Destroying the Cabana Hotel Would Not Be So Bad

Categories: City Hall

cabanamotel.jpg
Amy Silverstein
Eh.
Every hour or so, the Save the Cabana Hotel Facebook page reminds its 900-plus followers to SAVE THE CABANA HOTEL. Dallas' luxury Cabana Motor Hotel opened on Stemmons Freeway in 1962, and photographs on the fan page show legends like John Bonham and Robert Plant hanging out. The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix and Raquel Welch were also once inside the building.

In more recent years, the Cabana hosted a man named Danny Marvin, who describes his visit in the comments section of a Dallas Voice article:

I stayed there ... the food was horrible, staff wasn't very nice, and the worst part i had to stripe naked in front of other men. Nice architecture though.

What Marvin seems to be getting at is that the Cabana Hotel is already dead. It stopped being the Cabana Hotel in 1987, when Dallas County turned it into a jail. The Bill Decker Detention Center housed overflow inmates until 2009, when the county opened another jail to put the extra inmates instead.

"I don't ever see it reopening," County Commissioner John Wiley Price told the Dallas Morning News in 2008.

Five years later, the beat-up building still sits on Stemmons, now operating as a private halfway house. So why the sudden interest in returning a forgotten building next to a freeway to its 1960s glory? Because a bunch of developers were recently offered the building and now they're fighting to get their hands on it.

Last month a real estate group announced that the building was available for redevelopment. Developers put their bids in. Then in a closed meeting on October 7, Dallas County Commissioners Court reportedly made some sort of decision about the building that nobody can definitively talk about.

Neither the county nor the real estate group will comment yet on how that meeting went down or what's next for the building. But judging by the Save the Cabana Hotel page, it appears that a company called Lincoln Property got the place and now plans to do something evil. "We fear they will demolish it and ask for your help to save the structure," says a recent Save the Cabana Hotel post.

Who is Save the Cabana Hotel? It's a page run by a man named Charles Brower who also wants to redevelop the building. He says he thinks Lincoln Property will probably demolish everything but doesn't offer proof. "Although the Lincoln Property plan is uncertain," Brower says, "it's uncertain what they plan to do with the building. In all likelihood, given the economic opportunity for them, they would tear it down and build an apartment building in its place."

Brower lives in New York City and works as a "marketing leader and digital channel strategist," but denies that Save the Cabana Hotel is a marketing ploy. He says he plans to move to Dallas soon and is a partner in a company called Hercules Development that wants to restore the building. "We'd like to turn it back into a four-star hotel," he says.

Brower uses the building's history to make his case that it should be a hotel again. "There's a very rich legacy of Dallas history and memories that go along with that structure. Once that structure is gone, you've erased those memories, you've erased that history from the Dallas area," he says. (Lincoln Property's Clay Duvall hasn't yet returned our messages to confirm what it is that they actually plan to do with building. He vaguely told the News a few weeks ago that "we've looked at it a bunch of different ways.")

Unsure if this building is worth caring about or if this is just a turf war between competing developers, I went to Dallas' preservationist-in-chief to see if he thinks the building is nice. He does. "I believe that the Cabana Hotel is an extremely interesting and good piece of architecture," David Preziosi of Preservation Dallas says via email. "It evokes the spirit of the age when it was built with its modern concrete screen façade and nod to Las Vegas architecture in its design."

I drove by myself and found a large boxy building with a drab parking garage next to a freeway. The width seems to violate every urban, pedestrian-friendly principle that Dallas' trendy neighborhoods are supposed to be embracing now. The facade was pretty cool, though. Maybe we can work out a compromise where whoever gets the building promises to just raze half of it.

Send your story tips to the author, Amy Silverstein.


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33 comments
Albert01
Albert01


Robert L Meckfessel via Docomomo US NTX

From Docomomo US NTX:

"It's very cool that the Beatles, Hendrix, and Led Zeppelin stayed here and that Raquel Welch worked here. But beyond that, this is a very good building that is representative of a branch of Modernism not widely represented in Dallas.

It appears that Dallas County may have given little consideration to the Cabana's cultural and architectural significance when selecting a buyer. Hopefully, this decision can be reversed. Write your Country Commissioner and County Judge Jenkins!"

Albert01
Albert01

The Cabaña had a huge, deluxe 1960s clientele... The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Led Zeppelin, Richard Nixon, all chose it.. Raquel Welch served cocktails, too.


More importantly, the Cabaña is a unique, modernist icon of the 1960s, with an incredibly solid and sturdy structure. Conservation, ecology, and architectural uniqueness... YES.

RTGolden1
RTGolden1 topcommenter

That place was a luxury hotel?  I always thought it was Project Housing, with the later addition of the 'free fall screens' to prevent residents from being tosse.. er falling, to their deaths.

Albert01
Albert01

Hope Ms. Silverstein can make more of an effort to research her work.. The County is extraordinarily inept. Dallas County leaders meet each Tuesday in closed Executive Session because you the PUBLIC do not care. Here's what happened on Oct 7th: The County chose Lincoln to demolish the hotel ($8.7m) versus two LOCAL four-star hotel developers (TIE at $8.7m, and another $8.3m). Zero tax abatement or tax relief. The County has zero historical or preservation interest. Ms. Silverstein, I'm disappointed to see you've done little to no research yet published.


Dallas doesn't need to be a city of shiny, new MEDIOCRE buildings... Don't you all see San Francisco, Boston, St. Louis all figured out the need to protect its 50 to 100 year old buildings long ago?

dfw_maverick
dfw_maverick

So are the groups that actually care about preserving Dallas buildings concerned about this one or is the concern only being expressed by an out of state real estate developer that may have an interest in this building?

Albert01
Albert01

This says it all - Oy! History repeats.

1. Really nice building is constructed and experiences great history.

2. Building goes into decline

3. At about 50 years old it is at its most threatened - still too new to be appreciated by most, run down, its importance recognized by a sad few.

4. Government says, "meh"

5. Local reporter writes an article saying, "meh"

6. Building is demolished with 90% probability nothing better or even decent is built in its place.

7. 10 years later a book of the city's lost architecture comes out with a chapter on another lost gem, and people talk about how stupid we were to destroy it.

This is how far too many of the historic buildings in Dallas have been lost. Its probably how most are lost.

Myrna.Minkoff-Katz
Myrna.Minkoff-Katz topcommenter

Valley of the Dolls.  Now, that's a fabulous time-capsule of the late sixties.  Hilariously campy.  My favorite line, out of many, is when Neely O'Hara (Patty Duke) screams out, "Ted Casablanca is NOT a fag!" 

maroon9991
maroon9991

My memories of this place consist of being trapped in a holding cell for two hours with a British junkie going through heroin withdrawal, and watching another inmate develop a staph infection from doing push-ups on the floor. It's nice to finally find out why Decker Jail was referred to as "The Hotel", but I'd readily contribute to Lincoln's fund to demolish this "historical landmark".

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

I went on a bender and watched the first five years of Mad Men nonstop.  1962 was the scene of tacky architecture, really tacky furniture fixtures and interior decor, stick women with big hair, men in suits way too uptight and land yachts for cars.

It took forty years and Vietnam to knock it down, chop it up and generally winnow away at the 1960s look.  We've finally got it hemmed in to retro.  Let's not let it get its nose back up under the tent.

Maybe its a phobia but like Ebola, what if it gets loose again?

effuimanaardvark
effuimanaardvark

Trying to care, but I just can't. I do hate that Dallas doesn't do more to save some of its architecture, but really this building is just ugly. I just don't see any way it could be made desirable and profitable. I'm sure there are more worthy buildings to save. 

Tipster1908
Tipster1908

It's a pretty good bet that Lincoln will tear this thing down in a heartbeat and put in something new. Apartment complexes are easy to do, easy to finance, easy to fill, and easy to offload right now, so that's a good bet for their plan.

It sounds like this other investor wants to convince the county to sell to him, presumably at a lower price, to save the building. That's fine by me, but I want to see him post a bond against that so it's not just his word. Because otherwise he's going to try and get this thing for less money in order to save it. The restoration plans and/or money fall through, and in the end he sells for the true market value to someone who will demolish it. I actually think there is some value to the area to retaining the building, which with some modification could be nice as higher end apartments (turning it back into a hotel seems like a waste of everyone's time and money, although if he's got money to burn, so be it). So I'm not opposed to having the county sell it to less for someone who will renovate rather than demolish. Just has to be done correctly, which is something that the county doesn't have a fantastic track record with.

doug.robinson
doug.robinson

Perhaps Amy will learn how to spell the name of one of the greatest guitar gods in music history before she logs on her PC again. "Hendrex"?

doug.robinson
doug.robinson

Good to know the Dallas Observer can't spell the name of one of the greatest guitar gods of this or any generation. "Hendrex"? Really?

doug.robinson
doug.robinson

Good to know the Dallas douchebag Observer does know how to spell the name of one of the greatest guitar gods in the history of music.

mkroper56
mkroper56

I have a beautiful memory of having a Coca Cola with my Mom and two cousins after a day at the fair at this hotel.  We had a Coke where the Beatles stayed.  That was huge!  Memories probably can't save this building, but I will always remember how special that was!

JFPO
JFPO

Brower doesn't need "proof" Lincoln will demolish it. Developers here loathe mid-century architecture, as do most reporters not named Wilonsky.

pblaydes
pblaydes

Based on the redevelopment of the Statler, this would be an uphill battle. It's of similar age, and like the statler lacks the original fixtures, finishings, and furnishings from its era of significance.

That said, if news got out that someone was building a chic, trendy hotel/residential building based entirely on the 60’s near the Design District or in Trinity Groves, I think we’d all be like, “Aww, good idea.That will work.”

LakeWWWooder
LakeWWWooder

It had the same developer as Caesar's Palace in Vegas. Yes, it used to look a lot like the Cabana before additions dwarfed the original.

cantwaittoleavetx
cantwaittoleavetx

Oy! History repeats.

1. Really nice building is constructed and experiences great history.

2. Building goes into decline

3. At about 50 years old it is at its most threatened - still too new to be appreciated by most, run down, its importance recognized by a sad few.

4. Government says, "meh"

5. Local reporter writes an article saying, "meh"

6. Building is demolished with 90% probability nothing better or even decent is built in its place.

7. 10 years later a book of the city's lost architecture comes out with a chapter on another lost gem, and people talk about how stupid we were to destroy it.


This is how far too many of the historic buildings in Dallas have been lost. Its probably how most are lost.

texaspainter
texaspainter

 I drove by myself and and found a large boxy building with a drab parking garage next to a freeway

You do know that the parking garage that sits out front is not original don't you? By doing so, would return it to the original entry. Perhaps even adding an additional garage on the back part of the lot would help.

OxbowIncident
OxbowIncident

I'd love to see a revival of that style but let's be honest. That place has been gutted and turned into a jail. Let it go.

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

@maroon9991

Lincoln's probably holding it hostage (threat of demolition) to see if they can milk it for tax abatements, HUD and TIF money (ha!).

$10 says Lincoln's already "hired" former staff to pay current staff to implement Plan Nine From Outer Space.

This time I want a front row seat to watch Staff perform the shadow hand-puppet presentation.

leftocenter
leftocenter

I did the same thing with Mad Men...it's a train wreck in a time capsule that you can't look away from!  Oh, the smoking alone!  (for the grammar checkers, that's: from which you can't look away).  The 60s were tacky and proud of it! 

It's a cringe-worthy building facade...kinda nostalgic, but not nostalgic enough.

So when is the final 1/2 season of Mad Men?

Albert01
Albert01

@effuimanaardvark Two local, four-star hoteliers bid more than $8 million for the property. They are professionals at assessing hotel viability.. Too bad. The County leadership is in bed with Lincoln Property and will sell the Cabaña for the SAME MONEY to Lincoln. All very ODD.


WaitWhat
WaitWhat

@pblaydes Haven't seen it in person, but it's got to look better than the Statler.  The Statler is just an eyesore.

leftocenter
leftocenter

@cantwaittoleavetx

What's with your moniker and why do you care?

hilllbillle
hilllbillle

@OxbowIncident  I figger there's quite a few folks who visited it then. most of us would LOVE to visit there/spend our hard earned $$$ again to enjoy the memories..

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

@leftocenter I don't know.  I'll have to look on Netflix.

T Cullen Davis's manse was on the tax rolls for a dollar years ago.  I went to look at it for a bank who was considering making a loan for redevelopment.  They wanted to know if there was any value in the main residence.

It hurt my eyes.  An early 1960s stab at contemporary design similar to something Frank Lloyd Wright's mass producers might whip out.  Actually, it was worth less than a dollar.  It took $20,000 to bulldoze it and haul it off.  Early 60s doesn't age well. 

Imagine what the M Streets would look like if instead of post WWII it was developed in the 60s.

In fact, Old East Dallas has a lot of new attached housing product that is creepily similar to the 60s look.  I don't think that will age well either.

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