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Dallas’ Atlas Cocktail Bar Sets Opening Date for First Houston Location in the Heights

The Dallas-born cocktail bar makes its Houston debut this July with an all-new cocktail program, a hidden speakeasy, and lofty ambitions
Written By: author avatar Desiree Gutierrez
author avatar Desiree Gutierrez
Dark wood paneling, ornate chandeliers, and rich red velvet seating set the stage at Atlas Houston Heights. | Photo by Joseph Rojas
Dark wood paneling, ornate chandeliers, and rich red velvet seating set the stage at Atlas Houston Heights. | Photo by Joseph Rojas

Now boarding. Atlas Cocktail Bar is bringing Dallas’ passport-free cocktail experience to Houston. 

The Bishop Arts-born concept from Dallas hospitality pro Dan Bui will make its Houston debut on Thursday, July 16 at 729 W. 19th St. in the Heights. This marks the third Atlas location, and the largest yet, landing with a brand new globally-inspired bar program in a two-story space—complete with a hidden speakeasy. 

“Our brand is global, and it’s really kind of like Houston,” Atlas general manager Antonio Vargas says. “You have all kinds of communities where it’s like an atlas.”  

The Houston expansion has been in the works since fall 2024. For Bui, it’s a homecoming. The Sugar Land native has called Dallas home for 14 years, opening the flagship Bishop Arts location 2021 before adding Fort Worth in 2024. Now, he’s bringing the concept to the city where his story began.

Vargas joined the company last fall. The Heights locale marks the first Atlas project he and Bui have built from the ground up together. Since the start of the project, Vargas has immersed himself in Houston’s restaurant and bar scene. 

Atlas general manager Antonio Vargas has crafted an entirely new cocktail program for the concept's Houston debut, opening July 16. | Photo by Fovea
Atlas general manager Antonio Vargas has crafted an entirely new cocktail program for the concepts Houston debut opening July 16 | Photo by Fovea

“Our ownership has been really good at selecting the best areas for the business,” Vargas explains.

He cites the Houston Heights neighborhood as a historic corridor for the culinary and nightlife scene primed with opportunity. Unlike Dallas, Houston’s lack of zoning has created neighborhoods with distinct personalities. Vargas believes this plays directly into Atlas’ globally-influenced identity.

“At night it can get a little quieter compared to some of the other areas in Houston, but that’s where we’re going to be able to come in and liven that up a bit,” Vargas says. 

Hospitality is Vargas’ lifelong calling. His hosting roots began with teenage house parties before serving four years in the Marines, including a deployment to Afghanistan.  After returning home, he built a resume that includes the Dallas Country Club, Nuri Steakhouse, and Sassetta inside the Joule. 

Outside of restaurants, Vargas has cultivated a following through StyleBender Bartender, producing everything from city-sanctioned raves under a bridge and Austin boat parties to Debbie Does Cumbia, a collaboration with artist By Zeneth and dance collective Debbie Does Disco in Mexico City. 

“With Houston, I have a blank canvas to start,” Vargas says. 

Atlas Houston Heights pairs moody interiors, velvet banquettes, and vintage-inspired décor with a globally influenced cocktail program. Photo by Joseph Rojas
Atlas Houston Heights pairs moody interiors velvet banquettes and vintage inspired décor with a globally influenced cocktail program Photo by Joseph Rojas

At four times the size of the Bishop Arts flagship, the Heights’ two-story space is rich with reds, velvet banquettes, leather loveseats, and dark wood paneling. A gilded 9-foot Atlas is breathtaking beneath a sparkling chandelier.

“I always talk about Atlas Heights as being the spoiled child,” Vargas says. “It’s the new guy, the one getting all the stuff.” 

Like its Dallas and Fort Worth siblings, Houston will feature a speakeasy called the Library Bar. Instead of pushing through a bookshelf, the hidden bar is accessible through a sliding bookshelf revealing a staircase leading upstairs. 

A hidden bookshelf conceals the entrance to Library Bar, Atlas Houston Heights' intimate upstairs speakeasy. | Photo by Joseph Rojas
A hidden bookshelf conceals the entrance to Library Bar Atlas Houston Heights intimate upstairs speakeasy | Photo by Joseph Rojas

Meanwhile, the food program is a voyage itself. The culinary program travels from Vietnam to Cuba to Italy, with dishes including pho, a Cubano, and Italian meatballs.

Atlas Heights’ cocktails are entirely new, spanning the Western and Eastern hemispheres while showcasing Vargas’ creativity. “I’ve been an event coordinator, I’ve been a manager, I’ve been a lot of these things, but I don’t think that a lot of people have seen that cocktail creativeness from me just yet,” he says. 

That influence is evident in the Gwen Stephani, a roasted banana espresso martini inspired by his grandmother’s licuados (Latin American fruit drinks similar to smoothies) and served in a glass with a banana leaf-wrapped stem.

Looking beyond opening day, Atlas has plans to host industry nights, collaborations with neighboring businesses like Plume, another Heights-area cocktail bar newbie, and extensive event programming. 

“Houston is a city with so much good music, and I’m gonna switch it up on a lot of things, as far as the DJs and the live acts that we have,” Vargas says. “I have more to play with down there. I’m going to be able to give Houston a little bit of what they want, a little bit of everything, every day.”

For Vargas, Atlas Heights is more than another opening. It’s an opportunity to prove himself before venturing out on his own. He and Bui already have plans to transform the former Chimichurri space in Bishop Arts into a Mexico City-inspired taqueria and mezcaleria. “This is my last step before it’s time for me,” Vargas says. 

But before that, he is squarely focused on Atlas Houston Heights. “Out of the three—and this is my personal goal—I think it has the opportunity to be that top 100 kind of bar.”

As more Dallas-born concepts look to Houston for growth, Atlas Heights will be a test of whether North Texas buzz can translate in a fiercely local dining city.

Atlas, 729 W. 19th St., Houston, atlascocktailbar.com

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Desiree Gutierrez
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