Terms & Conditions

City Center Fort Worth has created this privacy statement in order to demonstrate our firm commitment to privacy. The following discloses the information gathering and dissemination practices for this web site.

Information Automatically Logged

We use visitors’ IP addresses to help diagnose problems with our server and to administer our web site. Visitors’ IP addresses are also used to gather broad demographic information, such as what region they live in, what browser they use, and how they found the City Center Fort Worth web site (i.e., a search engine). This information helps us design a better web site without compromising our users’ privacy.

Surveys

Our online surveys ask visitors for contact information (like email address), and demographic information (like city, state, and zip code). Contact information from the surveys is used to field questions, comments and concerns from users. Only users who request to be added to the E-list (e-mail distribution list) will receive future mailings, and they can delete themselves from the list at any time. Under no circumstances does City Center Fort Worth resell or distribute personal information to any individuals, companies, or bulkmailers.

Security

This site has security measures in place to protect the loss, misuse, and alteration of the information under our control. Our forms are protected by a Secure Socket Layer (SSL) which insures that your information is delivered to us securely.

External Links

This site contains links to other sites. City Center Fort Worth is not responsible for the privacy practices or the content of such web sites.

Contacting the Website

If you have any questions about this privacy statement, the practices of this site, or your dealings with this web site, you can contact City Center Fort Worth at 817.255.5731.

What's the Buzz

City Center has new neighbors! We’re proud to take part in the movement for a more eco-conscious city by installing a beehive on The Grill’s patio in City Club! Our beehive will be home to thousands of bees. Our new colleagues are pollinating the urban flora that surrounds us this summer. At the end of the season, we’ll harvest their honey and share it with our community.

What about stings, you ask? No need to fret! Bees really aren’t interested in human beings. They have one goal, and one goal only: to collect nectar and pollen from flowers within a 3-mile radius of their hive and bring it back to ensure the colony’s development.

Plus, bees die when they sting. It causes them to lose their stinger and a part of their abdomen - meaning they really have no interest in doing so, unless they feel their colonys threatened.

Our project is in collaboration with Alvéole, a social beekeeping company that has been around since 2013. They have partnered with hundreds of schools and companies like ours on beekeeping projects. Each hive creates greater ecological awareness, allowing city dwellers to reconnect with nature and adjust their sense of responsibility towards the environment. This season, we will discover the ties that bind us to bees and the flora and fauna that surround us, right here in the city.

Visit City Center Hive