram.com/p/Bwhs8q0gl6R/

 

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Originally posted July 21, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.

 


 

  On 3/24/2019 at 9:51 AM, CrockpotandGravel said:

A higher res rendering (and clearer) of  The Stomping Grounds at 1225 W 34th St (on the corner of W 34th St and Alba) in Houston.

There is a sign in the back for a Pizza slice shop and an ice cream shop. In the front possible health food restaurant and a neighborhood grill. So possible tenants they're looking for or have signed on.



Rumors are Fat Cat Creamery is expanding to Garden Oaks. A second ice cream shop is going in Re:Vive's / Revive Development's Stomping Grounds , 1225 W 34th St.

Going by the above site map, I think Fat Cat Creamery is going on the first floor of building C. There is an ice cream shop depicted in the earlier rendering above in a building shown on the site map as building C.

Construction is moving along here. From the looks of the construction progress when I passed by last week, at least one of the tenants' space may be ready to open before 2020. 



 

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Originally posted July 21, 2019 in this thread before all of my content were removed from the entire forum earlier this month. Reposting this throws off the flow of the thread (i.e. out of order),  still, it may be helpful for visitors to see what was previously discussed or shared before.


 

  On 7/21/2019 at 12:13 PM, CrockpotandGravel said:


Rumors are Fat Cat Creamery is expanding to Garden Oaks. A second ice cream shop is going in Re:Vive's / Revive Development's Stomping Grounds , 1225 W 34th St.

Going by the above site map, I think Fat Cat Creamery is going on the first floor of building C. There is an ice cream shop depicted in the earlier rendering above in a building shown on the site map as building C.

Construction is moving along here. From the looks of the construction progress when I passed by last week, at least one of the tenants' space may be ready to open before 2020. 

 




Fat Cat Creamery is the ice cream shop tenant at Stomping Grounds. Stomping Grounds is the Re:Vive's / Revive Development in Garden Oaks at 1225 W 34th St.



Last week, Stomping Ground replied to a question posted on their Facebook page in May. The question asked about other tenants. Revive Development's response confirmed Fat Cat Creamery and announced another tenant:


Yes, we will make announcements on this page. Stay tuned! We have already announced Threadfare Children's Boutique, Camerata at Paulie's and Fat Cat Creamery. More being announced in the next few weeks. Thanks!

https://www.facebook.com/theSGatGO/posts/2172443132804757




There is also a building permit issued to an entity linking to Fat Cat Creamery owner Sarah Johnston.
 

nXL7vvA.jpg


Jdljjh7.jpg



 

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