Toro Toro, 1300 Lamar, will open at the Four Seasons Hotel Houston in fall 2021. This will be the sixth location for the concept. The hotel has partnered with Richard Sandoval Hospitality to bring his award-winning global Pan-Latin Steakhouse to Houston. It will open in the hotel’s revamped third floor restaurant space, replacing Quattro, the now-closed Italian restaurant known for its spectacular brunches..
Toro Toro is a combination of the Japanese word for tuna and the Spanish word for bull, representing a menu that will feature seafood and steaks. With vibrant Pan-Latin flavors from Rodizio-style Churrasco and creative shareable small plates, the new restaurant will also take inspiration from the convivial dining culture of Central and South America. The restaurant will feature an open kitchen with a wood-burning grill with meats presented and carved tableside. There will be family-style ceviche,
Major 610/59 interchange project closure: KPRC 2′s Anavid Reyes warns of major construction closures that will impact Houston drivers for months
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HOUSTON – There’s a massive closure coming and it will last for months. Our traffic expert Anavid Reyes met with TXDOT engineers and got the timeline you need to know.
Slowdowns on your normal route into the Galleria are about to get even worse. The Southwest Freeway northbound connector ramp towards the West Loop northbound main lanes will shut down for six to eight months starting June 4.
Oklahoman
A Texas-based joint venture bought two Class A industrial buildings totaling 121,600 square feet from Oklahoma City s Hall Capital on land leased from the state of Oklahoma at 6200 and 6220 SW 29.
It was the 10th joint investment by Corinth Land Co., based in Fort Worth, and Prattco Creekway Industrial, based in Dallas, but their first investment in Oklahoma.
The purchase price was not disclosed. Since they purchased the buildings only, not the land, it is not a matter of public record. Financing was by Veritex Bank in Houston with majority equity provided by Western Production Co., an oil-and-gas company in Fort Worth.
Urban Walkability Gains a Foothold in the U.S.
Illustrations by Malte Mueller/Getty Images
The 15-Minute City, an urban concept in which all basic needs can be satisfied with a 15-minute walk or bike ride, is catching on in the U.S. as an indirect reaction to the pandemic.
May 5, 2021
Jake Poznak, co-owner of Moonrise Izakaya, a Japanese restaurant on Manhattan’s Upper West Side, could have easily been a statistic of the COVID-19 pandemic.
According to the National Restaurant Association, more than 100,000 restaurateurs across the country had to close their businesses because of the pandemic. After the first wave, when restaurants began to reopen, the city helped restaurants build outdoor dining enclosures that take up spots on the street otherwise reserved for parked cars. Expanded outdoor dining in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic was a lifeline for Poznak, the business, and the vibrancy of the neighborhood.