Celebrating Blog’s 19th Anniversary

 

  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 …

Thoughts on NGA West’s Upcoming $10 Million Dollar Landscaping Project

 

  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 …

Four Recent Books From Island Press

 

  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 …

New Siteman Cancer Center, Update on my Cancer

 

  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, …

Recent Articles:

Seventh Anniversary of UrbanReviewSTL.com!

 

To my knowledge, UrbanReviewSTL.com is the oldest urban blog in St. Louis, with the first blog posts appearing on Sunday October 31st, 2004 – seven years ago today!

ABOVE: The "about me" section created on Oct 31, 2004

At 12:50pm on October 31, 2004 I created the “about me” section, shown above.  Here is the text, sans my real estate pitch:

WHAT IS IT ABOUT ME THAT WANTED TO BLOG ON ST. LOUIS?

I’m often involved trying to save buildings from being demolished all the while stating I am not a preservationist. How can I put so much effort into saving old buildings and not be a preservationist?

I view myself as an urbanist first and foremost. Dynamic urban life is more important than any individual building, sports team, business or mayor. Great neighborhoods, by nature, incorporate existing urban-friendly buildings – especially those that are historic by virtue of architect, design or simply age.

[snip]

As an urbanist I see many mistakes being made in our urban environment. My intention with this blog is to highlight the positive and decidedly pro-urban parts of our city and region as well as show the mistakes. I hope that by showing the mistakes (and explaining why it is a mistake) we will begin to rebuild St. Louis into one of the countries [country’s] great cities.

My first post was a short while later at 2:30pm that day:

ABOVE: My first pic was a bike locked to a bike rack on Washington Ave

A BEAUTIFUL SIGHT

A month ago I was having lunch at Wasabi on Washington Avenue and I captured the essence of urbanity emerging in St. Louis.

The one thing missing from this picture is people. The goal is to make it difficult to snap a picture, day or night, in downtown St. Louis that doesn’t have people in it just due to the shear number of people on the sidewalks.

I love seeing a well-used bike secured to a proper bike rack. This inverted u-rack is considered one of the best urban bike racks due to its relative low cost, ease of use and simple design. The street trees, overflowing planers and even the row of parked cars made the sidewalk dining experience feel downright cozy. Spending a leisurely lunch people watching is one of the best of all urban activities.

My guest and I split an appetizer of Edamame. Edamame is one of the most simple of foods yet it is also one of the most rewarding in terms of both the processing of eating the soybeans from their pods and nutritionally. The urban lesson is that sometimes the simple solution is often one of the best.

Four more posts would follow later that same Sunday! Thousands of posts later, I’m still having fun. Hard to believe the eighth year begins tomorrow…

Tune in to KDHX 88.1FM tonight at 8:30pm to hear me on DJ Wilson’s show Collateral Damage. Thank you for reading!

– Steve Patterson

Poll: Will the Cardinals Winning the 2011 World Series Help Get Ballpark Village Built?

 

Before I start this post let me first congratulate the Cardinals on doing what few thought was possible a month ago. The boost to our civic pride will hopefully last a while. I also hope winning the World Series will help get something built at the long-stalled Ballpark Village.

The day the St. Louis Cardinals won the 2006 World Series they unveiled plans (see post) to build “Ballpark Village” on the site of the old Busch Memorial Stadium (1966-2005). Today the site is parking and a softball field.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-MS5l-S8yc

Yes the bottom fell out of the economy in 2008 and there have been times when it looked like it would start. I’ve lost track on the current status.

ABOVE: Ballpark Village is a surface packing lot.

I’m just afraid it will still be vacant in another 5-15 years. It took 20 years for the Blues ownership to restore the Kiel Opera House. It was worth the wait but it also wasn’t a vacant hole in the urbn fabric all those years. Still, I’d rather Ballpark Village get built right rather than be rushed.

The poll question this week is: Will the Cardinals winning the 2011 World Series help get the proposed Ballpark Village built sooner? The poll is in the right sidebar.

– Steve Patterson

Winning Transit Photo

October 29, 2011 Featured, Public Transit Comments Off on Winning Transit Photo
 

Congrats to the St. Louis Cardinals — 2011 MLB World Champs!

I’ve been submitting photos each month in CMT’s transit photo contest and finally I won. The prize each month is a transit pass.

ABOVE: Stadium MetroLink Station as seen from Busch Stadium a few years ago.

The pass is useful for us regular riders but also a great way to try out transit for a month. The November event is on Facebook here.

– Steve Patterson

Arch 50th Just Four Years Away

October 28, 2011 Downtown, Events/Meetings, Featured, History/Preservation Comments Off on Arch 50th Just Four Years Away
 

Four years from today is the 50th anniversary of the topping out of the Gateway Arch.

ABOVE: The final piece of the Gateway Arch was set into place on Thursday October 28, 1965

The City+Arch+River folks have much to accomplish in such a short about of time: build over I-70, create new west-facing museum entrance, rethink parking, etc. Given the current political landscape in Washington D.C. getting funding for improvements to this National Park Service site may prove nearly impossible.

The grounds aren’t as old as the Arch itself. Here is a video of a 1982 trip to the riverfront starting at 4th & Market. As you will see the trees are very young, the garage the will be removed from the north wasn’t yet built, and Lenore K. Sullivan Blvd hadn’t received the current improvements.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTbhs2gqrko

Thanks to Merrill & Matt Bauer for the footage!

Lighting Can Make a Positive Impact

October 27, 2011 Featured 12 Comments
 

So often people in cities put up flood lights for security but all they do is blind people and discourage them from being outside, not a good thing at all for a lively city.

ABOVE: Citygarden at night

Selectively lighting areas you can create an entirely different mood. How would the above appear if lit by flood lighting?

ABOVE: Fountain lighting at Citygarden

Outdoor public space need not be as bright as a Tuesday afternoon in July to be safe. Subtle lighting attracts people, thereby increasing safety.

– Steve Patterson

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