Commercial office space..I remember the bronze like reflective glass on the outside.Grumpy said:
Wow. Looks like the edge of town. What is the building in front where restaurants are now?
CTbruin said:
And I remember when it was the Lake Air Drive In movie
CTbruin said:
And I remember when it was the Lake Air Drive In movie
Felt like it too. The Loop/6 was way out. Heck Woodway felt like another town, not a continuation of Waco. The funny thing is that the interchange there at 84/6 looks unchanged from until now 30 years later.Quote:
Looks like the edge of town.
CorsicanaBear said:Felt like it too. The Loop/6 was way out. Heck Woodway felt like another town, not a continuation of Waco. The funny thing is that the interchange there at 84/6 looks unchanged from until now 30 years later.Quote:
Looks like the edge of town.
I worked at Richland in the Sunglass kiosk near the Chick-fil-a until I graduated in 1981. That cash bought my wife's engagement ring on layaway at Kindler's Gem Jewelers (then on Bosque).
True. And not the only one. Valley Mills at 35 is probably an even more urgent candidate. Problem is the Circle. As much as I like the history, it probably needs to go. Lived in the Boston area for a while. Traffic Circles/Rotaries work well, but the people using them have to instinctively know how to use them. Few in Texas do and the circle is very inefficient as a result. You have to maintain speed entering the circle, adjusting to actually merge with flowing traffic, not stop and wait for an opening. The circle might as well be a 4 way stop with turn lanes the way it works now.Quote:
interchange is in need of a massive refurb and expansion.
Chelsea's was the heartbeat of a lot of Waco music. Being 15 years old in 1986, I certainly can't confirm.IndyYes said:
My favorite memory of Richland Fashion Mall when I was a Baylor student from 1982-1986 was Chelsea Street Pub. They would offer 3 for 1's on Texas Teas. But about the time I graduated, MADD wasn't a fan of those promotions and put an end to it.
Heard Chelsea Street Pub was a place where David Koresh would frequent and do his recruiting.
Very true. I remember joking at the time that they change the name to "Richland Mall" that there was NO fashion there.MrGolfguy said:
Richland Fashion Mall was the official name the first couple decades i believe.
What is this "stuff" you speak of?Stranger said:CTbruin said:
And I remember when it was the Lake Air Drive In movie
And I remember a Baylor offensive lineman and my ownself would buy three cases of beer down at the Schlitz Distributor on Friday afternoon for $9.95 and invite a couple of coeds to the Lake Air Drive for movies and stuff.
If you were one of those that had your initials on all ten of the top ten score then, I HATED YOU!CooterBU said:
Burned through many an allowance at Just-For-Fun arcade back in the day. My high score on Zaxxon was boss!
LIB,MR BEARS said:If you were one of those that had your initials on all ten of the top ten score then, I HATED YOU!CooterBU said:
Burned through many an allowance at Just-For-Fun arcade back in the day. My high score on Zaxxon was boss!
LIB,MR BEARS said:What is this "stuff" you speak of?Stranger said:CTbruin said:
And I remember when it was the Lake Air Drive In movie
And I remember a Baylor offensive lineman and my ownself would buy three cases of beer down at the Schlitz Distributor on Friday afternoon for $9.95 and invite a couple of coeds to the Lake Air Drive for movies and stuff.
CooterBU said:LIB,MR BEARS said:If you were one of those that had your initials on all ten of the top ten score then, I HATED YOU!CooterBU said:
Burned through many an allowance at Just-For-Fun arcade back in the day. My high score on Zaxxon was boss!
You're welcome.
Stranger said:LIB,MR BEARS said:What is this "stuff" you speak of?Stranger said:CTbruin said:
And I remember when it was the Lake Air Drive In movie
And I remember a Baylor offensive lineman and my ownself would buy three cases of beer down at the Schlitz Distributor on Friday afternoon for $9.95 and invite a couple of coeds to the Lake Air Drive for movies and stuff.
Do you want me to draw you picture?
I don't think landmark is a crack haven but I could be wrong. You're probably thinking Waco dr and the river.Yogi said:
That's when the Landmark Apartments were the standard.
Now?
A great place to buy crack.
Dang yogi, I remember all of that. Molitor's , at the big store, had the best bike selection I'd ever seen. My Schwann Stingray came from there.Yogi said:
You guys got me thinking to stores that have lived and died in that mall.
For one, I remember the salon "Your Father's Moustache", where I was able to fill an autograph book of the Baylor Football team and coaching staff from 1981. Mom probably still has it stashed away somewhere.
Of course, there was Picadilly, Wicks N Sticks, Just for Fun, and who could possible forget Chelsea Street Pub?
Before the "Men's Dillards", there was Service Merchandise, and before that, Wilson's.
But as a kid, I liked going into KB Toys when I could, but it still was no match for Molitor's. Ha ha. Molitor's, even the mini-store on the Lake Air Mall next to the barber shop, was a wonderland for a kid back then. I still have the first adult bike I purchased from Molitor's somewhere - a 27 inch Schwinn.
You're talking about the big Fairgate store, right? Help me remember..for some reason I'm thinking of it opening as Molitor's Toy Wonderland..am I getting that right?LIB,MR BEARS said:Dang yogi, I remember all of that. Molitor's , at the big store, had the best bike selection I'd ever seen. My Schwann Stingray came from there.Yogi said:
You guys got me thinking to stores that have lived and died in that mall.
For one, I remember the salon "Your Father's Moustache", where I was able to fill an autograph book of the Baylor Football team and coaching staff from 1981. Mom probably still has it stashed away somewhere.
Of course, there was Picadilly, Wicks N Sticks, Just for Fun, and who could possible forget Chelsea Street Pub?
Before the "Men's Dillards", there was Service Merchandise, and before that, Wilson's.
But as a kid, I liked going into KB Toys when I could, but it still was no match for Molitor's. Ha ha. Molitor's, even the mini-store on the Lake Air Mall next to the barber shop, was a wonderland for a kid back then. I still have the first adult bike I purchased from Molitor's somewhere - a 27 inch Schwinn.
Walden Books.Quote:
B. Dalton was one bookstore, but I'm blanking on the other one right now.
Ah! Bless you! That would have for real bugged me until I remembered!CorsicanaBear said:Walden Books.Quote:
B. Dalton was one bookstore, but I'm blanking on the other one right now.
Man that is an awesome memory and appears to be very accurate. I need to take your vitamins.Mr Tulip said:
Let's see. from the "main entrance" on opening day was First Federal (with the "Prestidigitator" one the outside - the first ATM I ever used), I believe Gingiss tuxedo and formal wear, then "Just for Fun" arcade. The other side was Piccadilly, I think.
JCPenny anchored that side, and the Plitt 3 and 4 theaters were next to them (1 and 2 being on the hill). My little sister had an overnight Blue Birds camp out, and my parents couldn't ditch me, so they took me to see "Best Little *****house in Texas" there. I thought I was the shixnit.
I think Zales was always on the corner bend as it went downstairs. Wicks n Sticks was across from that. Linz Jewelers were next door. Coach House Gifts (Waco's sort of, could be version of Spencer's) was on that hall, but I can't remember if they were there when it opened.
I remember doubling up on Kay-Bee Toys and Circus World (down by Sears). Musicland had a better sheet music selection than Hastings. B. Dalton was one bookstore, but I'm blanking on the other one right now.