Grapevine - Colleyville - Southlake | June 2025

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Grapevine Colleyville

Southlake Edition VOLUME 15, ISSUE 4  JUNE 14JULY 15, 2025

2025 Health Care Edition

$200M in hotel updates spurs Grapevine tourism

BY GABBY BAILEY

The Grand Hyatt Hotel at Dallas Fort Worth International Airport in Grapevine announced May 14 it is undergoing a $34 million renovation that’s set to nish by late 2025. One of several hotel projects this year, it signals rising Grapevine tourism and economic growth after the COVID-19 pandemic halted the industry in 2020. “Grapevine was one of the rst hotel communities in the metroplex to get to pre-pandemic levels when it comes to occupancy and rate,” said Elizabeth Schrack, director of communications with The Grapevine Convention & Visitors Bureau.

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The Grand Hyatt DFW will undergo several renovations in 2025, including updates to hotel rooms and meeting spaces.

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GRAPEVINE - COLLEYVILLE - SOUTHLAKE EDITION

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GRAPEVINE  COLLEYVILLE  SOUTHLAKE EDITION

Impacts

specialty sushi and sashimi; bento boxes; and noodle and rice entrees. • Opened March 23 • 2805 Grapevine Mills Circle E., Ste. 140, Grapevine • www.harasushitx.com 5 Chipotle The chain’s standard menu includes made-to-order burritos, burrito bowls, quesadillas, tacos, chips and sides. • Opened April 18 • 2200 SH 114, Trophy Club • www.chipotle.com

Trophy Club

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6 United Defense Tactical The company will offer a simulator-based instruction system that focuses on situational awareness, de-escalation techniques and self-defense. • Opening in July 2025 • 1505 W. SH 114, Grapevine • www.uniteddefensetactical.com

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7 Brighton The accessories store will move to a new location within Southlake Town Square. • Estimated construction completion June 30 • 1249 Main Street, Southlake • www.brighton.com 8 DayTrip Diner Construction will start on the new restaurant taking over the old Waffle Way location at the end of the year.

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• Opened April 12 • 800 S. Kimball Ave., Southlake • www.passagechurch.com ASHLN.

Now open

CUMMINGS DR.

1 Perspire Sauna Studio The sauna has multiple therapies dedicated to helping the body rejuvenate and improve overall health. • Opened May 2 • 2251 E. Southlake Blvd., Ste. 100, Southlake • www.perspiresaunastudio.com/tx/southlake 2 Passage Church The church meets at 4 p.m. on Saturdays and has youth services on Wednesdays at 6:30 p.m.

3 Berry Bowl To Go The mobile unit now has a permanent location selling acai bowls. • Opened March 27 • 280 Commerce St., Southlake • www.berrybowltogo.com 4 Hara Sushi The sushi-centric restaurant offers salads; a sushi bar;

• Estimated construction completion Nov. 3 • 1206 W. Northwest Highway, Grapevine • Website TBD

9 Vidorra The new Mexican restaurant will start renovation on the

old Hoffbrau Steak & Grill House location. • Expected construction completion Nov. 1

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY COMMUNITY IMPACT STAFF

• 700 W. SH 114, Grapevine • www.vidorracocina.com

• Opened May 31 • 2550 Bobcat Blvd., Ste. 112, Trophy Club • www.tinyurl.com/57ys6chv

Now open

Relocations

13 Southlake Tennis Center The facility, located within Bicentennial Park, has 17 lighted hard courts and two indoor courts. • Celebrated 25th anniversary • 450 W. Southlake Blvd., Southlake • www.southlaketennis.com 14 Esparza’s Restaurante Mexicano The Grapevine dining staple has been in business for four decades, serving Mexican food and margaritas. • Celebrated 40th anniversary May 1

10 The Novus Academy The school moved from Grapevine to a new development called Southlake Crossing. • Relocated May 29 • 2250 E. Continental Blvd., Southlake • www.thenovusacademy.org

11 Feel Ideal 360 Med Spa Dr. Angela Straface moved to a new office in Southlake and offers monthly memberships for skin essentials and rejuvenation. • Relocated April 3 • 600 W. Southlake Blvd., Ste. 100, Southlake • www.feelideal360.com

• 124 E. Worth St., Grapevine • www.esparzastexas.com

16 Rosebud Steakhouse The Chicago-based restaurant serves dry-aged steaks with options such as Chicago cut bone-in ribeye, Kansas City strip and lobster, as well as Italian dishes and salads, according to the menu. The steak styles include 28-day wet-aged steaks and 45-day dry steaks. • Opened April 3 • 2102 E. SH 114, Ste. 119, Southlake • www.rosebudsteak.com

Closings

15 Market by Macy’s Macy’s announced in January it would be closing 66 stores across the country. • Closed end of March • 321 State St., Southlake • www.macys.com

In the news

12 Big Chill Trophy Club Tony Strehlow, his wife, Debbie, and son, Connor, are the new owners of the ice cream shop.

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GRAPEVINE - COLLEYVILLE - SOUTHLAKE EDITION

Government

BY HEATHER MCCULLOUGH & CODY THORN

Colleyville places age limits, other rules on e-bikes Colleyville City Council nailed down the city’s e-bike and scooter regulations during a special

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meeting May 13. What happened?

Grapevine OKs no- parking zone on Kubota Drive Parking on Kubota Drive is now banned for safety reasons. The gist A memo to Grapevine City Council May 6 stated the city is dealing with visibility issues from parking on the street. The city ordinance states those who park on Kubota Drive will be ned up to $200.

City Council went line by line through the regu- lations to decide what changes members wanted to make to the ordinance. The changes made since the rst reading included: • Restricting riders younger than 15 from riding a Class 3 e-bike on sidewalks and roads in the city to align with state law • Requiring helmets for riders under 16 • The speed is limited to 10 mph on sidewalks and trails and 20 mph on Cotton Belt Trail • No longer required for riders to carry an ID Before City Council adjusted the ordinances listed during the May 6 meeting, citizens spoke on the item with mixed feedback. Some residents thought the laws were

Colleyville City Council made some changes to the e-bike ordinance before approving it May 13.

COMMUNITY IMPACT STAFF

unnecessary due to many of the rules already being required by state law, while others approved the ordinance, citing times that kids they knew were in e-bike accidents around the city. “We’ve had a lot of emails supporting this and a lot against it,” Colleyville Mayor Bobby Lindamood said. “We want you to explore the city ... but we can’t aord somebody to get hurt.”

Southlake denies proposed 27-lot development A proposed housing development between Shady Oaks Drive and SH 114 was denied 4-3 during the Southlake City Council meeting June 3. The details

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houses and was tabled at the May 6 meeting. The four council members against the devel- opment said they did not like how the presented plan’s setback and buer yards were only 50 feet away from the SH 114 frontage road. Human, the former Southlake mayor from 2015-24, said at the May 6 meeting if the residen- tial development does not work, the owner would look at a commercial plan.

Proposed development

GARDEN CT.

The Human Group, which was represented by John Human, and the Sage Group, Inc. presented a plan that included 27 houses on lots more than 20,000 square feet. The plan originally had 29

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Education

BY MARK FADDEN & HEATHER MCCULLOUGH

GCISD predicts $1.28M budget deficit for 2025-26 Grapevine-Colleyville ISD Chief Financial Officer David Johnson gave another budget update to the board of trustees May 19, predicting a $1.28 million April 14 meeting May 19 meeting

Carroll ISD gives staffing updates after public backlash Superintendent Jeremy Glenn provided details June 2 on the status of several Carroll ISD positions after the district received community pushback. The gist Glenn said several jobs were reinstated amid the public outcry as the district tries to circumvent possible funding issues through its Budget Reduction Advisory Committee. CISD hired four new principals as of June 2, which include those positions at Carroll Senior High School and Carroll High School. Carroll Senior High School principal Ryan Wilson and Christina Benhoff, principal of Carroll High School, left CISD after their contracts were not renewed beyond 2025-26.

+0.29%

+0.15%

$143M

budget deficit for the 2025-26 school year. The budget deficit decreased approximately $190,000 since the district’s original projected deficit was presented at the April 14 special session. The details According to Johnson’s presentation, the district increased the projected revenue for the 2025-26 fiscal year by $400,364. Expenditures have also increased by $205,937 since the April 14 report. Changes to House Bill 2, which was sent to Gov. Greg Abbott at the time of publication, would increase the basic student allotment—or how much money the district receives for student attendance—by $55, down from the $395 that was approved by the House of Representatives April 16. With the current state law, the district expects $140.3 million in basic allotment funding. The

$142M

$141M

$140M

$0

Revenue

Expenditures

SOURCE: GRAPEVINE-COLLEYVILLE ISD/COMMUNITY IMPACT

state hasn’t raised the basic student allotment from $6,160 since 2019. The final budget will be presented June 16 for board approval, Johnson said.

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GRAPEVINE - COLLEYVILLE - SOUTHLAKE EDITION

Transportation

BY CODY THORN

Dove Road work in Southlake to finish by summer

Grapevine OKs $125K repairs contract Grapevine City Council approved a contract for $125,000 to O. Trevino Con- struction for concrete paving repairs at the intersection of Northwest Highway and Park Boulevard May 6. The gist The repairs will be done between 8 p.m.-5 a.m., nightly to help reduce impact to travel flow, according to city documents. Grapevine Marketing and Communications Manager Mona Quintanilla said no start date for the construction has been decided.

The Texas Department of Transportation resumed work on Dove Road in Southlake at the end of May. The details TxDOT is working with the contractor to expedite the finalization of the project on SH 114 and Dove Road, with an estimated substantial completion of this summer, a TxDOT official said in an email. The project includes turnaround lanes on Kirkwood Boulevard and Dove Road from SH 114. What happened? The announcement comes after Mayor Shawn McCaskill posted a letter addressed to State Sen. Kelly Hancock and State Rep. Giovanni Caprigilone on his Facebook page that expressed frustration with delays in the project. McCaskill wrote that the project started in Janu- ary 2021 with a completion date of December 2024.

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“The continued presence of traffic barrels, closed lanes and inactive construction zones reflects a lack of visible progress—issues that have become a significant source of frustration for our residents,” McCaskill wrote. McCaskill said the city committed $3 million to

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According to the TxDOT website, the amount paid for the project as of May 20 is $40.7 million, which includes $30 million in construction.

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Development

BY HEATHER MCCULLOUGH & CODY THORN

Mixed-use development Liberty Commons earns approval from Southlake Liberty Commons, a mixed-use development with ve commercial buildings and 14 single-fam- ily houses, was unanimously approved by South- lake City Council May 20. What’s happening? The 15-acre development will be along West Southlake Boulevard and South Peytonville Avenue. It originally came to council earlier this year under the name of Carroll Crossing. The details The plan will have four oce buildings and a yet-to-be-named restaurant along West Southlake Boulevard. The oce buildings are between 5,700 and 9,600 square feet, and the restaurant is 3,375 square feet, according to city documents.

Colleyville approves 10-lot subdivision The rezoning application for Holt Farms was unanimously approved at the May 13 Colleyville City Council meeting. The overview The 11.81-acre neighborhood will be o John McCain Road and have 10 custom-built houses starting at $2.5 million. Construction will begin once nal plat and engineering plans are approved by council, city documents state.

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4 oce buildings 1 restaurant

The residential component is 14 single-family houses on 10.72 acres, according to data from Sage Group, Inc., the developer. The gross density per dwelling will be 1.3 residents per unit.

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

Health care Health Care Edition

BY GABBY BAILEY

2025

Readers, welcome to your annual CI Health Care Edition! This edition contains content on some of the biggest local health news in our communities. Articles within this guide are focused industry trends and innovations, such as the impact of robotic surgeries, local hospital updates and area health care listings. Each piece is written by our team of journalists to provide trusted news and information everyone gets.

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Health comparison Health is shaped by social and economic factors like education; quality healthcare access and living environment; and 30% is from habits like diet and exercise.

Social and economic factors: 40% Health behaviors: 30% Hospital/clinic care: 20% Physical environment: 10% A person's overall health can be broken down into these components:

Tarrant County boasts higher health factors than the state in several key areas. There are ve domains of social factors for someone’s health: 1 Economic stability: refers to income and the cost of living. 2 Education access and quality: indicates early childhood education quality and high school/higher education graduation rates. 3 Health care access and quality: includes access to primary and specialty care services and health insurance. 4 Neighborhood environment: relates to housing; access to clean food; water; the internet; and crime rates. 5 Social and community context: local bonds, work conditions and food security. Tarrant County tops state in social health

Overall health

SOURCE: TARRANT COUNTYCOMMUNITY IMPACT

County population statistics compared to state and national averages:

1 Below poverty level (2022) Tarrant County Texas United States 10.6% 14% 12.6%

3 People under 65 with health insurance (2022) Tarrant County Texas United States 81.1% 90.5% 81.7% 4 Households spending 30%+ on housing (2016-20) Tarrant County Texas United States 28.4% 29.2% 29.4% 5 Population experiencing food insecurity (2021) Tarrant County Texas United States 12% 13.7% 10.4%

1 Employment for residents ages 16-65 (2022) Tarrant County Texas United States 74.9% 75.7% 77.4% 2 Residents ages 16-24 not in school nor working (2021) Tarrant County Texas United States 11.6% 13.7% 12.1%

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GRAPEVINE  COLLEYVILLE  SOUTHLAKE EDITION

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Health care

BY GABBY BAILEY

Put in perspective

Less pain/blood loss Several possible benets to undergoing robotic surgery to help with patient recovery time include:

Less scarring

Shorter hospital stay

Lower rate of health complications

Fewer surgical complications

Baylor Scott & White-Grapevine uses surgical robots for procedures like joint replacements and lung biopsies.

More precise implant placement

COURTESY BAYLOR SCOTT & WHITE

Robotics program advances surgeries at Baylor Scott & White-Grapevine

SOURCE: BAYLOR SCOTT & WHITECOMMUNITY IMPACT

The takeaway

This year, the surgical team at Baylor Scott & White-Grapevine surpassed more than 10,000 procedures since 2008. Dr. Matin said robotic surgeries helped patients with recovery time and have had generally positive outcomes.

instruments and a high-resolution camera. “Some of the ways we use robotic surgery at Baylor Scott & White Medical Center- Grapevine include procedures that previously required more complex surgeries with longer recovery times,” he said. Some of these procedures include: • Orthopedic surgeries, which focus on joint replacements • Lung biopsies, in which robotics are used to take tissue samples from the lungs • Esophageal and other chest surgeries • Gynecology and urology • Colorectal surgeries, which focus on the colon area

At Baylor Scott & White Medical Center- Grapevine, advanced robotic surgery is transforming the way some surgeries are being performed, leading to improved outcomes such as faster recovery times. This is due to the precise and extremely controlled use of the surgical instruments, a study with the National Library of Medicine states. According to ocials at Baylor Scott & White- Grapevine, robotic surgeries were introduced at the hospital in 2008. Dr. Sina Matin, one of the surgeons who works with the robotics platform at the Grapevine location, said the robotic surgeries—which are also called robotic-assisted surgeries—are used on minimally invasive procedures via a computer console, which controls very small

“While not every patient’s surgery can be performed with the robotic systems, [more] procedures are using the technology.” DR. SINA MATIN, SURGEON

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GRAPEVINE  COLLEYVILLE  SOUTHLAKE EDITION

Health care Clinics & ERs

BY CODY THORN

• 2305 Grapevine Mills Circle E., Grapevine • www.thevinemedicalcenter.com

Complete Care Southlake Type: urgent care Hours: 24/7 • 321 W. Southlake Blvd., Ste. 140, Southlake • www.visitcompletecare.com Cook Children’s Urgent Care Southlake Type: urgent care Hours: Monday- Sunday, 11 a.m.-10 p.m. • 2727 E. Southlake Blvd., Southlake • www.cookchildrens.org Direct Orthopedic Care Type: clinic Hours: Monday-Friday: 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Saturday: 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Sunday: noon-5 p.m. • 2419 W. Southlake Blvd., Southlake • www.directorthocare.com/location/southlake Texas Health Breeze Urgent Care Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Friday: 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday: 8 a.m.-noon; Sunday: closed

Colleyville

Southlake

Baylor Scott & White Urgent Care-Southlake Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Saturday: 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sunday: noon-5 p.m. • 925 E. Southlake Blvd., Ste. 270 • www.tinyurl.com/22dwcv9j

ER of Texas Type: freestanding emergency room Hours: 24/7 • 5000 SH 121, Colleyville • www.eroftexas.com Urgentology Care-Colleyville Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday: 9 a.m.-5 p.m. • 3855 Glade Road, Ste. 140, Colleyville • www.urgentology.com

• 5301 William D. Tate Ave., Ste. 100, Grapevine • www.carenow.com

Types of clinics & ERs

Retail clinic: clinics typically found in larger retailers that treat basic illnesses and offer vaccinations Urgent care center: can treat basic illnesses, some broken bones and other ailments Freestanding emergency room: can treat most symptoms and ailments—similar to a hospital’s ER *This list is not comprehensive

Crescent Direct Primary Care/Urgent Care Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Thursday: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; Friday: 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday: closed • 1501 Hughes Road, Ste. 130, Grapevine • www.crescentdpc.com CVS MinuteClinic Type: clinic Hours: Monday-Friday: 8:30 a.m.-7:30 p.m.; Saturday: 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m.; Sunday: 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. • 3701 E. Ira E. Woods Ave., Grapevine • www.minuteclinic.com

Better Faster Urgent Care Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Saturday: 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sunday: 8 a.m.-noon • 630 N. Kimball Ave., Ste. 100, Southlake • www.betterfasterurgentcare.com CareNow Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Sunday: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. • 2751 E. SH 114, Southlake • www.carenow.com

Colleyville

Texas Health Family Care Type: clinic Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, Sunday: closed • 5009 Thompson Terrace, Ste. 103, Colleyville • www.tinyurl.com/3k4vrske

Grapevine

Baylor Scott & White Emergency Hospital Type: freestanding emergency room Hours: Monday-Friday: 7:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday: 8 a.m.-noon; Sunday: closed

CareNow Type: urgent care Hours: Monday-Saturday: 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sunday: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

The Vine Medical Center Type: urgent care/clinic Hours: Monday-Friday: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.

• 125 Davis Blvd., Southlake • www.tinyurl.com/huypknz7

• 5500 Colleyville Blvd., Colleyville • www.bsweh.org/locations/colleyville

EULESS 900 E Harwood Rd (817) 545-2184 KELLER 101 Keller Smithfield Rd S (817) 482-8295

BEDFORD 1520 Airport Fwy (817) 508-4490 WESTLAKE 2341 Highway 377 (817) 490-9072

Health care

3 health care program, expansion updates from area hospitals

1 Baylor Scott & White Medical Center-Grapevine Within the last year, Baylor Scott & White Medical Center-Grapevine became a Comprehensive Stroke Center, which is the highest level of specialized stroke care, said Matthew Olivolo, Baylor Scott & White’s manager of North Texas media relations. The Joint Commission states this means the Grapevine location oers specialized stroke care, including advanced imaging and neurovascular specialists, and the hospital is equipped to handle multiple stroke types and complex cases.

2 Methodist Southlake Medical Center

3 Texas Health Harris Methodist Hospital Southlake The Southlake location added the Texas Health Care at Home initiative to its services in May, according to a news release. This model brings hospital-level clinical care into patients’ homes within a 25-mile radius of the hospital. It is available to patients with Medicare and Medicare Advantage who have conditions like heart failure, asthma and pneumonia. The Southlake location is the sixth Texas Health hospital to oer this service, the release states.

The hospital is in the process of installing a helipad, which is scheduled to be nished by the end of September, said Sherri Lewis, the community and public relations manager for Methodist Southlake. The helipad will be added to the west side of the hospital to move patients needing to be airlifted to another hospital for treatment. Before, helicopters taking patients to another hospital landed in a grassy area near the center.

Baylor Scott & White now is a Comprehensive Stroke Center, giving the highest level of stroke care.

Methodist Southlake Medical Center will have a helipad added to its campus by the end of the summer.

Texas Health Southlake now oers tailored, in-house clinical care to qualifying senior citizens.

Southlake

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COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY GABBY BAILEY

Along with red-light and infrared therapy sessions, some sauna studios also oer chromotherapy, or cool-light sessions.

PHOTOS BY GABBY BAILEYCOMMUNITY IMPACT

Q&A: How red-light, infrared sessions oer health benets Alex McClure, the owner of Perspire Sauna Studio in Southlake, breaks down how infrared and red- light therapy saunas oer much more than a way to sweat out body toxins. How do infrared saunas work? What makes them dierent from a regular sauna? Whereas a traditional mist or other kind of sauna [heats you from] the outside in, infrared saunas slowly warms you up from the inside and sweats everything out that’s not pure energy. We like to say that it’s detoxing for the body. You are sweating

from the inside out. You’ll see a lot of red-light ther- apy around where it’s all very concentrated with a mask or a gun. [In the sauna], you get to sit in the session and get a full-body red-light treatment. What are the benets from infrared saunas? It’s a supplement to your workout, so you get additional calorie burn after your workout while also recovering from your workout. You’re doubling down your calorie burn and you’re recovering at the same time. The red-light therapy is an actual medical grade, dermatologist-approved [treatment] that’s good for your skin. Any kind of inammation you have, any kind of blemishes, [red-light therapy] helps makes your skin look younger. It also helps your cardiovascular system; it gets the blood owing. Just like how your body needs to ght o the heat like if you have a fever, these sessions help ght o impure toxins inside you.

Are there any risks associated with infrared and red-light sauna sessions? For the average person, we haven’t seen any negative eects. If a person has a medical issue, such as really high blood pressure, consult your doctor. It’s also not recommended for pregnant women. What should rst-time users know? Be prepared to sweat. Bring water and be pre- pared to hydrate before and after your session. You can adjust the temperature to your own speed and go down to 115 degrees. That’s where we say the benets start. You can go up to 170 degrees, too.

This interview has been edited for length and clarity. For a longer version, visit communityimpact.com .

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GRAPEVINE  COLLEYVILLE  SOUTHLAKE EDITION

$200M in hotel updates spurs Grapevine tourism From the cover

Hotels in Grapevine 1 Comfort Suites DFW 2 Courtyard Dallas 3 Embassy Suites by Hilton 4 Hampton Inn & Suites

Two-minute impact

W. GRAPEVINE MILLS CIR.

INTERNATIONAL PKWY.

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Along with the Grand Hyatt DFW, five other hotels in Grapevine are scheduled to be built or undergo renovations and expansions. An application for a new hotel was also presented to Grapevine City Council May 20, which will be revisited June 17. Cvent, a platform for meeting and event planners, recently named Grapevine the 20th-best meeting destination in North America due to the 1 million square feet of meeting space, 20 hotels and more than 11,000 hotel rooms, all within 15 minutes of the historic downtown area. “Given the substantial economic benefits that meetings and events provide to local communities, it is more important than ever for convention and visitors bureaus and destination management companies to champion their regions, engage planners early and prioritize [proposal] responses to attract more group business,” said Bharet Malhotra, Cvent’s executive vice president.

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5 Hilton DFW Lakes 6 Hilton Garden Inn

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7 Hilton Garden Inn Grapevine 8 Holiday Inn Express & Suites 9 Homewood Suites by Hilton 10 Hyatt Place Dallas/Grapevine 11 Hyatt Regency DFW 12 Minute Suites DFW 13 Residence Inn DFW 14 Spark by Hilton 15 Super 8 by Wyndham 16 TownePlace Suites Dallas Renovating/expanding 17 Gaylord Texan Resort 18 Grand Hyatt DFW 19 Great Wolf Lodge 20 Hotel Vin, Autograph Collection Upcoming 21 Hampton by Hilton/Hilton2Suites 22 Proposed unnamed hotel

W. BETHEL RD.

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SOURCE: GRAPEVINE CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU/COMMUNITY IMPACT

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20

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

BY GABBY BAILEY

Grapevine hotel and tourism industry statistics 12M annual Grapevine visitors

The details

What’s happening?

$2.5B annual tourism- related spending

Grapevine employs a total hotel occupancy tax of 13% for guests staying at one of the city’s hotels—7% is for the city and 6% is for the state. Occupancy taxes come from room rentals, according to the Texas Hotel and Lodging Association. They are added onto the bill with other fees, like cleanings or extra guests. The funds are used by the Grapevine Con- vention & Visitor’s Bureau Advisory Board, which are hoteliers, restaurateurs, merchants and citizens, Schrack said. They oversee the city’s marketing programs via a selected subcommittee. Certain criteria is used to develop programs to promote the city as an overnight destination by showcasing all Grapevine has to offer, including events and attractions. They are reviewed by the city’s chief marketing officer and chief financial officer, then go through the City Council process. “The tourism industry does so much for the community, and I think that’s why the commu- nity embraces it so much,” Schrack said.

The Grand Hyatt DFW’s $34 million budget is for updating guest rooms, meeting spaces, event spaces, the lobby, the restaurant, the lounge and the bar. Hotel Vin will add 121 rooms, a spa, an outdoor pool and an enlarged private event space for $72 million, according to previous Community Impact reporting. The $54 million Gaylord Texan project will undergo a 20% expansion to room count and meeting space, according to previous reporting. The hotel and convention center currently has 1,814 hotel rooms and 500,000 square feet of meeting space, the hotel’s website states. Great Wolf Lodge officials renovated the lobby, updated restaurants and added amenities such as Duckpin Bowling at a cost of $40 million. Work was completed in February, according to previous reporting. A construction cost and timeline for the

$133M 2024 Grapevine tax revenue value 84% of total sales tax is from tourism

12,580 hospitality employees

$200M hotel updates/ renovations costs

SOURCES: GRAPEVINE CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU, TEXAS TRAVEL/COMMUNITY IMPACT

Hampton by Hilton/Hilton2Suites hotels haven’t been announced, but the hotel will be five stories with 201 rooms, said Garin Giacomarro, Grapevine’s director of economic development. “Once we [know the start date] and it’s public, we’ll make sure everyone knows,” he said. “We’re really excited about that [hotel].”

What’s next?

Grapevine hotel updates timeline Great Wolf Lodge updates Completed February 2025

+18.36%

$25M

North Texas visitors are expected to increase next summer with AT&T Stadium in Arlington hosting nine 2026 FIFA World Cup games, signaling the need for more hotel space. “People can come out of the airport, get to their hotel in 10 minutes and enjoy Grapevine,” Schrack said. “If they need to go to Kansas, Atlanta or [other World Cup locations], they can make Grapevine their home base and head to DFW Airport quickly.”

$20M

Gaylord Texan expansion Opening in 2026 Grand Hyatt DFW renovations Finishing by end of 2025

$15M

$10M

Hotel Vin expansion Opening late 2026 New Hampton by Hilton Anticipated opening 2027

$5M

$0

SOURCES: GRAPEVINE CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU, GRAND HYATT DFW/COMMUNITY IMPACT

SOURCE: CITY OF GRAPEVINE/ COMMUNITY IMPACT

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GRAPEVINE - COLLEYVILLE - SOUTHLAKE EDITION

Events

BY HEATHER MCCULLOUGH

June

July

Stars and Guitars Headlining band Diamond Rio will play at the baseball fields by Colleyville City Hall at 7:45 p.m. Fireworks will begin at 9:15 p.m. • June 20, 5:30 p.m. • Free admission for guests; $50 to reserve a table • 5201 Bransford Road, Colleyville • www.tinyurl.com/yx6xm57f Summer Days Vendor Market Explore more than 75 local vendors for summer decor, jewelry and homemade treats. • June 21, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. • Free (admission) • Grapevine Convention Center,

Drum Making Workshop Kids age 6 and up will use recycled materials to create a percussion instrument, then paint and personalize it. • July 2, 10-11 a.m. • Free (admission) • Southlake Town Hall, 1400 Main St., Southlake • www.cityofsouthlake.com/calendar.aspx Stars and Stripes Head to Southlake Town Square to engage in Fourth of July activities for all ages, taste festival foods and watch fireworks. • July 3, 5-11 p.m. • Free (admission) • 285 Grand Ave., Southlake • www.visitsouthlaketexas.com/event/stars-and-stripes 4th of July extravaganza Enjoy fireworks with patriotic music from the Grapevine Lake parks, marinas or the parking garage at Hotel Vin and Grapevine Main Station.

Ice Cream Social at Nash Farm Visit Nash Farm for ice cream treats, Victorian lawn games and old-time music. Guests can bring lawn chairs, quilts and picnics to relax on the grounds and can participate in a self-guided tour of the historic farm. • July 12, 7 p.m. • Free (admission) • 626 Ball St., Grapevine • www.tinyurl.com/rb8yhpts

1209 S. Main St., Grapevine • www.tinyurl.com/4zpax9da

Tropical Tastes and Perfect Pairings Messina Hof Winery will bring tropical flavors to this unique wine pairing, such as coconut and passion fruit. • June 28, 5-7 p.m. • $50

• July 4, 9:30 p.m. • Free (admission) • 2100 Lakeview Drive, Grapevine • www.tinyurl.com/4pbwkw7u

• 201 S. Main St., Grapevine • www.tinyurl.com/2s3e456s

Travel millions of years into the past from Historic Grapevine to Prehistoric Grapevine. Enjoy affordable dinosaur-themed activities throughout Grapevine’s Historic District including “Be the Dinosaur” which let’s you experience life as a dinosaur in the Cretaceous period. Come see why All Tracks Lead to Grapevine. Summer 2025, DINOSAURS return to GRAPEVINE!

Scan the QR code or visit GrapevineTexasUSA.com/Dinosaurs for details.

22

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

A TOUR OF THE STATE, MADE ESPECIALLY FOR COMMUNITY IMPACT JUNE 2025

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

SUBSCRIBE AT TEXASMONTHLY .COM/TEXAN TO SEE THE ENTIRE ISSUE!

DETOURS: The Botanical Gardens of Orange CRITTER: Bottlenose Dolphin OUT THERE: Meanwhile, in Texas MADE IN TEXAS: Copper Craftsman FEATURE PREVIEW: Juneteenth’s Hero, Opal Lee

Above: The Shangri La Botanical Gardens and Nature Center.

23

GRAPEVINE - COLLEYVILLE - SOUTHLAKE EDITION

DETOURS

A Green Refuge In Orange

Northwest of downtown, alongside Adams Bayou.

BY DANIEL VAUGHN

FOR FIFTY YEARS the gates of Shangri La Botanical Gardens and Nature Center were closed. A bitter freeze in 1958 killed much of founder H.J. Lutcher Stark’s plant- ings, including his prized azaleas. Decades later, reopening plans spearheaded by his namesake foundation were also thwarted by nature, first by Hurricane Rita, in 2005, and then by Ike, in 2008. Finally, in 2009, the 252-acre park opened once again to visitors. Gravel paths wander along- side some three hundred plant species, and everywhere are contemplative spaces that feel far removed from the surrounding city, which lies just across the Sabine River from Louisiana. At the placid Pond of the Blue Moon is the towering Cypress Gate, a platform designed by San Antonio–based architecture firm Lake Flato from logs salvaged after Rita. At Ruby Lake, you’ll find a bird blind for viewing the many varieties of waterfowl that come through, and you just might see an alligator sunning on the dock nearby.

About 51,000 bottlenose dol- phins—the most common spe- cies o the Texas coast—are frolicking in the northern Gulf as you read this. Occasionally, though, one of them ends up on land. The Texas Marine Mam- mal Stranding Network, based in Galveston, responds to an average of 134 strandings per year. Executive director Heidi Whitehead says that after hur- ricanes, she and her colleagues have even rescued dolphins from fields and ditches as far as seventeen miles inland. So before you head to the beach, learn what to do if you come across one.

it can be rescued. Then try to keep it shaded and wet.

IF I FIND A STRANDED DOLPHIN, SHOULD I PUSH

CRITTER OF THE MONTH

Bottlenose Dolphin

IT INTO THE WATER? Often, says Whitehead, a

HOW EXACTLY DOES ONE MOISTEN A DOLPHIN ? You can pour seawater over it or cover it in wet towels. Just be sure to avoid the blowhole. MAY I PET IT? Definitely not. Wild dolphins are a protected species, and any form of harassment (such as trying to touch, feed, or swim with them) is illegal. Whitehead says the best thing you can do is be quiet and keep pets and other people at a distance. —Lauren Larson

beached dolphin is su ering from a lung disease brought on by exposure to bacteria, viruses, or fungi, and it must be treated and rehabilitated. If you try to Free Willy a dolphin back into the Gulf, it is unlikely to survive. WHAT SHOULD I DO? First, call 800-9MAMMAL, which is like a dolphin 911, and someone from Whitehead’s group will talk you through keeping the animal safe until

24

COMMUNITYIMPACT.COM

MADE IN TEXAS

Inside a Copper Mind Jonathan Beall makes modern kitchenware, barware, and water dispensers that last a lifetime.

BY AMANDA ALBEE

When Beall launched Sertodo Copper, in 1997, he traveled the U.S., cold-calling ho- tels and restaurants to sell Mexican-made copper cookware and chafing dishes. Three years later, he moved to Santa Clara del Cobre, Michoacán, a town with a coppersmithing tradition that predates its founding nearly five hundred years ago. There, he joined a copper community led by James Metcalf, the late sculptor and educator who reinvigorated local artisanal traditions. An apprentice- ship with copper maestro Máximo Velázquez Correa had Beall forging hundreds of nails and tools, including hammers and chisels, to cultivate a “manual intelligence” that he says is in decline among modern American creators, who sidestep material knowledge for computer-aided design. To read the full story, please subscribe to Texas Monthly.

IN HIS AUSTIN warehouse, Jonathan Beall sips water from one of his copper cups, an Ayurvedic practice said to stimulate diges- tion and increase immunity. He points to a hand-carved solid-copper vase made us- ing traditional techniques, such as melting recycled copper into ingots and repeatedly annealing and forging the mass into shape, a skill he learned in Mexico. It reminds him of a similar piece he encountered on a trip to Sayulita, on that country’s Pacific coast, almost thirty years ago—he can still see it glittering in the dawn light among a peddler’s wares. “I had never seen anything like it,” he says. “I didn’t know what was happening, but I had a big feeling.”

OUT THERE

Meanwhile, In Texas A man dressed in shorts and sneakers was seen cruising down the center lane of westbound Interstate 40 in Amarillo on an electric scooter . In a cave near Marfa, archaeologists discovered remnants of an atlatl, a straight-flying boomerang, and other components of whatmay be the oldest intact hunting kit found in North America. Almost four thousand Kerrville residents lost power for two hours after a ringtail came into contact with equipment at a substation. On National Beer Day, a train collided with the trailer of a semitruck near Saginaw, spilling hundreds of cans of beer around the tracks. Nearly three thousand people and 1,300 dogs descended on a ranch in Bee Cave for Texas’s largest annual golden retriever meetup . Hoping to steal a car, a man threw a rock through the window of a Tyler dealership, injured himself while entering through the broken glass, and called 911 for help getting out of the building, even though several doors were unlocked. Former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was bitten by an ostrich while visiting a wildlife park in North Texas. —Meher Yeda

Jonathan Beall polishes a copper vessel at his com- pany’s workshop in Austin on April 24, 2025.

25

GRAPEVINE - COLLEYVILLE - SOUTHLAKE EDITION

Opal Lee at her Fort Worth home, in front of a painting of her family tree.

advantage of the specials. At least four con- versations are happening at once, all of them somehow meeting at a center point, briefly, beforebouncingo„oneanotherandcontinu- ing in their own universes. When Lee, 98, emerges from a back room, glass of milk in hand, she is vibrant, smiling widely, and moving gingerly, but no one fusses over her. They all seem to know she moves at her own pace, on her own time. “Old people ain’t got nothing but time,” she tells me, set- tlingintoachairinanoˆcethatisoverflowing with honors and ephemera: a signed basketball from the New York Knicks, photos with Pres- idents Joe Biden and Barack Obama, various awards from women’s groups and colleges and civil rights organizations. When I ask Lee how she’s feeling, she tells me she’s wearing a back brace, so she’s feeling good. Her back has been hurting, but it ain’t nothing special. Old people have aches and pains; most of them don’t even know why or where they came from. I want to know what keeps her going, and she smiles. “I feel like I’m everybody’s grandma. And I had good grand- mas.” She recalls her grandparents always findingwaystohelpfolksintheircommunity. “My mom was like that too,” she says. “It’s just part of your makeup.” To read the full story, please subscribe to Texas Monthly .

OPAL LEE LIVES on the same property where her childhood home once sat, inside a house recently built for her by Habitat for Hu- manity. On the front door is a purple wreath. In the center of the wreath is a quote from Lee herself: “If people can be taught to hate, they can be taught to love.” Inside, the house buzzes with Lee’s friends and family. There’s excitement in the air, in part because it is Veterans Day, and at least two veterans are in the home, preparing to circulate through several restaurants to take

FEATURE PREVIEW

Opal Lee Marches On The 98-year-old activist partly

responsible for Juneteenth becoming a federal holiday says, “I got work to do.” BY HANIF ABDURRAQIB

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