Paul McKee’s NorthSide project may, eventually, be a good thing for the City of St. Louis and the entire St. Louis region. But by that time most of us won’t be around. We’ve had a 60+ year decline (1940-2000) and it will take at least 60 more to recover (2010-2070) from numerous past mistakes.
Looking at unused land (Pruitt-Igoe, 22nd Street Interchange, etc) as potential job centers connected by tree-lined boulevards and transit is sound urban planning. But good urban planning in the community is best done by the community, not the private sector.
Famed planner (engineer actually) Harland Bartholomew guided much of the destruction of the city during his tenure, 1916-1950. He rejected everything Jane Jacobs valued in cities.
The destruction continued after he retired his city job in 1950, guided by his 1947 Comprehensive City Plan. Big picture planning basically stopped after he left. Planning became seeking federal Urban Renewal & Model Cities money. In 1973 the Rand Corporation issued the report St. Louis: A City and Its Suburbs:
A summary statement of the research findings and policy implications of a series of studies conducted under the St. Louis project of the RAND Urban Policy Analysis Program. Three possible futures for the city are posed: continued decline; stabilization in a new role as an increasingly black suburb; and return to a former role as the center of economic activity in the metropolitan area. The analysis argues that without major policy changes beyond the local level, the city will most likely continue to decline, and suggests that, among the alternatives open to the city, promoting a new role for St. Louis as one of many large suburban centers of economic and residential life holds more promise than reviving the traditional central city functions. However, new resources, available to the city from sources outside the city, are essential to any improvement. Several mechanisms are offered for consideration: (1) a more substantial federal revenue-sharing program; (2) a state revenue-sharing program to support selected public goods; (3) a metropolitan revenue program, sharing revenue generated by industry in the metropolitan area; and (4) a metropolitan earnings tax.
This report shocked city leaders. The planning commission hired a consulting firm to update the 1947 Plan and to reverse the decline cited in the Rand Report. The draft 1975 INTERIM COMPREHENSIVE PLAN was the city’s response.
The Interim Comprehensive Plan was introduced to the public as a replacement of the 1947 Comprehensive Plan . The City Planning Commission claims that the planning needs of St. Louis had changed over a period of thirty years and therefore the comprehensive plan for the City should change as well. This draft document was written for citizen review. The overall focus of this comprehensive plan was to provide citizens with the highest quality of life, socially, economically, and physically. The plan contains policies and recommendations for land use, transportation, public facilities and housing, all of which are aimed at establishing a quality residential environment, job opportunities, economic development, and expanded opportunities for the disadvantaged.
This never adopted draft plan is best known for the firm the wrote it, Team Four. The Team Four plan was urban triage — cutting off municipal services to those areas deemed too far gone. Save what can still be saved. Today this approach is applied to shrinking cities.  Back in the day it was viewed as a plot to drive black citizens out of the city. Many still feel that was the intent or would have been the result if the plan would have been officially adopted.
After the backlash against the Team Four plan the City of St. Louis got out of the big picture planning business kicking off the second 30 year period without a plan.
We look to the government to provide services where the private market has failed or those for the common good, such as fire protection. But three decades of government being out of planning the primate market reversed the roles and developed their own plan. Of course the private market’s main goal is profit.
Today’s residents, many not born when the city gave up on planning, are not willing to turn over community planning to a private business. I don’t blame them. So the first part of the mess is the city’s abandonment of planning. Next is the realization that a businessman from St. Charles County wants to do the planning the city should have been doing. Of course, the city has a poor track record of planning.
But the citizenry had an ideal of community planning so when McKee purchased thousands of properties people naturally got suspicious of his intentions. Numerous meetings this year announced those intentions but poor community & media relations has made a bad situation even worse. Myself and others of the media were barred from a meeting, a discussion board was set up by McKee’s company only to be taken down due to a mountain of criticism. Uh, duh.
Tonight McKee is asking for public TIF funds to help finance his project yet a few days ago, at a public meeting, he objected to his statements being recorded on video. In decades earlier deals could get done without such documentation by the public. But it is 2009, not 1959. Cameras are a fact today and public meetings are subject to being recorded. Holding meetings in private to circumvent this reality is even worse. Our elected leadership is not equipped to manage the conflict.
Parts of McKee’s plan are sound: developing the vacant Pruitt-Igoe site, using wasted land at the 22nd Street Interchange, planning for jobs at the landing of the new Mississippi River bridge, narrowing Jefferson Ave, and building a streetcar to tie the near North side into downtown, filling in gaps in the urban fabric. Had these ideas come out of a community planning process most would be on board today. Instead we have a huge mess with a substantial section of the city hanging in the balance.
I’m not sure which is worse; Harland Bartholomew’s highly planned destruction of 19th century neighborhoods, a 30-60 year gap in planning, or planning serving private interests. None will lead to the city I envision St. Louis becoming.
See Matt Mourning’s excellent post With NorthSide Project, the Villain is in the Process for more thoughts on process (this sentence added 9/23/2009 at 7am.)
– Steve Patterson