Improvements needed to the city block containing “Twain”

April 15, 2010 Downtown, Parks 15 Comments

As I explained yesterday (Readers split on Richard Serra’s “Twain”) the Richard Serra sculpture “Twain” was designed for it’s location and it must be seen from the inside to appreciate it.  As an appointed member of the newly formed Gateway Mall Advisory Board I see improving the appeal of this block as very important.  I and the other board members need to work within, or revise, the existing master plan (PDF).  So I looked to see what it said about Serra’s Twain:

“One of his earlier works, the City is fortunate to have one of his often ‘misunderstood’ sculpture.  Once the improvements to the two eastern blocks of the garden have been made, the space surrounding Twain should be revisited to see how it could better integrate into the redesigned blocks to the east and west.”

No real specifics except the clear understanding that the sculpture is to stay put. One of the best ways to integrate this block is the “hallway” element that is supposed to run the entire length of the Gateway Mall.

ABOVE: Two blocks of the hallway element is complete between 8th & 10th

Once the hallway is greater than two blocks long it will be a strong organizing element. You can hopefully imagine how extending the above one more block west will help Twain:

ABOVE: Narrow attached sidewalk between 10th and 11th Streets

The current sidewalk between 10th and 11th is nothing like the one from 8th to 10th. One of the best aspects of this hallway idea is how it will flow from block to block.

ABOVE: Gateway Mall hallway crosses 9th Street

At 9th street the design guidelines from the master plan are actualized.  Rain gardens help narrow 9th street and the sidewalk continues across the street easily.  Those of us using wheelchairs as well as those pushing a stroller can just continue in the same direction. Unfortunately the same treatment was not done at both 8th and 10th.  This mistake means part of the new Citygarden will need to be redone to extend the hallway in both directions.

ABOVE: Looking west across 10th Street

As you can see the 10th Street edge of the hallway in Citygarden is quite different than at 9th.  Had someone looked ahead they would have built the paving and curb here to the new standard so that all that needed to be done was the other side of 10th.  Ditto for 8th Street.  I intend to ensure as blocks are redone consideration is given to extending the hallway as adjacent blocks are rebuilt.

OK, so the “hallway” takes care of one side of the block.  The other three need new wider sidewalks as well. I had originally thought we needed some porous gravel paths leading to Twain but Serra wanted it to be approachable from any angle.   However the ground is currently uneven in places and my power wheelchair got stuck a few times.  Anyone in a manual wheelchair would be out of luck.  Even the wheels on a stroller are likely to get muddy.  I suggest special pavers that allow grass to grow through openings in places in and around the piece.  This would ensure a level surface while maintaining the all grass appearance.

Over and over I’ve heard people say the homeless and drunk baseball fans use the interior of the “Twain” sculpture as a giant steel urinal.  With so much activity in Citygarden to the aast I don’t think that is still the case.  Plus portable toilets are now available across the street at Citygarden.

ABOVE: Two portable toilets along the West edge of Citygarden
ABOVE: Two portable toilets along the West edge of Citygarden

Stunning Citygarden with portable toilets on the sidewalk, classy.  So my grand idea is to include a low-maintenance pay toilet on the SE corner of the Twain block, accessible from the hallway.   New York City recently added it’s first pay toilet:

The “Pay-Per-Potty” — as some cleverly call it — is purported to be automatically self cleaning. It even does the floors and is touted as more sanitary than regular public toilets.

Inside the unit, a sit-down, so to speak, will cost you a quarter.

The quarter will get you get 15 minutes of private time — and not a second more.

“The doors open and the eyes of New York are upon you,” said Department of Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan.

Just in case you don’t know how much time you have left, a handy-dandy warning light will give you a three-minute warning.  (Full story)

Here are some short videos of pay toilets:

New York:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zu8DJFH1Ubw

San Francisco:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-TvK94inAKU

New Zealand:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GpKZmKizO9s

The Gateway Mall Master Plan calls for public restrooms along the length but not in the three blocks between Gateway One (7th  to 8th) the Civil Courts (11th-12th/Tucker), just where they are needed most. The pay public toilet I envision might be covered in stainless steel, some other metal or even growing plants.

– Steve Patterson

 

Urban Review STL Android app now available

April 15, 2010 Site Info 4 Comments
ABOVEL: Screen shots from the Urban Review STL Android app
ABOVE: Screen shots from the Urban Review STL Android app

I am pleased to announce the availability of the free Urban Review STL app for Android app.  This new app joins the iPhone app made available in January 2010 (post).  An App for BlackBerry will be available, although the schedule is determined by MotherApp.  Sorry, they do not indicate support for Windows Mobile, WebOS, or other platforms.

– Steve Patterson

 

Readers split on Richard Serra’s “Twain”

April 14, 2010 Downtown, Parks 17 Comments
ABOVE: Inside Serras Twain
ABOVE: Inside Serra's Twain looking East to Citygarden and the Arch

I didn’t appreciate “Twain” until after Citygarden opened and I spent more time in the area. Sure, I’d driven and walked passed it many times but I had never ventured across the grass.  I’ve learned my wheelchair does a decent job on grass and, after getting up close to Twain and passing through the passageways, I now have a love affair with the sculpture.

Here are the results of last week’s poll:

Q: Which best describes your thoughts on the Gateway Mall block w/Richard Serra’s ‘Twain’ sculpture?

  1. Get rid of Twain ASAP. 104 [43%]
  2. Like Twain but the block is too bare, needs more art & activities. 63 [26%]
  3. I don’t hate Twain but I’m not crazy about it either. 37 [15%]
  4. Like Twain and the minimal surroundings, just needs new sidewalks, etc 26 [11%]
  5. Love Twain, don’t change that block at all. 7 [3%]
  6. Other answer… 4 [2%]
  7. Unsure/no opinion. 1 [0%]

While the biggest block (43%) favors removal of Twain that means a small majority are at least okay with it staying.

As I thought, readers would not be short of opinions on Twain.  One example shared by others:

I’ve always felt that Twain – an interesting piece in of itself – is simply in the wrong venue. Had this same reviled installation been originally placed in Laumeier Sculpture Park, it would likely be valued (even lauded) lauded today as an environmental work. I think we could do right by both Serra and the city by relocating Twain to Laumeier and expanding Citygarden into that space.

Twain was designed for the current site, not a suburban park.  Moving the piece would destroy it.

SERRA’S “TILTED ARC” in Federal Plaza, New York, angered workers in adjacent federal office buildings because it runs, 120 feet long and 12 feet high, across part of a much-used square. The obligatory detour around it, and its confrontational scale and placement in a city where pedestrians cherish the little open space they can get, makes it vulnerable to the charge that while it may be imposing as sculpture, it is insensitive as urban design.

“Tilted Arc” is seriously threatened with removal, and in St. Louis Alderman Timothy J. Dee of the 17th Ward has introduced a bill that would put it up to the voters to decide if “Twain” should be removed from city property. A simple majority would do it next Aug. 5 if the proposition gets on the ballot. “A whole lot of people want it moved,” Dee said.

Former Alderman Dee’s bill wasn’t approved by the Board of Aldermen.  Public art should never be the subject of a vote at the polls.  The work was designed for this site and no other, moving it would destroy it.

ABOVE: Construction of "Twain" in 1981. ® Robert Pettus, used with permission
ABOVE: Construction of "Twain" in 1981. Photo by Robert Pettus, used with permission

As you can see from the above image the context in 1981 was rather bleak. The idea was to get glimpses of the city through the openings.  You cannot appreciate “Twain” from the street or even from the sidewalk. I recently sat with Amy Broadway of the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts as we watched a 1986 documentary clip on “Twain.”  It included interviews with Serra himself.  He explained how he wanted you to be free to approach from any direction, hence no paths. He wanted you to see the city differently. While I was there I experienced Serra’s “Joe:”

ABOVE: Joe by Richard Serra
ABOVE: "Joe" by Richard Serra

“The urban works need a large number of people to complete their content. (I feel strongly that these sculptures could not be in a dessert)  They need the interaction of people.”
– Richard Serra

Here is a little video clip I made of “Twain:”

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9nWOLmkr_Kk

Tomorrow I will outline suggestions for physical improvements to the block.  Thanks to photographer Robert Pettus for the permission to use his image.

– Steve Patterson

 

Remembering the deaths of Richard Nickel and Louis Sullivan

ABOVE: Louis Sullivans Union Trust
ABOVE: Adler & Sullivan's Union Trust, 7th & Olive St. Louis

Thirty-eight years ago today (4/13/1972) photographer & preservation activist Richard Nickel died in Adler & Sullivan’s Chicago Stock Exchange Building as he was trying to save a few more pieces before the wrecking ball finished off the building. Nickel was my current age, 43.  More info on Richard Nickel.

ABOVE: Adler & Sullivan's Union Trust, 7th & Olive St. Louis

Interestingly, Nickel died one day before the 48th anniversary of the death of architect Louis Sullivan (September 3, 1856 – April 14, 1924).  I recently visited Chicago for the opening of the new Louis Sullivan documentary, Louis Sullivan:The Struggle for an American Architecture, by Mark Smith.

Sullivan's Wainwright Tomb, Bellefontaine Cemetery, July 2008

St. Louis is fortunate to have three works by Sullivan.

Sullivan's Wainwright Tomb, Bellefontaine Cemetery, July 2008
Sullivan's Wainwright Tomb, Bellefontaine Cemetery, July 2008

Two of the three bear the name Wainwright. No trip to Bellefontaine Cemetery is complete without seeing the Wainwright Tomb.

Adler & Sullivan's Wainwright Building, 7th & Chestnut, St. Louis

Here is the trailer for Louis Sullivan: the Struggle for American Architecture:

– Steve Patterson

 

Delmar crosswalk now has the ADA ramps it should have had in the first place

April 12, 2010 Accessibility 2 Comments

Last July I posted about a crosswalk on Delmar that lacked ADA ramps (Delmar Crosswalk Missing ADA Ramps)

ABOVE: Delmar crosswalk lacking ADA ramps, July 2009

This past Monday I was pleasantly surprised to see ramps were finally installed.

ABOVE:
ABOVE: Same crosswalk with new ADA ramps, April 2010

– Steve Patterson

 

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