Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

The Independent's journalism is supported by our readers. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn commission.

Pearl District: 10 things to do in San Antonio’s coolest neighbourhood

A disused brewery is now the trendiest place to hang out in the Texan city

Ella Buchan
Tuesday 12 June 2018 13:23 BST
Comments
Pearl District is the jewel in Portland's crown
Pearl District is the jewel in Portland's crown (Scott Martin)

What’s that saying about organising something in a brewery? The architects and planners behind San Antonio’s Pearl District have taken the challenge even further, organising a neighbourhood in a brewery. The former home of Pearl Brewery, which operated here from 1883 to 2001, was for years a no-go area, an eerily empty stretch of land north of downtown.

Over the past decade, the plant has been painstakingly and sensitively repurposed into a vibrant micro district. Many original structures remain; the bottling plant is now a food hall, for example, and vintage equipment is strewn around public spaces. Brewery and ammonia tanks are now rainwater collectors and herb-garden containers.

With chef-owned restaurants, independent shops and cool cocktail bars all situated in a compact, 22-acre site by the San Antonio River, Pearl has quickly become the city’s most desirable place to stay and play.

Sleep in a brew house

When it finally opened in November 2015, Hotel Emma signified Pearl’s transformation from sketchy industrial area to slick neighbourhood was complete. Thoughtful touches like a welcome margarita – served from a vintage cocktail tray in the Library room – and bedtime macaroons from Bakery Lorraine, a local favourite, mean guests feel thoroughly taken care of. Set aside an afternoon to doze by the tranquil outdoor pool, with food and drink served straight to your lounger.

The imposing exterior of Hotel Emma (Nicole Franzen)

Browse niche souvenirs

Pearl has more than a dozen independent shops to explore. Lose an afternoon at the Twig Book Shop, and peep at Vintage Bouquet Bar’s floral works of art. For a souvenir fix, visit fairtrade craft store Ten Thousand Villages and browse turquoise glassware and seersucker bathrobes at Curio, inside Hotel Emma’s lobby.

Flex your credit card at one of the many independent shops throughout Pearl (Pearl)

Get on your bike

Rent a bike from one of Pearl’s B-Cycle hubs to explore the Museum Reach, a rejuvenated stretch of the pedestrian-friendly River Walk. Pass art murals and green spaces en route to downtown, visit the location of the 1836 Battle of the Alamo, and continue to Southtown – another up-and-coming area, dominated by the Blue Star Arts Complex.

Shop to live music

Live bands play while shoppers browse stalls with local honey, wine, cheeses and baked goods at Pearl’s monthly night market, which runs throughout the summer. Local restaurants, bars and shops join the fun, staying open late and offering discounts. The weekend farmers' market runs all year.

Enjoy some music while shopping for local produce at Pearl's buzzing markets (Matt Buikema)

Take an aerial yoga class

To counter all that food and drink, book a class at The Synergy Studio. Niche workouts include Nia – a combination of jazz dance, yoga, and mindfulness – and aerial yoga, where poses are struck in an aerial hammock.

Cruise down the River Walk

Take a narrated boat tour with Go Rio Cruises, passing the city’s first neighbourhood – La Vallita – or buy a day pass and hop between the museums, bars and restaurants dotted between Pearl and downtown.

Give your feet a rest with a cruise down the San Antonio river (Pearl)

Drink in a brew tank

The most coveted seats in Hotel Emma’s bar, Sternewirth, are inside cast-iron tanks once used to ferment beer. There’s even a button to summon the bar staff, so you don’t have to shift from your velvet banquette to order potent cocktails like the Three Emmas, made with Pearl beer, rose cordial and gin.

Kick back with your tipple of choice at Hotel Emma’s bar, Sternewirth (Nicole Franzen)

Soak up some art

Take a short stroll along the River Walk to reach the San Antonio Museum of Art. Its beguiling collections of pre-Columbian, Spanish Colonial and Latin American art are arranged across two wings, connected by a skybridge with city views. The 19th-century building was formerly occupied by the Lone Star Brewery. Notice a theme here?

Dine at chef-led restaurants

Many of Pearl’s restaurants are owned by chefs trained by the CIA – the Culinary Institute of America, that is – there’s a huge campus here. Many graduates have stuck around, and the talent is evident in every bite. Hotel Emma’s supper uses local produce for dishes like crispy smoked quail with pickled corn relish. At Cured, housed in the brewery’s administrative offices, diners are greeted by a charcuterie case. The menu is (unsurprisingly) meaty, from the plates of house-cured meat to the bison tartare. But they take their vegetables seriously too, as evidenced by the vibrant beet salad and the deliciously rich and earthy mushroom gnocchi.

Treat your tastebuds at the decadent Cured (Scott Martin)

Sip frosé in a food hall

Head to the Bottling Department for happy hour. The food hall’s drinks cost half price every day from 3pm to 6pm, and all day on Mondays. The frosé (frozen rosé) is especially refreshing, like a grown-up slushy. Stalls selling ramen, burgers and rotisserie chicken and are on hand to soak up the booze, or try a raspberry hibiscus doughnut, served plain or a la mode (with a scoop of ice cream), from Maybelle’s.

Travel essentials

Getting there

Norwegian flies three times a week from London Gatwick to Austin, which is around an hour’s drive from San Antonio, from £340 return.

Staying there

Doubles at Hotel Emma from £250, room only.

More information

atpearl.com

visitsanantonio.com

traveltexas.com

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in