Developer to bring homes with personal vineyards, high-end hospitality to Fredericksburg
A new development plans to draw hundreds of thousands of tourists visiting Texas' Wine Trail with a winery, luxury hospitality that could include a Michelin-starred chef and homes with their own personal vineyards.
Hereโs how housing prices are expected to change in San Antonio in 2024
After a year marked by volatile โ and frequently high โ mortgage rates, little inventory and affordability issues that sidelined many buyers, the 2024 housing market outlook offers more of the same, albeit with some relief.
Terry Blackโs BBQ group plan hotel, spa and restaurant on Broadway land
The family behind Terry Blackโs BBQ plans to build a barbecue restaurant, hotel, spa and a parking garage on the land it owns at 2100 Broadway, according to documents obtained by the Business Journal through a public records request with the city of San Antonio.
โA (vegan) food extravaganzaโ: San Antonio restaurants see positive reaction to plant-based initiative
When you think of the San Antonio culinary scene, you might envision a plate of cheesy enchiladas, smoked brisket or chicken fried steak, but a new effort is aiming to broaden the options at restaurants to include items that are more healthy and environmentally friendly.
Tiny home community planned for South Side gets Zoning Commission approval
The Zoning Commission on Tuesday lent its support to a proposed 79-unit tiny home development on the cityโs South Side. The one- and two-story properties would rise at 1471 and 1477 West Villaret Blvd. and 1487 Malley Blvd., across the road from Palo Alto College.
Davidโs Bridal downsizes with new owners; cites โreimagining periodโ for the company
The company closed a transaction with CION Investment Corporation, a business development company, in late July. The deal gets Davidโs Bridal out of bankruptcy and will keep 195 Davidโs Bridal locations open, including two in San Antonio.
In January, CPS Energy received a shipment of transformers. A quarter of them were faulty.
At the height of an ongoing dearth in transformers bottlenecking real estate development in San Antonio, CPS Energy found itself having to send back a portion of a shipment it received in January due to quality concerns.