Nineteen year ago I started this blog as a distraction from my father’s heart attack and slow recovery. It was late 2004 and social media & video streaming apps didn’t exist yet — or at least not widely available to the general public. Blogs were the newest means of …
The new NGA West campus , Jefferson & Cass, has been under construction for a few years now. Next NGA West is a large-scale construction project that will build a new facility for the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency in St. Louis, Missouri.This $1.7B project is managed by the U.S. Army …
Book publisher Island Press always impresses me with thoughtful new books written by people working to solve current problems — the subjects are important ones for urbanists and policy makers to be familiar and actively discussing. These four books are presented in the order I received them. ‘Justice and …
This post is about two indirectly related topics: the new Siteman Cancer Center building under construction on the Washington University School of Medicine/BJC campus and an update on my stage 4 kidney cancer. Let’s deal with the latter first. You may have noticed I’ve not posted in three months, …
I’ve long argued one key to revitalization of St. Louis is to focus on major corridors. Concentrating on major transportation corridors, used by many means efforts will get noticed, whereas rehabbing or building new houses in the middle of a residential block four bstreets away may not. Not that we shouldn’t do work on neighborhood streets, but perceptions of entire neighborhoods can be positively influenced along busy corridors. Along the way you can improve mobility for pedestrians, cyclists, transit users, and even motorists. My views ob the importance of corridors is why I liked some aspects of Paul McKee’s NorthSide Regeneration plan.
Two recent posts on McKee’s plans — which the city now says he’s in default on their agreements:
For the most part two corridors connect these four locations: Jefferson & Cass. As you can see from the image above, the total area is quite large. Overwhelmingly large. St. Louis loves big projects, especially those that are too big to succeed.
St. Louis needs to look at these four spots and come up with a framework plan for each. Will one be mostly residential while another is industrial, and another a mix of uses? What is desired in terms of the form future buildings should take? What should the corridors look like? Travel speeds, width of auto lanes, transportation options? Answer the big picture questions and then developers (big & small) will know what is the desired outcome in 15-20 years. Players of all sizes can be a part of the effort.
I’d personally add a 5th spot to the list — the North riverfront area found at the East end of Cass Ave. @ N. Broadway. Might as well look at the full length of Case Ave from Broadway on the East to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. just West of Grand Blvd. — a 2.5 mile-long corridor. What’s the development potential? Any historic buildings?
Many are interested in investing in a North-South transit line: light rail, streetcar, BRT, etc. One study included Natural Bridge as part of the route — a station at Parnell/Salisbury (Jefferson) would be the kind of public infrastructure investment that could spur private interest. There’s also been talk of connecting the new National Geospatial Agency West HQ, now under construction at Cass & Jefferson, to downtown via a streetcar or some other means. These should all be planned together, not separately as we often do here.
These efforts won’t return us to our peak population of over 856k, but concentrating new housings, jobs, etc can make near North St Louis more sustainable so continuing to provide city services is a viable option. Residential streets may remain sparsely populated for many decades, but have a nearby corridor active with jobs & residents will allow the neighborhoods to hold on until they can slowly stabilize with lower density than the nearby corridors.
Along these lines the City’s development entity. the St. Louis Development Corporation (SLDC), is seeking proposals for a citywide economic development plan.
Alderman Joe Roddy, who as head of the Housing Urban Development and Zoning committee has called for a citywide plan for several years, said it was “long overdue.” He said a bill passed by alderman earlier this year calling for the creation of an economic development strategy, which would be updated annually, put some additional pressure on SLDC to move ahead with the strategy. (Post-Dispatch)
The last attempt at anything citywide was when Rollin Stanley was in charge of planning — he got a new land use analysis passed, but got pushed out before he could get needed zoning changes enacted. Lots of wasted effort in a city that resists changing despite plenty of evidence it needed to decades ago.
While I think St. Louis could bring affordable new housing, quality transit, improved pedestrian environment, and much-needed jobs to the Northside — I’m not convinced it has the capacity to change enough to do what’s required. Hopefully I’m wrong.
June 24, 2018Featured, Sunday PollComments Off on Sunday Poll: Is Being LGBT A Choice?
LGBT Pride events have been happening in the St. Louis region all weekend, the biggest happens todayL
The theme for Sunday’s parade is “Remember. Rise. Respect,” which reflects the history of the gay rights movement and the importance of respecting others within and outside the community.
Pride events are typically held in June to commemorate the 1969 riots at the Stonewall Inn in New York City, after a police raid at the gay bar led to days of demonstrations. (Post-Dispatch)
I’ve seen a lot of change since I came out 35+ years ago, but also a lot that hasn’t changed. Today’s poll is asking for your thoughts on the issue of born this way or choice. This poll, like every week, is totally anonymous.
B.B.#88 – Middlebrook – An Ordinance approving the Petition to Establish the Gateway Land Community Improvement District, establishing the Gateway Land Community Improvement District, and finding a public purpose for the establishment of the Gateway Land Community Improvement District.
B.B.#89 – Middlebrook – An Ordinance authorizing the execution of a Cooperation Agreement with Discovery Pier Land Holdings, LLC, authorizing reimbursement in accordance therewith, and containing a severability clause and an emergency clause.\B.B.#90 – Coatar – An Ordinance Amending Ordinance No. 69146 and 69153; authorizing other related actions; and containing a Severability Clause.
B.B.#91 – Navarro/Williamson – An ordinance approved and recommended by the Preservation Board and Planning Commission of the City of St. Louis pertaining to the Skinker –DeBaliviere-Catlin Tract-Parkview Historic District; amending Ordinance #57688, repealing and replacing certain standards for the Skinker –DeBaliviere-Catlin Tract-Parkview Historic District as set forth herein.
B.B.#92 – Navarro – An ordinance adopted pursuant to
Sections 70.210-70.325 of the Revised Statutes of Missouri; authorizing and directing the City, a constitutional charter city of the State of Missouri, by and through its Director of Parks, Recreation & Forestry, to execute and deliver an Intergovernmental Cooperation Agreement by and among the City and the Art Museum Subdistrict of the Metropolitan Zoological Park and the Museum District of the City, a politicalsubdivision of the state of Missouri (the “Museum”) .
The meeting begins at 10am, past meetings and a live broadcast can be watched online here. See list of all board bills for the 2017-2018 session — the new bills listed above may not be online right away.
June 20, 2018Featured, NorthSide Project, Planning & DesignComments Off on Blairmont Became NorthSide Regeneration, Received Blessing of Mayor Slay and a Majority of Aldermen
That Fall, during the Board of Aldermen’s 2009-2010 session, two bills (BB218 & BB219) were introduced by then 5th ward alderman April Ford-Griffin and 4 co-sponsors: Freeman M Bosley Sr.(2nd), Kacie Starr Triplett (6th), Phyllis Young (7th), and Marlene E Davis (19th). Of these 5 aldermen, only Marlene Davis is still in office.
These two bills, despite significant public opposition, moved quickly through the Board:
10/16/2009 First Reading
10/23/2009 Second Reading
10/30/2009 Perfection, Third Reading
Online voting records only go back to 2015, so I can’t tell you who, if anyone, voted against these bills.
In November 2009 Mayor Francis Slay signed the two bills at an event held in front of the Clemens Mansion, which was going to be rehabbed by state tax credits (low income and/or historic) didn’t come through. The still-vacant property burned on July 12, 2017.
I was there whenPaul McKee & Mayor Slay kicked off NorthSide Regeneration, here’s there comments that day.
After the two bills became ordinances, lawsuits were filed, more legislation passed with more tax credits and so on. In the meantime, the National Geospacial-Itellegence Agency (NGA) picked a sparsely populated area North of the old Pruitt-Igoe site for their new West headquarters, relocating from South St. Louis. See New NGA West Location Will Gut St. Louis Place Neighborhood, Not Revitalize What Remains. As mentioned on Monday, the 5th Ward master plan, adopted in 2002, designed the area for new development.
Wednesdays is when I share the results of the non-scientific Sunday Poll, so here they are:
Q: Agree or disagree: Paul McKee’s Northside Regeneration project was the only hope for reviving much of North St. Louis
Strongly agree 4 [11.11%]
Agree 0 [0%]
Somewhat agree 16 [16.67%]
Neither agree or disagree 1 [2.78%]
Somewhat disagree 1 [2.78%]
Disagree 5 [13.89%]
Strongly disagree 19 [52.78%]
Unsure/No Answer 0 [0%]
I’d planned to share my thoughts on what St. Louis should do next now that McKee’s project has collapsed, but that’ll need a separate post. So Monday won’t be about all the issues frim the past 15 years…it’ll be about the next 15 years as I think they should go.
With the news last week that the City of St. Louis now considers developer Paul McKee’s NorthSide Regeneration project in default and Missouri suing him for tax fraud, I got to thinking about how we got here.
To my knowledge the first blog post about Blairmont was Michael Allen’s July 21, 2005 entry titled Seeking Blairmont, here’s a snippet:
Blairmont owns many properties on the Near North Side of St. Louis and is notoriously hard to reach. No one can find out anything about Blairmont except that a man named Harry Noble supposedly owns the company — but even that isn’t verified. A search through the Missouri Secretary of State’s corporation registry reveals that the “CT Corporation System” registered the name “Blairmont Associates LC” on behalf of an anonymous party or parties.
Many of Blairmont’s properties seem to be vacant lots in Old North St. Louis, St. Louis Place and other neighborhoods, although the company recently purchased a vacant St. Louis Public Schools property at 2333 Benton.
Other people report needing to make agreements with Blairmont to repair shared utilities or utilities that run through Blairmonnt properties, and having difficulty finding a phone number.
If you know anything about Blairmont, please post a comment here and maybe we’ll be able to help Lyra and others who are interested in contacting the company.
Many wrote about Blairmont, but Michael Allen was most prolific. For example, in December 2005 he wrote:
The July 15 Quarterly Report of the Jordan W. Chambers 19th Ward Regular Democratic Organization reveals some interesting information about its contributors. Namely, that the following contributors, all real estate holding companies, share the same address:
N & G Ventures LC Noble Development Company VHS Partners LLC McEagle Properties LLC West Alton Holding Company LLC Oakland Properties, Inc. Blairmont Associates Limited Company
That address is 1001 Boardwalk Springs Place in O’Fallon, Missouri . 1001 Boardwalk Springs Place is the address of the largest office building in the sprawling WingHaven development. This also happens to be the mailing address for Paric Corporation and McEagle Development, the well-known companies founded by wealthy developer Paul McKee, Jr. (Paric is now led by McKee‘s son Joe.)
In the above post Allen lists how many properties were owned by each entity. At the time I was in real estate so I could look up all the properties owned by name. Using Allen’s list of names we were quickly able to create a list of hundreds of properties involved. The data was exported in XLS format so he could create a master spreadsheet.
In the meantime, BJC Healthcare was wanting development rights to Hudlin Park — a former piece of Forest Park with their underground parking garage. The local neighborhood group, for which the park was a part of, was to hold a meeting on BJC’s plans.
1) Hatch evil plan around self interests but tied concerns about higher taxes if not accepted. 2) Get politicos on board with plan. After all, that is why we give them contributions! 3) Get local group on board now that they are used to our annual grants. 4) Oh yeah, almost forgot, hold some sort of public meeting now that all the decisions are made. Solicit “input” without laughing. 5) Wrap up song & dance and return to doing whatever we feel like secure in the knowledge the alderman and neighborhood are eating out of our hands.
What a system we’ve got.
Keep the above sarcastic playbook in the back of your head. Blairmont moved from blogs to print on January 10, 2007 when the Riverfront Times wrote about it, here’s a quote on Allen:
Michael Allen has tracked the company’s comings and goings on his Web site, www .www.eco-absence.org. He says that the Blairmont group of companies (which operate under names such as VHS Partners, N&G Ventures and Noble Development Company) has accumulated nearly 400 properties — more than 1,000 acres — in the Fifth and Nineteenth wards.
“They show no signs of slowing down,” says Allen.
Among Blairmont Associates’ properties are the historic James Clemens Jr. House at 1849 Cass Avenue, which is a stately-but-crumbling mansion, and the Brecht Butcher Supply Company buildings at 1201-17 North Cass Avenue, which were gutted by fire last October.
Residents first identified Blairmont as a neighborhood force about three years ago, says Sean Thomas, executive director of the Old North St. Louis Restoration Group. The nonprofit group, which was established in 1981 to help revitalize the area, grew uneasy because Blairmont didn’t seem concerned with upkeep.
That same day, on January 10, 2007, I saved a PDF of Paul McKee’s bio on the McEagle website. Two issues, BJC/Hudlin Park and hundreds of vacant/derelict properties had one connection: Paul McKee. Ten days later the RFT had part 2 of their Blairmont story:
Before the 2007 legislative session, the developer met with Republican state senator John Griesheimer of Washington. Griesheimer, who chairs the Economic Development, Tourism & Local Government Committee, says a mutual friend suggested the confab to smooth things over with McKee, who had lobbied last year against a tax increment financing (TIF) reform bill the senator favored.
Griesheimer says McKee seized the opportunity to float the idea of a tax credit to encourage development in distressed areas. The senator ultimately inserted the Distressed Areas Land Assemblage Tax Credit Act into an omnibus economic-development bill that now awaits the signature of Governor Matt Blunt. A spokeswoman for Blunt says that because there are so many provisions to consider, the governor will take his time signing. His deadline is July 14.
Although I’d read about Blairmont, and worked behind the scenes with Michael Allen on identifying properties, I hadn’t written about it…yet.
Much has been written lately about the sinister plot, known to many as “Blairmont”, to bulldoze North St. Louis (specifically the St. Louis Place neighborhood). The focus has been on various straw companies such as Blairmont Associates, LLC and part owner Paul McKee. McKee is a founder of well known commercial contractor Paric, an officer in McEagle Development and current Chairman of BJC Healthcare. In other words, a prominent citizen for all that’s worth.
The major issue has been these companies are buying hundreds of properties, including some very historic structures, and letting them sit empty and decaying. A few have had some devistating fires. Nobody has been able to track down any more information on the motives & intention behind these purchases. Interestingly, the answer was under our noses the whole time.
This is all part of a public plan, one of many actually.
The following was an example I cited:
In 2002 the city’s Planning Commission adopted the 5th Ward Comprehensive Neighborhood Plan. It should be noted the boundaries are the old 5th Ward, not the boundaries as changed around the same time as the plan was being adopted. Anyway, in the plan a large swath of land just north of the long vacant Pruitt-Igoe site is shown hatched out with the designation “Proposed Large Land Use (for further study).” In other words, level anything remaining and start fresh. There it is, fully adopted after numerous public meetings and everything.
Fast forward to Monday May 11, 2009 when McKee was to finally attend a North side resident meeting and talk about his plans. So how did the meeting & presentation go? I’ll let Alex Ihnen explain:
Well today the plan was offered to select attendees at meeting on the North Side. The press wasn’t allowed and even Steve Patterson of Urban Review STL was asked to leave as a member of the press. Well, well, bloggers have come a long way huh?
So what’s on the table?
$400M TIF
Mixed infill residential with commercial centers
22,000 permanet jobs and up to 43,000 temporary jobs mostly in construction
Commercial centers located near 22nd street & I-64, Jefferson & Cass, Jefferson & Natural Bridge, and the new I-70 bridge terminus.
Light rail and the requisite bike lanes
Preservation of existing historic buildings
So what’s missing? Just developers and financing, that’s all. It appears as though McKee will be asking for concessions from just about everyone and I’m not sure that people are clamoring for development on the north side enough to give him carte blanche. This is just the first word, but it appears that the potential $400M TIF will be up for a vote as early as this coming Friday.
Yes, I was asked to leave a meeting. Never mind that where I lived then is where I live — which became part of the 5th ward after the last redistricting. I got into my wheelchair , left the meeting, and joined the press outside.
The next week another meeting was scheduled for May 21, 2009 — the press was welcome to attend. That morning I wrote:
Today “shrinking cities” are studied and various techniques are debated. In the 70s in St. Louis the Team Four plan was seen as a racist plot to deny services to a minority population. We know more today about how to adjust to shrinking populations.
Tonight we will see another, a huge heavily subsidized redevelopment plan. Many are opposed simply based on the history of the project to date. I for one plan to go with an open mind. I have reservations about both the developer and the political leadership. Griffin’s view on the role of zoning doesn’t give me a lot of hope for what may be presented in pretty artist renderings actually being completed as promised. A good framework of a zoning code can help ensure the promised vision develops into reality.
Six days later I shared my thoughts, the following is part of what I wrote:
For five years now Paul McKee of McEagle Properties has been acquiring properties in a large swath of land in the near North side of St. Louis. These were purchased through a long list of holding companies such as Blairmont Associates LLC. The first few years this was under the radar. But people, notably Michael Allen, began to notice the properties and their common ownership.
Many are upset about how events transpired. Quietly buying property, little to no maintenance, and so on. These issues have been hashed out here, on other sites and in the meeting on the 21st when a guy stood and called McKee a f-ing liar. I’m not going to rehash it all again. Instead I’m going to jump into the proposal.
I think because of this academic background I’m able to step aside from my anger at the loss of the warehouse at Cass & Tucker and the many other reasons so many are angry. Three years ago my reaction would have been quite different. So what do I think of the plan now that I’ve had a chance to see the proposal?
I like it. I don’t like how we got to this point (Urban Renewal trashing North St. Louis, city dropping the ball, McKee coming in). Typically we expect government to do what the private market fails to do. Here we turn this around, the private market is stepping in where the public sector has failed: planning. I like what it has the long-term potential of doing for the city.
McKee’s plan calls for four job centers — large sites suitable for one or more companies to have a new campus setting. No surprise here, this is what McEagle does in suburban areas. This is a chance to get these jobs (and taxes) in the city.
I am excited about the potential this project brings to the city & region. A chance to get some large new employers — or to retain the ones we’ve got. A chance to change perceptions about North St. Louis. A chance to fill in the many gaps in our building stock. A chance to add needed population. A chance to get a modern streetcar/trolley line connecting the project area to downtown. A chance to get thousands of parcels of land out of city ownership.
Before someone suggests I was bought off I can assure you I’m still a struggling grad student. I’ve met Paul McKee twice — the 1st time 3-4 years ago at a meeting of the Dardenne Prairie Board of Aldermen. The 2nd time was at McKee’s presentation last Thursday. This 2nd time he knew who I was and he offered his card. After a couple of emails I got the above images out of him, nothing else.
But while I like the big picture planning involved I have reservations about the follow through on the project. Paul McKee promised New Urbanism at WingHaven but delivered a half-assed cartoon version. The St. Louis Board of Aldermen, as a general rule with a few exceptions, do not get what compromises walkable urbanism. How will they know what to require of McKee? To be sure our old 1947 zoning needs to be tossed aside for this area. A new form-based code needs to be laid over the project area to guide future development to ensure we get what we are promised.
I want this project to succeed — financially & urbanisticly. I want to live along the trolley line. I want St. Louis to be a city of 500,000 people again in 20-25 years.
I’m going to stop here for now, I’ll continue on Wednesday and share my thoughts on what St. Louis should do next.
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