NEW HEIGHTS
San Antonio inches closer to huge observation wheel in St. Paul Square

Grandísimo will be 200 feet tall.
San Antonio is one step closer to getting its own gigantic observation wheel, part of an entertainment development planned for St. Paul Square. The 200-foot-tall Grandísimo recently received key conceptual approval from the city, paving the way for the continued revitalization of the East Side historic district in 2026.
The San Antonio Historic and Design Review Commission (HDRC) gave it approval on June 16, allowing Florida-based Icon Experiences to begin solidifying their plans for the park, which will also include a mini-golf course featuring local art, a carousel, and Grub-isimo, a food hall.
The road to building a London Eye-like attraction in Alamo City has taken a few twists and turns since 2017, when the Federal Aviation Administration received a request for an official aeronautical study to construct a 900-foot Ferris wheel south of downtown. That project would have even dwarfed Ain Dubai, currently the tallest observation wheel in the world at 820 feet.
In 2024, Icon took up the mantle with the more modest Grandísimo, which it still touted as the largest of its kind in Texas. The wheel will include 42 climate-controlled gondolas with sweeping views of the city.
Initially, the project was set to be built on a small tract of land near the Alamo. Although Grandísimo received Zoning Commission approval in April, it received pushback from the Alamo Trust, which worried it would obstruct views of the city's most famous cultural treasure.
The height is less of an issue at St. Paul Square, which is already surrounded by a few taller buildings. Still, the commission said it would review final plans to make sure the park follows St. Paul Square's materials, textures, and form.
The buildout would be a major boon to the historic area, which is finding new life as an entertainment district. This year, sports bar Atlee's Rally and coffeehouse El Tigre added to a diverse mix of restaurants and cocktail lounges, reviving the once declining blocks.
Although Commissioner Gabriel Velasquez said there might be more appropriate places for the observation wheel park, he did echo the board's sentiment that it was good for the city.
"[T]o me, it is not alien in any way, shape, or form," he said during the meeting. "It in fact pulls us back to the era of the Hemisfair and some of the things that used to be part of the landscape that are perhaps finding their way back into a more vibrant and playful and fun [city]."
