Texarkana Gazette

Hotel Grim sign again shines over downtown

- By Karl Richter

TEXARKANA, Texas — After remaining dark for more than three decades, the iconic sign atop the Hotel Grim shone again Tuesday.

At a sunset ceremony hosted by the city and developer Cohen-Esrey, a crowd in front of the Perot Theatre led by both Texarkana mayors counted down from 10. The mayors pulled a ceremonial switch, the sign blazed back to life, and those gathered — many holding up cellphones to record video of the event — cheered.

Texas-side Mayor Bob Bruggeman had begun the ceremony by recounting the history of the hotel’s constructi­on and opening on July 15, 1925, saying it was called “a monument dedicated to the progress of greater Texarkana.”

Sets of identical twins attended the 1925 opening to symbolize the twin cities of Texarkana, and the gesture was repeated Tuesday. Bruggeman recognized Texas-side residents Todd and Brooke Marshall and their young twin sons, Luke and John.

Cohen-Esrey executive Tom Anderson said when he first saw the hotel, he thought an attempt to renovate it would be crazy. But after meeting with city officials and members of the community, he changed his mind.

“I heard story after story about how important this project was to the city of Texarkana. So, little by little, I became convinced. And if there was any more convincing that I needed, it happened tonight,” Anderson said, adding that working on the project is special.

“It’s finally becoming a reality, and it is just such an

honor for me, it’s an honor for our team, it’s an honor for the investors that we brought to the table, to be part of such an important building block in the fabric of community here in downtown Texarkana. …

“I’m looking forward to being back here a little over a year from tonight, when it’s in the springtime and perhaps a little warmer, and we’re going to cut the ribbon and have a grand opening celebratio­n for the new Hotel Grim.”

Temporary measures were used to light the sign Tuesday, said David Peavy, whose local company Artex Electric has the electrical contract for the Grim project. Peavy coated the sign’s letters with reflective white paint days before the ceremony, and two 500-watt LED lights powered by a portable generator lit them from the front side.

Contractor­s will take down and renovate the sign permanentl­y at some point during the building’s rehabilita­tion. The paint should not hamper that effort or violate any historic standards the project must adhere to, said Ellis Mumford-Russell with Ogee, the Austin-based historic preservati­on consultanc­y advising the Grim’s developers.

Funded by a multifacet­ed $25-million financing package, the project will convert the hotel into more than 90 apartments for low-income residents. It is expected to be completed in spring 2021.

 ?? Staff photo by Hunt Mercier ?? ■ Attendees of the Hotel Grim lighting ceremony hold their phones out to record and photograph the lighting of the sign for the first time in 30 years on Tuesday outside the Perot Theatre in Texarkana, Texas.
Staff photo by Hunt Mercier ■ Attendees of the Hotel Grim lighting ceremony hold their phones out to record and photograph the lighting of the sign for the first time in 30 years on Tuesday outside the Perot Theatre in Texarkana, Texas.
 ?? Staff photo ??
Staff photo

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