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St. Louis Needs CEOs Creating Walkable Shopping Around Their Corporate Campuses

November 29, 2011 Featured, Planning & Design, Retail, Travel 12 Comments

Over the last 6-8 years I’ve watched the corporate campus of Chesapeake Energy Corporation in Oklahoma City grow and grow and grow. But I wouldn’t use the old phrase “sprawling campus” because the site has developed quite dense and walkable.  Most of you in St. Louis have likely never heard of Chesapeake so here is a summary from Wikipedia:

Chesapeake Energy (NYSE: CHK) is the second largest producer of natural gas in the United States, a top 15 producer of U.S. liquids and the most active driller of new wells, according to an August 2011 investor presentation. It recorded 2Q 2011 natural gas production of an average of approximately 3.049 billion cubic feet (86,300,000 m3) of natural gas equivalent, a 9 percent year-over-year increase. The 2010 full year was Chesapeake’s 21st consecutive year of sequential production growth.

The company had a few buildings in an older office park when I first visited an employee. Recently those original buildings were razed.

ABOVE: Construction equipment has is a fixture of Chesapeake's campus

From such humble beginnings, the company’s Oklahoma City footprint has multiplied an astonishing 450 times. The Chesapeake campus now measures 2.7 million square feet. Employees work in 24 buildings, and there’s another half million square feet of office space under construction. (source)

They even have a page to talk up their campus:

Chesapeake’s 72,000-square-foot Fitness Center is located on campus, and plays host to a wide range of recreation programs, group exercise classes, cardio machines, weight room, basketball courts, racquetball courts, swimming pool, fitness assessments and preventative health screenings. Our adjoining athletic field hosts a variety of outdoor events during and after work, including coed flag football, soccer, kickball, team Frisbee, softball and personal training, and includes a quarter-mile track.

Also on campus are three restaurants, The Wildcat, Fuel and Elements, which offer a wide variety of healthy choices for breakfast and lunch. From a fresh salad bar, to made-to-order deli line and grill, employees have a variety of healthy alternatives to choose from.

The impressive fitness center was one of the first new buildings constructed as expansion began. Even though they have three restaurants for employees on campus they have developed shopping across Western Ave to the west. I posted about ClassenCurve last year.

ABOVE: ClassenCurve just opening in September 2010

Last month a new Whole Foods opened at The Triangle at ClassenCurve. Chesapeake is located on the edge of Nichols Hills (map), a small but very affluent suburb of Oklahoma City, their version of our Ladue. Tulsa has had a Wild Oats/Whole Foods for years, located in a space vacated by a former chain grocery. There have been several times I would stop at the Whole Foods in Tulsa to pick up items to eat at my parents house in Oklahoma City.

ABOVE: OKC's newly opened Whole Foods

Now I can stop at the huge new Whole Foods store in OKC when I’m visiting family.  The thousands of workers on Chesapeake’s campus can walk across the street to get a salad, food from the hot bar or pick up a few groceries. Whole Foods is in Oklahoma City now because of Chesapeake.

ABOVE: Bike racks are right out front, easy to use and actually used by cyclists

The campus-adjacent shopping isn’t just intend for Chesapeake’s employees, all can enjoy — assuming they can afford the types of shops locating in the retail spaces. By my standards the retail developments are barely walkable but compared to most of OKC they are a pedestrian paradise.

ABOVE: Public sidewalk along Classen in the campus looking west toward the retail

The architecture of the retail is a complete contrast to the campus. The campus has Georgian red brick structures while the retail is dark, modern and sleek.They compliment without copying. The retail doesn’t have any of the materials, look or logo of Chesapeake.

I can’t think of any Fortune 500 company in St. Louis that has done what Chesapeake has done. A-B? Nope. A.G. Edwards (now Wells Fargo)? Nada. What about institutions with deep pockets like Saint Louis University? Yeah right!

Chesapeake’s campus, like most corporate & institutional campuses, has lush lawns, water features, plantings and lots of parking. It’s edges separate the public from private but it does so in a friendly way. Architect Rand Elliott:

“We’re really fortunate,” Elliott stated “to have a number of CEO’s in this community, including Aubrey certainly, who believe that architecture is a powerful statement, and an important one for our community and for their businesses, as well.”

I was fortunate to have been paired with Rand Elliott on a project in middle schools during my freshman year at the University of Oklahoma College of Architecture. We need CEOs that will create walkable campus-adjacent space in the St. Louis region.

– Steve Patterson

 

Currently there are "12 comments" on this Article:

  1. Eric says:

    Your focus on Whole Foods is telling. People who want urbanism (like Whole Foods customers…) are overwhelmingly affluent, white, young, single, and socially liberal. Families typically want a yard for their kids to play in, while people who grew up in the “ghetto” want nothing that resembles the ghetto. Urbanism may be best for you, but is it really best for everyone else?

     
  2. Eric says:

    Your focus on Whole Foods is telling. People who want urbanism (like Whole Foods customers…) are overwhelmingly affluent, white, young, single, and socially liberal. Families typically want a yard for their kids to play in, while people who grew up in the “ghetto” want nothing that resembles the ghetto. Urbanism may be best for you, but is it really best for everyone else?

     
    • The desire for the safe places to walk to and good food is not limited to the affluent, white, young & socially liberal. I don’t shop at Whole Foods normally because I simply can’t afford to.

       
  3. The desire for the safe places to walk to and good food is not limited to the affluent, white, young & socially liberal. I don’t shop at Whole Foods normally because I simply can’t afford to.

     
  4. Moe says:

    A brick wall is no different from a black iron fence.  Oh wait, you can see through the fence and not the wall.   that shot of looking down the sidewalk….lovely green grass, nice sidewalk, a few flowers….no people.  Both SLU and Wash U have very welcoming campuses.  I bet if you walked onto the Chesapeake campus, they would usher you right off.  At least at SLU the students are welcoming and friendly and you can wander at your leasure.

     
  5. Moe says:

    A brick wall is no different from a black iron fence.  Oh wait, you can see through the fence and not the wall.   that shot of looking down the sidewalk….lovely green grass, nice sidewalk, a few flowers….no people.  Both SLU and Wash U have very welcoming campuses.  I bet if you walked onto the Chesapeake campus, they would usher you right off.  At least at SLU the students are welcoming and friendly and you can wander at your leasure.

     
  6. Benya31 says:

    Steve sorry but I don’t see it with this post. Maybe its better in real life than the pictures show but everything you are describing sounds just like any other suburban development you can find here…thinking of the new ‘downtown creve couer’ experiment. Yeah they have sidewalks that connect parking lots but does that make them walkable? I guess we should be impressed that the company is taking charge as developer….but you should know that in Saint Louis we haven’t had the best results when that happens (Kosiusko, SLU, AG Edwards, etc)

     
  7. Benya31 says:

    Steve sorry but I don’t see it with this post. Maybe its better in real life than the pictures show but everything you are describing sounds just like any other suburban development you can find here…thinking of the new ‘downtown creve couer’ experiment. Yeah they have sidewalks that connect parking lots but does that make them walkable? I guess we should be impressed that the company is taking charge as developer….but you should know that in Saint Louis we haven’t had the best results when that happens (Kosiusko, SLU, AG Edwards, etc)

     
    • This isn’t a pedestrian paradise but it is fundamentally different than what we’ve experienced in St. Louis. Here the corporations build campuses surrounded by nothing for employees to walk to. Sometimes a short walk outside the corporate campus can relieve stress.

       
      • JZ71 says:

        Enterprise employees can walk either into Clayton or to the Galleria from their campus off I-170.

         
  8. This isn’t a pedestrian paradise but it is fundamentally different than what we’ve experienced in St. Louis. Here the corporations build campuses surrounded by nothing for employees to walk to. Sometimes a short walk outside the corporate campus can relieve stress.

     
  9. JZ71 says:

    Enterprise employees can walk either into Clayton or to the Galleria from their campus off I-170.

     

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