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    Irving Staycation

    From gondolas to great tunes: 6 wonderful ways to escape in Irving

    Cheryl Ng Collett
    Aug 25, 2015 | 9:27 am

    If you don’t have too much time or the money for airfares and other expenses associated with a getaway, a staycation in Irving might just be your ticket to pool time, art, history, music, and even a gondola ride.

    Here are six surprising things about Irving that make it a great spot for a vacation.

    The Resort
    Life is indulgent at the Four Seasons Resort and Club Dallas in Las Colinas. The only caveat to staying in such lavish digs may be that you may never want to leave. The 400-acre, five-star property features four pools (including one designated just for families), a luxury spa, and a golf course that's home to the AT&T Byron Nelson PGA Tournament.

    The hotel is steeped in golf tradition, honoring Byron Nelson champions past and present with memorabilia throughout the property. Be one of the first in Texas to snag a ride on a Golfboard, a cross between a surf board and a golf cart, letting golfers carve up the award-winning TPC fairways at speeds of up to 10 miles an hour.

    The hotel’s service is impeccable, with the staff anticipating all your first-world needs. A supervised kids club with activities like golf and tennis clinics, art workshops, calf roping, and games gives parents a little break to slip off to the spa or just float lazily in the resort pool.

    Of Water Views and Gondolas
    If you fancy the thought of being away from landlocked Dallas, the Omni Mandalay at Las Colinas may be your answer. The hotel, with its 421 rooms and suites, sits on the edge of Lake Carolyn, offering guests a taste of life by the water with activities like paddle boating and pedal boats. There’s a heated lakeside swimming pool, waterfront dining, and a spa.

    To woo the one you love, Gondola Adventures offers the unique opportunity to ply the placid waters of Lago de Claire in an authentic Venetian gondola, complete with a singing gondolier. Choose from several packages, which include breakfast, dinner, or a dessert and champagne spread. Note that the other ride location at Lake Carolyn is currently not in operation until further notice.

    History Buffs
    On an unassuming street in a working-class neighborhood in Irving stands a nondescript, two-bedroom home. It’s nondescript until you learn about two fateful families, the Paines and the Oswalds, who were flung into extraordinary infamy on November 22, 1963, the day of John F. Kennedy’s assassination.

    This house belonged to Ruth Paine, a close friend of Marina Oswald, wife of Lee Harvey Oswald. At the time of JFK’s assassination, the Oswald family was living at the Paines’ home. Oswald himself lived in Oak Cliff, to be close to his job at the Texas School Book Depository in downtown Dallas, and visited his family on weekends.

    However, on the night before the assassination, Oswald made a surprise visit to his family in Irving. The Ruth Paine House Museum tour spans two locations and begins at the visitor center off site, near the Irving City Hall. The small visitor center displays personal letters and artifacts of the families, plus the televised interviews of Ruth Paine.

    A docent then buses you to the actual house, which has now been brought to life with a meticulous restoration. Kevin Kendro, Irving City Archivist, gives the tour and is an essential part of the experience with his detailed retelling of this tragic story. Reservations must be made in advance at the Ruth Paine House Museum.

    Music Lovers
    Brand-new to historic downtown Irving, the Texas Musicians Museum (TMM) offers an up-close encounter with memorabilia from music icons of the Lone Star State. There are stage outfits, awards, instruments, personal letters, and music contracts from hundreds of musicians. Exhibits from artists like Buddy Holly, Roy Orbison, Destiny’s Child, Willie Nelson, Janis Joplin and Waylon Jennings represent multiple musical genres.

    The 18,000-square-foot space includes an adjacent music garden, where concerts are held regularly. Book a docent-led tour to appreciate the largest public display of Texas music history in the world and hear all the juicy backstories.

    American Art Gem
    For American art aficionados, there’s a hidden treasure inside the National Scouting Museum: more than 60 Norman Rockwell original illustrations used in calendars, handbooks, posters, and magazines. The little-known exhibit pays homage to Rockwell’s role in shaping the image of the Boys Scouts of America and chronicles the group’s history with thousands of artifacts.

    Hope that you’re lucky enough to catch 87-year-old Jim Dunkley giving a docent tour. Dunkley, a scout veteran since 1940 who counts scouting as his lifelong passion, is living history himself. There’s also a movie theater featuring an animatronic Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the Boy Scout movement, and an interactive area where children can try their hand at a shooting gallery, race derby cars at the pinewood track, and explore canoeing and spelunking.

    Nostalgia
    Inside the tough, hard exterior of bike icon Rick Fairless (of Strokers fame) is a man with a heart for Irving. The longtime Irving resident and his wife, Susan, couldn’t bear the thought of Big State Fountain and Grill closing after more than 65 years. The classic ’50s diner had been the center of so many Fairless family meals that the couple decided to buy the business to keep the tradition alive for future generations.

    It’s truly a small-town experience, where the staff know your name — and your children’s too. Burgers are made fresh, fries come out hot and crisp, and Texas toast is a staple. Hand-spun malt shakes are also crowd favorites.

    Completing the throwback experience is an old-fashioned jukebox that plays your favorite diner tunes for free, compliments of a family that loves Irving.

    Old-fashioned tunes play at Big State Bar and Grill.

    Big State Fountain and Grill
    Photo courtesy of Itty Bitty Foodies
    Old-fashioned tunes play at Big State Bar and Grill.
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    Hill Country Eats

    3 new restaurants to try in the Texas Hill Country this spring

    Brianna Caleri
    Brandon Watson
    Feb 5, 2026 | 2:58 pm
    Roxie's exterior
    Photo by Garrett Smith
    Roxie's has made its highly anticipated debut.

    The Texas Hill Country is booming — at least when it comes to restaurants right now. Three notable restaurants opening a few weeks apart have set up shop in historic buildings and are awaiting visitors, likely from all over Texas.

    Whether Dallas travelers are looking to fold these spots in as they're just passing through the region, or they're planning a whole bluebonnet pilgrimage this spring, here's a rundown of three new destination restaurants for a Hill Country to-do list.

    Roxie's — 308 S Main St., Ste. 101, Buda
    At the top of the "highly anticipated" list is Roxie's, a Southern restaurant in Buda by Scott Roberts, current owner of famous barbecue joint The Salt Lick in Driftwood. In fact, the property even made Bon Appetit's 2025 list of "The 8 Must-Visit Restaurants to Try This Fall" — back when it seemed like it'd be open by then.

    It wasn't too late on the draw, opening on January 28, 2026, almost exactly a year after it was announced.

    Roxie's is named after Roberts' grandmother, and the restaurant further ties him to Buda, the town where he went to elementary school. The food on offer — dishes including pimento cheese with crudites and crackers, Hill Country sliders, fried chicken wings, burgers, chili dogs, and Roxie’s famous biscuit — nod to Roxie's home cooking. Appropriately, there's also a family-style dinner that groups can share.

    The building's heritage is almost as interesting as the concept's. Roxie's is located in the Buda Mill & Grain, a farm structure that was renovated into a 27,000-square-foot retail center. Guests at Roxie's may stop by several other stores on the property, totaling a dozen more local businesses. Those including tasting room Water2Wine, home goods shop The Mercantile at Mill + Grain, and the lush Saint Montogren’s Florist.

    ¡Saludos! Cocina + Bar — 388 E. San Antonio St., New Braunfels
    ¡Saludos! Cocina + Bar greeted the bedroom community of New Braunfels on February 2, bringing Mexican cuisine to the historic Dittlinger Roller Mills downtown.

    Brothers Israel Trevino (Las Fontanas in New Braunfels) and Daniel Trevino (Box St. All Day in San Antonio) teamed up with Edward Garcia III and Allen Shy (CRAFThouse and Blind Salamander Cantina in San Marcos) to give the 1887 former flour mill new life.

    The menu is inspired by Mexican street food, with standout dishes including vampiro-style tacos, rajas con crema, and cochinita pibil flautas, fajitas and enchiladas rojas, and a few cross-cultural surprises like a Caesar salad. The spot also has a “dinner” menu that gives diners a little more variety with dishes like a fish of the day, schnitzel, burgers, and vegan tofu skewers. There's a vast dessert menu and a full bar program with premium spirits, beer, and wine.

    Given the Instagram-friendly interiors of Box Street, it’s no surprise that the restaurant is decked to the nines. A dusty terracotta and grass green color scheme is accented by Talavera tiles and contemporary Mexican artwork and accents.

    Old City Hall Restaurant and Bar — 200 N. Seguin Ave., New Braunfels
    New Braunfels’ Old City Hall will soon be back in session, this time for dinner. On February 17, the team behind some of the city’s most popular eateries will open Old City Hall Restaurant and Bar inside a landmark former municipal building.

    The project comes from Wiggins Hospitality Group, the local team behind Hill Country hot spots like McAdoo's Seafood Company and La Cosecha Mexican Table. The company has been hard at work transforming the nearly century-old building into a dining destination. Previously, the site has served as New Braunfels Police Department headquarters, a World War II medic training site, a museum archive, and, most recently, city hall itself.

    The menu features refined takes on classic American fare. Menu highlights include Texas beef or tuna tartare, spicy vodka rigatoni, peppercorn filet mignon, and The Mayor’s Cheeseburger — double beef patties sandwiched with American cheese, house pickles, caramelized onion, and a béarnaise aïoli.

    The cocktail program is equally timeless. Guests can sip on ice-cold martinis (both traditional and newfangled), negronis, frozen gin and tonics, and originals like the Beretta with Still Austin cask-strength Bourbon or a margarita with egg white foam.

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