Body found in parking lot of apartment complex on West Side

A body was found late Friday morning in the parking lot of an apartment complex on the city’s West Side.

According to San Antonio spokesman Nick Soliz, the body was found around 11:50 a.m. at the Westward Plaza Apartments and Townhomes in the 2600 block of Westward Drive.

No information was provided on the gender or a general age of the victim.

The incident is being treated as a homicide investigation.

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Women artisans showcased in ‘Makers Batch’ exhibit at South Side library

Editor’s note: This story was published through a partnership between KSAT and Live From the Southside, a new local- and Latina-owned magazine that works to improve & expand community relationships through promoting events, stories and businesses.

Celebrate Women’s History Month by visiting “The Makers Batch: Hidden Stories of the Women Artisans of San José Potteries.”

This unique exhibit is curated by San Antonio’s own Mission Crafts Chandlery.

Makers Batch

“The Makers Batch: Hidden Stories of the Women Artisans of San José Potteries” portrays the untold story of the creative women behind the San José Pottery Workshops and highlights their contributions to the arts and crafts movement of San Antonio.

Visitors will learn about these local San José neighborhood women who produced creative goods for the workshops. They have deep family ties that connect them to settlers of the San Antonio Missions and to local history legends Domingo Bustillo, a prominent military and political figure during the 1700s, and Pedro Huizar, the sculptor of the Mission San José Rose Window.

Visitors are offered an intimate glimpse into the lives of artisans like Jesusa (Susie) Bustillos-Chavez, Maria Eufemia (Pema) Bustillos-Salinas, Carmen Bustillos-Chavez, Virginia Martinez- Bustillos, Dorothy Pacheco, and Emma Vignes-Dixon through a private compilation of photographs, heirlooms and hand-crafted creations as well as original furniture productions from San José Potteries. These precious items are generously loaned to the Mission Library from the personal collections of Susan Toomey Frost and the Anguiano, Mendoza, Bustillos, Salinas, Valdez and Villarreal families.

A Women’s History Month Exhibition: March 3-31, 2022, Mission Library, 3134 Roosevelt Ave.

Mission Crafts Chandlery

Mission Crafts Chandlery was born from not only the admiration of the beauty surrounding San Antonio’s beloved World Heritage sites but in an effort to preserve Spanish-Texan culture. Each treasure in their collections was discovered with the intent to give shoppers more than a novelty. With passion and purpose, they are sharing pieces of a legacy with you to welcome into your special place.

The location is 2915 Roosevelt Ave., and the hours are noon-6 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, and 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday.

All of their candles are hand-poured and made in San Antonio. Aside from their candles, they also make custom home décor also inspired by the Missions themselves.

This article initially appeared on Live from the Southside.

Do you know of someone or something on the South Side that deserves some news coverage? Let us know in the prompt below.

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San Antonio is getting a giant pirate-themed play park, designed for inclusive play

One San Antonio family’s heartbreaking loss of their son led them on a journey to better the community in his memory and it’s led to the development of a 42-acre park called Mitchell’s Landing.

Mitchell Chang was 3-years-old when he drowned at the Love to Swim School in Stone Oak Parkway in February 2018. After his death, his parents, April and Marvin Chang, said they felt a strong need to do the good Mitchell could not longer do because he died too young.

“People try to imagine losing a child, but they often don’t think about it’s more than your child, it’s everything they were going to do in the world,” April Chang told KSAT. “To Mitchell, life was a party. Everything was fun, he wanted to have fun with everyone! Marvin felt very strongly that building a playground would continue Mitchell’s fun in a positive way,”

The family, which also includes the Chang’s other son, Evan, decided to put their efforts into a free public playground that would also be inclusive for families who have children with disabilities.

“We took inspiration from our memories with Evan and Mitchell at Morgan’s Wonderland and wanted to give a small piece of that to the public parks system. A playground that radiates acceptance, love, compassion, and fun,” April said. “Since Mitchell viewed himself a pirate in training, GameTime came up with this incredible pirate design with little Mitchell Easter eggs hidden throughout it. Once we saw the idea of the shipwrecked pirate ship, marsh bog, and abandoned Spanish mission, we knew this was the playground for our city and Mitchell.”

The park will be located in the 20000 block of Hardy Oak Parkway within the 204-acre Classen-Steubing Ranch Park. A video rendering of the park can be viewed in the video player at the top of the article.

There will be 164 parking spots, walking trails, a pavilion, restrooms, picnic areas, baseball fields, and open-play fields, all centered around the Mitchell’s Landing playground, according to the Mitchell Chang Foundation.

April told KSAT that Mitchell’s Landing is projected to open at the end of 2022 but “with the residual effects from the pandemic, it is difficult to say exactly.”

This is the final stage of what has been a 4-year project. Money for Classen-Steubing Ranch Park was a part of a 2017 city bond package.

“Since the original concept we have added H-E-B Mermaid Lagoon, where local students designed the climbing mermaid tails and the beach that was designed by Mitchell’s older brother Evan,” April said. “Marvin and I are incredibly appreciative for the help and trust that the San Antonio Parks and Recreation Department and our community partners, H-E-B and Susan Naylor Mouton have shown. We approached them with the idea of Mitchell’s Landing and all of them believed in Mitchell’s story and us enough to take a leap of faith for this project.”

The foundation’s website nites that the playground will be designed in a way that also encourages multigenerational play by providing access and ease of use for family members of all ages and ability levels, including grandparents and caregivers with disabilities.

“Mitchell’s Landing is a playground for our community, by our community….in so many ways,” April said. “Moms post pictures of their child in a wheelchair or with a walker and say how much they are excited to be able to pop into a playground real quick, something most families are used to. We are getting messages asking how and when they can book their child’s birthday party. It feels like the anticipation is bubbling over!”

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San Antonio declared one the best family getaways by Southern Living

Readers of Southern Living magazine are heaping praise on San Antonio. In the magazine’s sixth annual South’s Best Awards, the Alamo City earns a No. 8 ranking the South’s best family getaways, and gets some shoutouts for many of its bars and restaurants and nearby amenities. San Antonio’s Hyatt Regency Hill Country Resort & Spa unlocks the No. 7 spot on the list of the South’s best resorts, and Weathered Souls Brewing Co. is listed…

Fate of Lone Star Brewery makeover unclear as site is back on the market

Editor’s note: This story was published through a partnership between KSAT and the San Antonio Business Journal.

The 32-acre site once home to Lone Star Brewery is again for sale, putting plans for a major destination development south of downtown San Antonio in doubt.

The latest twist in what has been a multi-decade effort to revitalize the once hopping area along the San Antonio River comes less than a year after City Council approved as much as $24 million in incentives to support the nearly $600 million project.

The Business Journal reported in spring 2020 that a subsidiary of GrayStreet Partners was acquiring the real estate along Lone Star Boulevard.

Last year, GrayStreet enlisted the help of Midway, a Houston-based real estate investment, development and management firm to help with reimagining the Lone Star property. They’ve pursued a redevelopment plan for the former beer-making site that could include a mix of office, hotel and retail development.

“Together with our partners, we are exploring the opportunity to sell all or part of the Lone Star District,” Midway confirmed in a statement, noting that the firm often considers such sales throughout the development cycle of its projects.”

GrayStreet managing partner Kevin Covey was unavailable for comment at press time.

In May, despite previous failed attempts by others to redevelop Lone Star, Covey said he wanted to rescue the once-popular area from nostalgia and that he was optimistic his group had the right vision and enough bandwidth to advance its plan.

“We feel like we have a lot of flexibility to do something cool,” he said, noting that Midway brought additional experience to the table.

Now, it’s unclear what the future holds for the property.

“While we remain eager to work in San Antonio, Lone Star District is first and foremost a land investment,” Midway added in its statement. “We constantly evaluate current market opportunities on our investment in order to maximize value for our investors.”

The Business Journal will continue to follow this developing story.

Read the full story on San Antonio Business Journal.

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Amazing photos: Snake says nope when bird tries to eat it at Brazos Bend State Park

The early bird gets the worm — or in this case, the snake.

Elise Kitchens, a hobbyist photographer, got an incredible shot of an American bittern eating a mud snake over the weekend and the photo is drawing some attention on social media.

Kitchens told KSAT she was at Brazos Bend State Park on Saturday when she came upon the bird eating the snake.

“I was wrapping up a productive morning for photos and stopped to shoot a turtle. Someone a few yards down called out to get my attention. The bittern had just grabbed the mud snake. I of course ran right over,” said Kitchens.

“The Snake was fighting pretty hard, but the bittern managed to get him down. Then he came back up,” Kitchens continued. “We could see the snake’s head popping out of the bittern’s mouth. That was wild enough, and the bittern swallowed him again.”

Turns out the snake wasn’t done fighting and came back up again and that’s when Kitchens got the shot.

“When the snake stayed down, the few of us standing there looked at each other with ‘Did we really just see that??’ faces. Crossed my fingers for in-focus shots,” Kitchens said.

The photos were definitely in focus, as it turns out. Kitchens sent a copy of the crazy scene to Brazos Bend State Park and officials then posted the photo to social media.

The snake is believed to be a red-bellied mudsnake, but as it’s now been eaten by a hungry bittern, it’s just a best guess.

“Photographers all hope to have that ONE photo…we mentally picture something beautiful, artistic and ethereal. What’s the shot everyone likes? A snake impersonating an alien,” Kitchens quipped.

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Monumental new work from renowned artist gazes over the River Walk

The City of San Antonio has unveiled its latest piece of public art — a towering new sculpture that looks out over the River Walk Public Art Garden. Stargazer (Citlali), by internationally renowned Mexican artist Pedro Reyes, features a seated woman who “holds and gazes upon a star-like object held between her fingers,” a release describes. Inspired by San Antonio’s tricentennial, the piece “honors a collective history of looking to the stars for inspiration, guidance,…