FORT WORTH HAS more than a handful of nicknames: Cowtown, Wall Street of the West, the Unexpected City, Where the West Begins.
This is not because the place has an identity crisis-it's because it has so much to offer, as I discovered on a recent visit. Fort Worth has managed to maintain its Old West charm and cowboy roots while modernizing into a cultural powerhouse, with an identity distinct from Dallas, its larger neighbor. The best thing of all? It took only a weekend to see its transformation for myself.
FRIDAY
I got my bearings at the 35-block Sundance Square in the city center, which has a plaza that's anchored by a fountain and a giant disco-mirrored cowboy hat. Next I made my way to Water Gardens, a series of reflecting pools that were featured in one of Kendrick Lamar's music videos. As I walked, I paused to read a series of historical plaques detailing the characters of Fort Worth's past, including Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.
At lunchtime, I pulled up a seat at Don Artemio (entrées $35-$82), a James Beard Award semifinalist, for enchiladas stuffed with queso fresco and drizzled with tamarind mole.
Post-meal, I freshened up in my suite at the Crescent Hotel (doubles from $300), a slick 200-room property that opened last November. It is home to Canyon Ranch's first Wellness Club, which has a 9,000-square-foot fitness center and spa that has a range of treatments, including facials with diamond peptides.
The Crescent is close to a quartet of art institutions that rival any city. The Louis Kahn-designed Kimbell Art Museum has one of Michelangelo's first known paintings (and the only one to hang in an American museum), in addition to works by Monet, Mondrian, and Rembrandt, plus an exhibition hall designed by Renzo Piano.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2024-Ausgabe von Travel+Leisure US.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 2024-Ausgabe von Travel+Leisure US.
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My decade-long marriage to a man I deeply love had dissolved, and I had come to the Spirit Rock Meditation Center, in the secluded hills of Marin County, north of San Francisco, to steady myself. Led by the author and meditation teacher Oren Jay Sofer, the seven-day silent retreat focused on the four brahmavihāra, or Buddhist virtues: loving-kindness, compassion, joy, and equanimity.
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The Hudson Valley has long drawn New York City dwellers in search of clean air, spectacular hikes, and upstate culture. Now a budding community of artisans-young farmers, bakers, vintners, distillers-is turning the region into a modern breadbasket.It is a tightly woven ecosystem that also extends to restaurants and hotels. At Tenmile Distillery, in the town of Wassaic, for example, the grain used to make whiskey comes from a farm in Tivoli, 30 miles away, while the gin and vodka it produces are served at stylish addresses like the Troutbeck (doubles from $580), a hotel in Amenia, and the restaurant Stissing House (entrées $22-$155), in Pine Plains.
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