Fort Worth Business Press, June 2, 2014 Vol. 26, No. 22
June 9 - 15, 2014
Vol. 26, No. 22 • $3.00
Western
roundup
New Stockyards plan
calls for development
maintaining heritage
LEFT: Paella
is a popular Spanish
rice dish that originated
on the east coast of Spain
in Valencia. It is often regarded as the national
dish of Spain. Sera Dining & Wine offers this dish
and many others at its Forest Park location.
n Scott Nishimura
photos by alyson peyton perkins
[email protected]
Sera offers contemporary Spanish cuisine
Tamarind Phinisee n Fort Worth Business Press Contributor
P
atrons looking for traditional Spanish
food with a modern flair may not have
to look farther than a relatively new
restaurant called Sera Dining & Wine.
Not to be confused with the Mexican or Tex-Mex
food style, Sera features traditional foods from Spain
and wine from coastal France, Spain and Portugal.
See sera u 20-21
LEFT: Sera
Dining &
Wine features
traditional foods
from Spain and
wine from coastal
France, Spain
and Portugal. The
restaurant, owned
by Fort Worth native John Marsh,
is located at 2418
Forest Park Blvd,
about a half mile
from Texas Christian University.
ABOVE: Executive chef Brandon
Hudson in
the kitchen.
feeling right at home
New entrepreneur John Riggins
couldn’t stay away from pursuing
his dream job owning a senior
services franchise. P12
Fort Worth’s historic Stockyards,
transformed in the 1990s when
businessman Holt Hickman
converted the old hog and sheep
pens into the Stockyards Station
festival center and added a visitors
center, could be headed for another
re-awakening.
The Hickman
family is teaming
up with Majestic
Realty Co. of
California on
a $175 million
mixed-use
Holt Hickman
project that could
include corporate
headquarters,
hotels,
destination retail
and restaurants
on Marine Creek,
craft breweries,
and residential
Brad Hickman Sr.
space, as well as a
redevelopment of
the old horse and
mule barns.
The
partnership, Fort
Worth Heritage
Development
Cavileer
LLC, takes in
a major portion of the holdings
owned by the Hickman family and
Dallas investor Lyda Hunt Hill,
including Stockyards Station and the
mule barns, said Majestic principal
Craig Cavileer and Hickman
vice president Brad Hickman Sr.
They spoke in an interview after
disclosing the project to Mayor Betsy
Price and City Council members
June 3. Hill has decided to exit her
interests and is negotiating with the
partnership, they said.
See stockyards u 8