IDK, but based on what some of the local country clubs and downtown venues charge, the TCU hotel couldn’t possibly be any more expensive (at least I hope not).
as a man who has paid for 7 weddings not including my own - trust me in saying it is not the facility that costs money, it is the catering and all the other stuff around it (rentals, decorations, flowers, the band, etc)
Any facility charge is included in the minimum in places that cater and I have yet to see a minimum charge that wasn't easily exceeded except for one of my granddaughters that originally wanted to get married at Colonial but only invite 50 people. And even then we worked it out by not using the ballrooms.
But basic food and a bar will run you $100/person unless you serve finger sandwiches and miller lite - so $7500 for a minimum at Ft Worth Club or $10k at Colonial is easy to meet if you are planning on inviting 100 people.
Plus, that is still only 1/3 or less of what a wedding will cost these days it seems. People think that renting a facility and doing their own catering/bar saves money but my experience is that isn't true once you rent all the other stuff and hire an external caterer. You might get by if you cater with Babe's and get your fraternity brothers to be the bartenders but you will be stressed out the day of making sure you bought enough vodka at Sam's. and yes, I have had to make a liquor store run in a tux before they closed on Saturday night because of poor estimating.
If a wedding isn't that big - then just tell places like Ft Worth Club, City Club, Colonial, Shady, etc and they will let you use the Library or Leonard Room or do a Sunday afternoon for a lot less.
Best advice I ever got and we do all the time now - hire a coordinator for the day of the wedding. It will cost you $500 but they will make sure flowers are in the right place, bridesmaids show up, mothers are in the right pews, the band plays the right song at the right time, the car is ready when the service is over, etc. - all the stuff that can ruin 12 months of planning and a lot of money spent.