Eats Beat

Here’s what a $6 million BBQ palace looks like: It’s a new Terry Black’s in Fort Worth

Inside Look stories give Star-Telegram subscribers exclusive sneak peeks and behind-the-scenes reporting. Story suggestion? Editors@star-telegram.com.

The new $6 million Fort Worth location of Lockhart-based Terry Black’s Barbecue will include a main building along West Seventh Street with parking behind it, according to plans filed with the city.

Terry Black’s, founded by descendants from one of Central Texas’ legacy barbecue families, is building a 6,400-square-foot restaurant on a former Wendy’s hamburger stand site at 2926 W. Seventh St.

The restaurant site stretches back with parking on the West Sixth Street side, according to the plans.

The restaurant is tentatively scheduled to open by next fall, according to a state application.

The view from West Seventh Street of the new Terry Black’s BBQ in west Fort Worth.
The view from West Seventh Street of the new Terry Black’s BBQ in west Fort Worth. Talson Design

It was officially announced earlier in October. Black’s had bought the land in January.

The site, valued at $1.8 million, had been home to a gas station for 40 years before the Wendy’s was built in 1977.

Terry Black’s has a Dallas location at 3025 Main St. in Deep Ellum. The original opened in 2014 in Austin after a family split with 90-year-old Black’s Barbecue in Lockhart.

Terry Black’s expanded to Dallas in 2019 and added a Lockhart restaurant in 2022.

Mark Black said in January that the Fort Worth restaurant will open at lunch and dinner daily and serve “straight-up Central Texas barbecue — the same thing we’ve been doing since the 1930s.” (No shorter hours, burgers or brisket tacos.)

Customers at the Dallas location often say, “come to Fort Worth,” he said then.

“The barbecue scene in Fort Worth has blown up,” he said. “We love to be in areas where barbecue is king.”

Artist’s rendition of the waiting line at Terry Black’s BBQ in west Fort Worth.
Artist’s rendition of the waiting line at Terry Black’s BBQ in west Fort Worth. Talson Design

The Blacks are also building a restaurant, winery and resort in Driftwood near Austin.

The Terry Black’s site, three blocks from the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, is valued at $1.8 million just for the land.

The old Wendy’s was built in 1977 and replaced a 40-year-old Texaco station. An In-N-Out Burger is next door.

A chef-driven barbecue restaurant and bar by TV food show celebrity chef Graham Elliot and executive Felipe Armenta, F1 Smokehouse, recently opened nearby at 517 University Drive.

An artist’s conception of the new Terry Black’s BBQ under construction in west Fort Worth.
An artist’s conception of the new Terry Black’s BBQ under construction in west Fort Worth. Talson Design

Several of the city’s “new school” barbecue restaurants have achieved state top 10 or top 50 rankings, led by Panther City BBQ, 201 E. Hattie St. (also mapped as 201 E. Pennsylvania Ave.).

Dayne Weaver of state top-50 Dayne’s Craft Barbecue, currently at 9840 Camp Bowie West Blvd., is remodeling a new location at 109 S. Front St., Aledo.

Fort Worth gained statewide fame in 2021 when Goldee’s Barbecue, 4645 Dick Price Road in rural Tarrant County south of Kennedale, was ranked the state’s best and 11 more local restaurants made the “50 best” or top 100.

Brisket and sausage with slaw and creamed corn at Terry Black’s Barbecue.
Brisket and sausage with slaw and creamed corn at Terry Black’s Barbecue. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

Also listed among Texas Monthly’s 2021 guide to the state’s top 50 barbecue restaurants:

▪ Hurtado Barbecue, 1116 Eighth Ave., Fort Worth, and 205 E. Front St., Arlington.

▪ Smoke-A-Holics BBQ, 1417 Evans Ave., Fort Worth;

▪ Zavala’s Barbecue, 421 W. Main St., Grand Prairie.

A “Best of the Rest” honorable mention list included 407BBQ, Argyle; 225° BBQ, Arlington; Bare Barbecue, Johnson County; BBQ on the Brazos, Cresson; and Heim Barbecue, with three locations in Fort Worth and Dallas and a new restaurant expected next year at 114 E. Ellison St., Burleson.

This story was originally published October 26, 2023 at 2:10 PM.

Follow More of Our Reporting on Fort Worth: Inside Look

Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat. Support my work with a digital subscription
Bud Kennedy
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Bud Kennedy is a Fort Worth Star-Telegram opinion columnist. In a 54-year Texas newspaper career, he has covered two Super Bowls, a presidential inauguration, seven national political conventions and 19 Texas Legislature sessions.. Support my work with a digital subscription
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER