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    On the Road

    How to get the most out of small-but-spectacular Shenandoah

    CultureMap Create
    Jun 4, 2025 | 11:56 am
    With its distinct Venetian-style architecture, the Portofino Shopping Center is a pretty place to browse.
    With its distinct Venetian-style architecture, the Portofino Shopping Center is a pretty place to browse.
    Photo courtesy of Visit Shenandoah

    Looking for a destination for an overnight trip, weekend getaway, or family vacation? You might want to consider Shenandoah.

    Situated in the booming North Houston area and adjacent to Conroe, Spring, and The Woodlands, Shenandoah packs a punch with more than 60 restaurants, 13 well-reviewed and affordable hotels, nine family-friendly entertainment venues, five shopping centers, and a variety of outdoor amenities such as four city parks, all in an easy-to-navigate, compact footprint of 2.2 square miles.

    Here’s your short list for how to best enjoy Shenandoah:

    Browse and shop
    If you like to shop, Shenandoah is your mini mecca, with a multitude of options. You’ll love the Portofino Shopping Center, with its distinct Venetian-style architecture and mix of nationally recognized stores, specialty boutiques, and salons.

    The Sam Moon Center is home to the eponymous Sam Moon Trading Company, which is renowned for its tremendous selection of affordable women’s handbags, jewelry, and accessories, as well as being home to a number of upscale resale shops including Once Upon A Child, Plato’s Closet, and Style Encore. Be sure to check out Space Cadets and Violet K-Pop, stores that are sure to appeal to the anime, comic book, K-pop, and plushie toy-lovers in your family.

    Adjacent to the Sam Moon Center is the city’s Metropark Square, which is quickly gaining awareness for its collection of Asian and women-owned restaurants, shops (like Daiso Japanese dollar store), and along with the Sam Moon Center, its breadth of family-friendly, indoor entertainment venues.

    Shenandoah also has a variety of locally owned specialty shops worth exploring, including Bikeland and Bike Lane, each with a vast selection of road, mountain, and ebikes.

    There's also Precision Camera & Video, one of the largest camera stores in Texas, which offers a variety of classes for the public.

    Pop into Picket Fences, located just down the road in the city’s Research Plaza Shopping Center. It’s renowned for its stylish selection of furniture, home decor, gifts, and accessories, as well as its constantly rotating seasonal merchandise.

    Dish and dine
    Foodies, take note: There are actually two, twice-nominated James Beard semifinalists in town.

    Le Cordon Blue-trained chef Ronnie Killen operates Killen’s Texas Barbecue, his nationally renowned barbecue joint known for its succulent smoked Texas meats and delicious sides. It’s sister location just received a Bib Gourmand designation in the inaugural edition of the Texas Michelin Guide.

    Fellow Beard semifinalist chef Levi Goode operates his two upscale establishments, Goode Co. Fish Camp — known for its fresh Gulf seafood and robust cocktail program — and the Tex-Mex gem Goode Co. Kitchen & Cantina. Be sure to ask about their Brazos Bottom Pecan Pie, twice named best mail-order pie in the U.S. by Bloomberg News.

    New restaurants that opened in Shenandoah this past year include Adriatic Cafe, Gloria's Latin Cuisine, Kyu Ramen (featuring TBaar drinks), and Munch Munch Mochi Donut, Tea & Dessert, an Instagram-worthy mochi donut and creme puff shop that foodies won’t want to miss. Also coming to Shenandoah soon are Knead Me Bakery, KPOT Korean BBQ & Hot Pot, and Pluckers Wing Bar.

    On the fast-casual front, be sure to check out Califa’s Tacos and Beer. This family-owned restaurant features Cali-style tacos and burritos made with the freshest ingredients, and has even been voted the best tacos in The Woodlands area.

    Late-night cravings can be filled at Katz's Never Kloses deli, also recognized for having “The Best Sandwich in Houston” by the Houston Press' Readers’ Choice Awards.

    Be sure to leave some room for dessert! Ice cream lovers are sure to find a treat at The Sweet Swirl, a shop that makes both soft and hand-scooped ice cream featuring Asian-inspired flavors, floteas, and coffee drinks; and SomiSomi, a new Korean-style ice cream and taiyaki store in Metropark Square.

    See and do
    Shenandoah is now home to nine family-friendly, indoor entertainment venues, and is gaining recognition as an entertainment and gaming mecca in the greater North Houston/Woodlands area.

    In the past year, five new venues have opened in the Sam Moon Center and Metropark Square, and they include: BRKTHROUGH, Cheeky Monkeys, Color Me Mine, Escapology, and Game Show Battle Rooms. They join the city’s four other indoor entertainment venues: AMC Cineplex with IMAX, Dave & Buster's, Main Event, and Urban Air Adventure Park.

    Looking to pamper yourself? Consider booking an appointment at the Aveda Institute, one of Aveda’s largest training centers in the country. You can get a variety of hair and body treatments for less as you help support students with their education (just be sure to allow a little extra time). Master trainers work alongside students as part of their training.

    Shenandoah is home to four outdoor parks, including Vision Park, the city’s newest, which is home to Shenandoah Veterans Point at Vision Park, a lovely outdoor plaza and memorial honoring residents that have served in the armed forces. Outdoor enthusiasts can also connect with nature at the W.G. Jones State Forest, which is one of the nation’s largest working urban forests, or the George Mitchell Nature Preserve, with its miles of hike and bike trails across 1,800 acres — both are just minutes away.

    For a full list of places to see, shop, stay, and savor, head over to Visit Shenandoah.

    Picket Fences Shenandoah
    Photo courtesy of Visit Shenandoah
    Picket Fences has an incredible breadth of merchandise.
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    Texas travel

    9 vintage gas stations worth a stop on your next Texas road trip

    Shilo Urban
    Mar 24, 2026 | 4:50 pm
    Phillips 66 station in McLean, Texas
    Courtesy photo
    Historic Phillips 66 station in McLean, Texas.

    Forget Buc-ee’s, with its gleaming bathroom mirrors and enough packaged snacks to feed a small country. There are other, true "destination gas stations" that are the real road trip OG's, and they're worth a stop on your next trek around Texas.

    With America’s legendary Route 66 celebrating its 100th birthday this year, old-school, landmark gas stations have re-emerged as trendy pit stops (natch!) for travelers. And there are many in Texas.

    Some of the gas stations below have been converted into trendy cafes, some are protected historical sites, and some sit empty and awaiting their rebirth. From hidden gems in the hearts of big cities (including Dallas) to Art Deco wonders out west - including one on Route 66 itself - they'll have travelers channeling their inner adventurer to check out these road trip relics.

    Good Luck Gas Station: Art Deco in Dallas
    A few blocks away from the Mixmaster’s elevated freeways, you’ll spy a peculiar white tower with curved, stepped sides and retro-futuristic style. It’s the Good Luck Gas Station, built in 1939 by East Texas’ Good Luck Oil Company. Topping out at 35 feet tall, the Art Deco station features smooth, stucco walls and rounded corners. Its sleek, aerodynamic aesthetic evokes machine-age ocean liners and aeroplanes, and was inspired by a trip to the city’s Fair Park. The station sits vacant today and is a designated Dallas Landmark. 903 Cadiz St., Dallas.

    Good Luck Gas Station Vintage photo of the Good Luck Gas Station in Dallas.Courtesy photo

    Ellerbe Fine Foods: Fill up on farm-to-table fare in Fort Worth
    Fort Worth’s Magnolia Avenue might be a foodie hotspot today, but it was once a workaday corridor with hardware stores, barbershops, and gas stations — including the 1920s relic that now houses Ellerbe. Built on a corner lot for quick access for motorists, the utilitarian brick building isn’t noted so much for its architecture as for the alchemy inside: award-winning fine dining in an intimate, sophisticated atmosphere. Grab a table on the patio to eat under the original canopy where gas attendants previously manned the pumps. You can still say fill ‘er up — but instead of diesel, you’ll get blackened red fish, pork beignets, and braised duck with black pepper dumplings. 1501 W Magnolia Ave., Fort Worth.

    Ellerbe Fine Foods Ellerbe is a fine-dining destination in an old gas station in Fort Worth.Courtesy photo

    Petrified Wood Gas Station: Prehistoric pit shop in Decatur
    The story of this station in Decatur begins 100 million years ago: Trees fell in the forest (no one heard it), sediment covered them up, and the wood was slowly transformed into quartz. Fast-forward to 1935, when E. F. Boydston decided to plaster his eight-year-old station with petrified wood to make it stand out. It was a fashionable choice for the era. Excavators were unearthing mountains of the fossilized wood thanks to recent improvements in digging equipment, and people were incorporating the sturdy material in walls, in houses, and even in jewelry. The roadside stop also had a gift shop and a handful of one-room cabins, where the outlaws Bonnie and Clyde supposedly hid out (or so the story goes). Boydston’s descendants have lovingly restored the funky gas station, now home to the Whistle Stop Café. 904 US-287, Decatur.

    Petrified Wood Station Petrified Wood Station in Decatur.Courtesy photo

    Humble Oil Service Station: From pumps to pups in San Antonio
    With bright blue tiles and a decorative crest above the doorway, this 1930s station showcases the Spanish Revival style that was popular in the Southwest at the time. Humble Oil, a Texas company, aspired to create a sense of elegance and civility at its gas stations, which were once common across the state. They often added ornamental touches and zig-zag patterns, like the ones you’ll see here in San Antonio. You may also see pups running around: Lucy’s Doggy Daycare and Spa owns the old station and the building next door, and they use the space between as a dog run. 1019 S Laredo St., San Antonio.

    Triangle Sinclair Station: Geometry on point in Snyder
    Three-sided buildings are expensive to build, difficult to furnish, and oddly disorienting inside — and they’re absolutely charming, like this adorable triangular station in West Texas. When life gives you a three-sided lot, you make a triangular building, which is just what Sinclair Oil Company did here in Snyder back in 1935. Beautifully restored in the 2010s, it’s topped by a steep green pyramid roof that matches the shiny green dinosaur (Sinclair’s mascot) out front. Antique pumps under a separate, triangular canopy add to the appeal. 701 Coliseum Dr., Snyder, Texas.

    Triangular Sinclair Triangular Sinclair station.Courtesy photo

    Magnolia Filling Station: Castroville Coffee House in Castroville
    Once painted entirely orange inside, this old-fashioned outpost fuels locals in Castroville with fresh coffee and scratch-made pastries. Castroville is famously the “Little Alsace of Texas,” a one-time French settlement whose quaint historic buildings feature rustic wooden shutters and sloping mansard roofs. Flowerboxes and outdoor tables now fill the auto bays of the Hill Country station, which was built in the 1920s and still has its vintage pump. Enjoy the downhome ease along with creative libations like strawberry matcha tea and white chocolate lavender lattes. 1101 Fiorella St, Castroville.

    Magnolia station in Castroville Magnolia station in Castroville.Courtesy photo

    Phillips 66 Station: Pretty panhandle pumps in McLean
    Bucking the 1920s Art Deco fad in favor of Tudor Revival design, this charming 1929 cottage is cute-as-a-button with gabled roof and front chimney. Phillips Petroleum liked the cottagecore look so much that it became a common theme for their service stations. One of the oldest gas stations in Texas, it was restored in the 1990s with pops of red paint. Several early-20th Century antiques have been moved to the station, including a tow truck, an oil pump, two gas pumps, and an original Phillips 66 sign. But don’t expect to fill up; this throwback treasure is a historic site (and photo opp) only. 218 W First St, McLean, Texas.

    The Gas Station: For horror fans in Bastrop
    Have you ever wondered why so many horror movies are set in Texas? One of the craziest cult classics is 1976’s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre — and the gas station/barbecue joint that the cannibals owned in the film is now open for lunch and dinner. Riding the dark tourism trend, the rickety pit stop in Bastrop was reborn in 2016 as a restaurant, gift shop, and overnight stay with a campsite and four rustic cabins (the blood-red walls are a nice touch).

    There’s no human flesh on the meat-heavy menu, so you’ll have to settle for brisket nachos, beef chili, and smoked sausage. But you can mingle with other murder-movie lovers at lovely outdoor picnic tables. The Gas Station is easy to find — just look for the replica of the film’s creepy green van and the sign that says We Slaughter Barbecue. 1073 State Highway 304, Bastrop, Texas.

    The Gas Station in Bastrop The Gas Station in Bastrop.Courtesy photo

    Conoco Tower Station & U-Drop Inn Cafe: Route 66 icon in Shamrock
    Drivers on Route 66 have stopped at this Art Deco masterpiece for decades to fill up their tanks and their bellies before continuing west toward the American Dream. One of the most photographed roadside attractions in Texas, the unique stopover was built in 1936 with green glazed tiles, geometric details, and neon lights to make sure you don’t miss it. If it looks familiar, that’s because it inspired the design of Ramone’s body shop in the Pixar movie Cars.

    Beautifully restored and reopened as a restaurant and gift shop in 2021, the must-stop attraction now serves excellent brisket smoked on-site and classic diner eats like meatloaf and chicken-fried steak. Expect a line if you’re traveling during high season, especially if you want to sit in the booth where Elvis ate his bacon and eggs, pancakes, chocolate pie, and a double order of toast with his coffee and Pepsi. 105 E 12th St, Shamrock, Texas.

    Conoco station in Shamrock Conoco station in Shamrock.Courtesy photo

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