It's fairly easy to sense that Bentonville, Ark., is a company town. You can drive the commercial strip of Walton Boulevard, the Hwy. 71 Business Route, past Wal-Mart's world headquarters and numerous corporate outposts such as Wal-Mart Logistics and Wal-Mart Global Support.
In the town square there's the Walton Five and Dime museum, commemorating the rise of retailer Sam Walton and clan. And all over are the glowing blue signs of Arvest Bank, a financial arm of the Waltons.
The family name, businesses and influence have much to do with the fast-growth aura of Bentonville, in Arkansas' northwest corner.
And now the family that built its retail empire on high volume and discount prices has delivered something completely different from its usual consume-dispose-and-do-it-again world: the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art.
On Nov. 11, the museum that invites reflection, cultural dialogue and learning opened astride a tree-lined creek bed in a patch of family acreage just a few blocks from Bentonville's town square.
Local merchants and residents had been gearing up for the museum's opening, expecting an influx of tourists and their dollars.
"I can't yet say what it's going to do, but I can't imagine anything but good things happening," says Josh Milton, manager of the Phat Tire Bike Shop on the square. "I'm glad there's going to be more culture in the area."
A couple of blocks away, site work has begun for a $23 million, 100-room hotel, expected to be opened by the end of this year. Classy new bistros have been sprouting near the square, and the local Chamber of Commerce projects 250,000 visitors a year.