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    Sexy Cocktail Bar

    New downtown cocktail bar emphasizes sexy restraint in calm, cool atmosphere

    Eric Sandler
    Sep 24, 2014 | 2:14 pm

    Moving Sidewalk, the bar that has replaced shuttered ramen shop Goro & Gun, opened quietly on Main Street last weekend. With teal walls and three antique chandeliers hanging over the bar, it's a calmer, cooler atmosphere than its predecessor. As one patron quipped during Saturday night's first official service, "It doesn't look like Josh Martinez's dorm room anymore" (referring to the ramen shop's former partner).

    For Gregg, restraint is the governing principle that guided this new venture — the first time the veteran barman, whose credits include Anvil and The Pass & Provisions, has his own place.

    Beverage director Alexander Gregg tells CultureMap the new look reflects a deliberate choice. "We wanted it to feel sexy. Dark lights, candles, nice cool color on the walls . . . Teal is a soothing color. Kinda puts people in a good mood."

    If it all feels a little bit restrained, well, that's sort of the point. For Gregg, restraint is the governing principle that guided this new venture — the first time the veteran barman, whose credits include Anvil and The Pass & Provisions, has his own place.

    "In any creative form, I feel like restraint is the hardest principle to attain. You know a great master painter by his restraint. It’s not the lines he draws. It’s the lines he doesn’t draw," Gregg explains.

    Gregg gets a little philosophical when asked to explain how restraint manifests itself in Moving Sidewalk's tidy, eight-item cocktail menu.

    There’s a couple of schools of thought on flavor balance in cocktails. I’ve seen judges in competitions tell people ‘you should be able to taste every component in your drink. Every ingredient, you should be able to taste that.’ I completely disagree. When you add ingredients, you don’t taste them all on their own.

    That’s where the restraint comes in. Maybe you can taste the chartreuse in that drink but if you dial it back a little bit and not hitting you over the head with chartreuse it’s a little more interesting . . . but if you take it out it doesn’t taste the same."

    Even the name, which is inspired by ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons' first band, is a more low-key reference that replaces one taken from a Japanese cult classic movie. Beyond alluding to a local legend, Gregg cites two components of the name. "There’s this flow of people downtown. It’s becoming a bar hopping district. Basically, outside is a moving sidewalk," Gregg says. "Finally, is the name memorable? Or does it have a world-class feel to it? We think it does."

    Kitchen cocktails

    Gregg thinks that having a kitchen will help Moving Sidewalk distinguish itself from Bad News Bar, the neighbor that he cites as another world-class cocktail bar in Houston. Compared to bars that focus on classic cocktails, Gregg says that Moving Sidewalk will be "a little more modern in the approach. Having the kitchen allows us to create ingredients that don’t exist and use them in cocktails."

    Even the name, inspired by ZZ Top guitarist Billy Gibbons' first band, is a more low-key reference that replaces one taken from a Japanese cult classic movie.

    The kitchen's vacuum sealer helps with a rosehip infusion for the Lermontov Rose cocktail, and bartender Molly Pillow created a fig and marigold shrub for the All That Falls. Ultimately, Gregg cites bars like The Aviary in Chicago and Booker and Dax in New York as examples of places with kitchens that are creating modern cocktails.

    "I’m not going to say that’s the style we’re going for, but looking at some of the different techniques and some of the different lines of thought is definitely an inspiration," Gregg says.

    The bar's modern approach is best demonstrated in the White Lady -> to Corpse Reviver No. 2, in which liquid nitrogen is used to freeze Cocchi Americano and absinthe, the ingredients that distinguish the two drinks. The first sips are all White Lady, but the Corpse Reviver No. 2 emerges as the ingredients melt. The theater created by watching the liquid nitrogen pour into a glass from a thermos has an instant "gotta have it" effect that prompts nearby patrons to order the drink.

    Beyond a specific cocktail or technique, Moving Sidewalk is Gregg's first opportunity to have his own place. "It’s always been a dream of mine to have a bar. The reality is still kind of setting in," he admits.

    "It’s huge. It’s a life changing event for me for sure. It’s one thing to have a job. It’s another thing to have a bar."

    Moving Sidewalk is open Tuesday through Saturday from 4 p.m. to 2 a.m.

    Calm, sexy and illuminated by candlelight.

    Moving Sidewalk Interior
    Photo by Alexander Gregg, courtesy of Moving Sidewalk
    Calm, sexy and illuminated by candlelight.
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    service switcheroo

    Street food-inspired Houston restaurant swaps counter service for servers

    Eric Sandler
    Nov 14, 2025 | 10:14 am
    Traveler's Cart food spread
    Photo by Andrew Hemingway
    Traveler's Cart is add new dishes to its menu, including steak frites and chicken parm.

    A globally-inspired Houston restaurant is making a big change to its service model. Traveler’s Cart will switch from counter service to full service beginning this Monday, November 17.

    When owners Thy and Matthew Mitchell opened Traveler’s Cart last year as a more casual sister concept to Traveler’s Table, their globally-inspired Montrose restaurant, they decided counter service would match the restaurant’s street food-inspired menu and lower price point. With a year of experience, they’ve decided full service — where diners sit down and order from a server — will improve the customer experience in a number of ways.

    First, they noticed that some of their online reviews go to great lengths to explain the ordering process. Moving to traditional table service will elimination that confusion.

    “We want to be like a great brasserie or izakaya where people come and enjoy food and drinks at a reasonable price,” Matthew Mitchell tells CultureMap. “There’s a lack of intuitiveness about the process right now. Almost a year in, we’re still having to explain where you go and how you order. That tells you we probably missed the mark.”

    He also recognizes that the inherent uncertainty of counter service — people are concerned about how long they’ll have to wait to order and whether a table will be available once they do — limits the restaurant’s appeal as a date night option or for larger groups who want the certainty of having a place to sit.

    Even though the restaurant has been a financial success, according to Mitchell, he thinks Traveler’s Cart is missing out on revenue with its counter service model. “I think people order less at the counter. You may not order a cocktail, and you certainly won’t get back up and order more drinks,” he says.

    Switching to full service will also help the restaurant’s perceived value. With entrees mostly priced between $15 and $25, the restaurant may feel expensive relative to other fast casual restaurants. Once servers are added, Mitchell thinks diners will appreciate the value, particularly since its prices are about half of sister concept Traveler’s Table.

    “I feel like the food quality is outstanding for the price, but when it crosses that $20 or $30 threshold, people perceive it as pricey,” he says.

    Traveler’s Cart has other ways to enhance the value of its offering, such as its $18, three-course lunch that includes iced tea or a fountain drink. Happy hour, available Monday through Friday from 3-6 pm, includes $8 cocktails, $3 drafts, $8 small plates, and more.

    Along with the new service model, Travelers Cart is updating its menu with a number of new dishes. They include Thai chili queso, Baja shrimp tacos, salmon donburi bowl, chicken parmesan, and steak frites. The cocktail menu has also been refreshed with a Mexican espresso martini and a Tuk Tuk Old Fashioned, named for the vehicle that now sits in front of the restaurant’s entrance.

    Recently recognized by the Texas Restaurant Association as Restaurateurs of the Year for the Houston region, the Mitchells hope that these changes will lead to even more success. With the service style refined and the menu dialed in, they’re already looking for another location.





    Traveler's Cart food spread

    Photo by Andrew Hemingway

    Traveler's Cart is add new dishes to its menu, including steak frites and chicken parm.

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