Downtown Fort Worth

Downtown Fort Worth
Bass Performance Hall
Fort Worth Water Gardens

Downtown Fort Worth is the central business district of Fort Worth, Texas, United States. Most of Fort Worth's tallest buildings and skyscrapers are located downtown.

Attractions

AMC Theatre in Downtown Fort Worth

Sundance Square

Sundance Square began as an effort by Ed Bass to revitalize downtown Fort Worth in the 1980s. At the time, downtown Fort Worth was in decline due to suburbanization. There were many empty gaps between existing skyscrapers and historic buildings that resulted in a pedestrian-unfriendly atmosphere. During a trip to Washington, D.C., Ed Bass was fascinated with multiple buildings designed by architect David M. Schwarz. As a result, Ed Bass hired David Schwarz to design multiple traditional-style buildings for downtown Fort Worth.

Today, Sundance Square is a pedestrian-friendly cluster of blocks in a portion of downtown Fort Worth that features bars, restaurants, museums, theaters, and retail. Sundance Square also has offices and residential units. Most buildings in Sundance Square are either historic or designed by Schwarz, with three modern skyscrapers and a hotel being exceptions. Sidewalks in Sundance Square are paved with bricks.

"Architect David M. Schwarz". Street Smarts. Chicago. March 19, 2015. WTTW. Retrieved April 5, 2015. 

Parks and plazas

Sundance Square Plaza is a 55,000 square foot plaza spanning two city blocks within Sundance Square. The plaza features four large Teflon umbrellas, a permanent stage built into the Westbrook building, jetted fountains that illuminate at night, various other fountains, and a pavilion that can be rented. Sundance Square Plaza is bookended by two office buildings: The Westbrook and The Commerce. [1]

Businesses within the Sundance Square Plaza include: Bird Cafe, Del Frisco's Grille, Jamba Juice, Silver Leaf Cigar Bar, Starbucks and Taco Diner.

Fort Worth Water Gardens - A 4.3-acre (17,000 m2) contemporary park, designed by architect Philip Johnson, that features three unique pools of water offering a calming and cooling oasis for downtown patrons. The gardens were used in the finale of the 1976 sci-fi film Logan's Run. (In mid-2004 the Water Gardens had to be closed due to several drownings. It has reopened after preventive measures have been installed.)

Arts and culture

Bass Performance Hall - Bass Hall is the permanent home to the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra, Texas Ballet Theater, Fort Worth Opera, and the Van Cliburn International Piano Competition and Cliburn Concerts.

Convention Center

Fort Worth Convention Center - Includes an 11,200 seat multi-purpose arena.

Notable hotels

Notable buildings

Government and infrastructure

The Fort Worth district of the United States Army Corps of Engineers is located downtown. District Office.

The United States Postal Service operates the Downtown Fort Worth Post Office at 251 West Lancaster Avenue.[3]

The Texas Second Court of Appeals is located in the Tim Curry Criminal Justice Center in Downtown Fort Worth.[4]

Tarrant County Courthouse stands at the north end of Main Street. It has been remodeled over the years and the exterior was used frequently in Walker, Texas Ranger.

Economy

Downtown Fort Worth is the central business district of the city, and is home to many commercial office buildings, including four office towers over 450 feet tall.[5]

Radio Shack has its headquarters in Downtown Fort Worth.[6] In 2001 Radio Shack bought the former Ripley Arnold public housing complex in Downtown Fort Worth for $20 million. The company razed the complex and had a 900,000 square feet (84,000 m2) corporate headquarters campus built after the City of Fort Worth approved a 30-year economic agreement to ensure that the company stayed in Fort Worth. The company sold the building and, as of 2009, had two years left of a rent-free lease in the building. The company intended to make $66.8 million in the deal with the city. By 2009 it made $4 million; by 2009 the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported that the company was considering a new site for its headquarters.[7]

Downtown Fort Worth is also home to the headquarters of Pier 1 Imports,[8] D.R. Horton,[9] XTO Energy,[10] and TPG Capital.[11][12]

Transportation

Tandy Center view from Belknap

Downtown Fort Worth is well-served by controlled-access highways, with freeways and parkways converging upon downtown from seven different directions: I-35W from the north and south, I-30 from the east and west, SH 121 from the northeast and southwest, and US 287 from the southeast.[13]

The primary mass transportation hub of Fort Worth is the Intermodal Transportation Center, located in the eastern portion of downtown at the intersection of Jones Street and 9th Street. About two dozen bus lines operated by The T converge at this hub, as well as the Trinity Railway Express, a commuter rail line to Richland Hills, Irving, and Dallas. Bus service from The T is free within certain downtown boundaries.[14] The T operates a downtown bus circulator known as Molly The Trolley, which uses a bus designed to look like a historic trolley.[15]

In the future, a 27-mile commuter rail line called TEX Rail will be built from downtown Fort Worth to Grapevine and DFW Airport.[16]

The Tandy Center Subway, based in the Tandy Center (now known as City Place), operated in Fort Worth from 1963 to 2002. The 0.7 mile (1 km) long subway was the only privately operated subway in the United States.

The Trinity Trails is a network of over 35 miles (56 km) of pedestrian trails along the Trinity River branching from downtown.

Education

The Fort Worth Independent School District provides public education for children who reside downtown, and has one school (Nash Elementary) located in downtown.[17]

Tarrant County College's Trinity River campus is located in downtown. Tarrant County College purchased several of the buildings that make up the Trinity River campus from Radio Shack in 2008, who had built the campus as their headquarters in 2004.[18]

Fort Worth Library operates the Central Library at 500 West Third Street at Taylor Street. The library opened in 1978, and an expansion was completed in 2000.[19]

In popular culture

Urban neighborhoods surrounding downtown

Fort Worth has several other urban neighborhoods that are in close proximity to the central business district.

Stockyards District

Fort Worth Live Stock Exchange (postcard, circa 1908)

The Fort Worth Stockyards, located north of downtown, offers a taste of the old west and the Chisholm Trail at the site of the historic cattle drives and rail access. The district is filled with restaurants, clubs, gift shops, and attractions such as the twice daily Texas Longhorn cattle drives through the streets, historic reenactments, the Stockyards Museum, the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame, and Billy Bob's, the world's largest country and western music venue.

Cultural District

The Cultural District is located west of the West Seventh District and Downtown, and is home to many Fort Worth museums, such as the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Kimbell Art Museum, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth Museum of Science and History, and National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame, among others. The Cultural district is also home to Will Rogers Memorial Center, which hosts the annual Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo.

West Seventh District

West Seventh can refer to the gentrifying neighborhood along West 7th Street between the Cultural District and downtown, the mixed-use development within the district, or the street itself.[20] Most gentrification in the West Seventh District has happened south of West 7th Street.

Near Southside / Medical District

The Near Southside is an urban neighborhood just south of downtown.[21] Many Fort Worth hospitals are located in this district, including Baylor All Saints Medical Center, Cook Children's Medical Center, Texas Health Harris Methodist, and JPS Health Network, among others.[22] Most pedestrian activity in the Near Southside takes place along Magnolia Avenue.

Texas Christian University

Texas Christian University is Fort Worth's most prominent university, the 325 acres campus is located southwest of the Near Southside and downtown. Neighborhoods surrounding the university are predominantly made up of historic single family homes. In recent years, demand for more student housing has resulted in many historic houses being torn down for larger houses designed to accommodate large amounts of students attending the university, upsetting many existing residents.[23] Nightlife options and restaurants geared towards students can be found along University Drive and Berry Street.[24]

Panther Island

The Trinity River Vision Authority, Tarrant Regional Water District, City of Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Streams & Valleys Inc, and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers are cooperating in an effort to redevelop Panther Island, an eight-hundred acre area north of downtown along the Trinity River.[25][26] The first part of the redevelopment plan calls for infrastructure improvements and flood protection. The second part of the redevelopment plan calls for mixed-use development and sustainable growth along the Trinity River, which would result in a vibrant urban neighborhood.

Panther Island is currently home to several attractions, including Coyote Urban Drive-In Movie Theater, Panther Island Pavilion, and LaGrave Field (home of the Fort Worth Cats and Fort Worth Vaqueros FC).[27]

References

  1. http://www.sundancesquare.com/info/sundancesquareplaza/
  2. http://www.theashtonhotel.com/about/history.htm
  3. "Post Office Location - DOWNTOWN FORT WORTH." United States Postal Service. Retrieved on April 17, 2009.
  4. "Contact Information." Texas Second Court of Appeals. Retrieved on March 9, 2010.
  5. http://www.emporis.com/statistics/tallest-buildings-fortworth-tx-usa
  6. "Corporate Information Contacts." Radio Shack. Retrieved on October 20, 2009.
  7. "Fort Worth-based RadioShack may move headquarters out of town." Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Wednesday November 11, 2009. Retrieved on November 13, 2009.
  8. http://www.pier1.com/public-relations/pr_history,default,pg.html
  9. "WEBSITE LAYOUT REGARDING CORPORATE GOVERNANCE." D. R. Horton. Retrieved on December 8, 2009.
  10. "Contact Us." XTO Energy. Retrieved on December 8, 2009.
  11. Chassany, Anne-Sylvanie. "PAI’s ‘Coup d’Etat’ Shows LBO Firms’ Feuds Over Power, Strategy ." Bloomberg. September 29, 2009. Retrieved on October 20, 2009.
  12. "Contact TPG." TPG Capital. Retrieved on October 20, 2009.
  13. https://maps.google.com/maps?dg=optperm&output=classic
  14. http://www.the-t.com/MapsSchedules/SystemMap/tabid/204/Default.aspx
  15. http://www.the-t.com/MollytheTrolley.aspx
  16. http://www.texrail.com/
  17. http://www.dfwi.org/what-we-offer/schools
  18. http://fortwortharchitecture.com/radioshack.htm
  19. "Central Library." Fort Worth Library. Retrieved on April 19, 2009.
  20. http://www.fortworth.com/about-fort-worth/neighborhoods-districts/west-seventh-so7/
  21. http://www.fortworthsouth.org/
  22. http://www.fortworthsouth.org/community/whats-here/careers-health-sciences-major-employers/health-sciences/
  23. http://www.star-telegram.com/2014/06/20/5916663/residents-hope-overlay-will-preserve.html
  24. http://www.fortworth.com/about-fort-worth/neighborhoods-districts/university-tcu/
  25. http://trinityrivervision.org/aboutus/ProjectPartners
  26. http://trinityrivervision.org/projects/panther-island
  27. http://trinityrivervision.org/projects/panther-island/things-to-do-in-panther-island---fort-worth-tx

External links

Coordinates: 32°45′18″N 97°19′48″W / 32.755°N 97.330°W / 32.755; -97.330

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/11/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.