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:

Another Reason Corner Curb Ramps Don’t Work Well

 

Pedestrians generally walk in a straight line, stepping over curbs as necessary to keep going in the same direction.

People pushing strollers, or using wheelchairs, have to go not in a straight line, but where the curb ramp is placed. Ideally ramps would be located where we could also continue in a straight line.

But most St. Louis intersections place curb ramps, not in the natural line of travel, but at the apex of the corner. On a standard intersection of two streets at a 90° angle the corner ramp does save money by requiring fewer ramps – four rather than eight.  The problem however, is the corner ramp has become the local default, even when it makes no sense to do so.

img_2778
ABOVE: curb ramps at a downtown hotel drive direct you into the snow rather than a straight line

The example above is one where placing the curb ramps at the corners makes no sense at all. There is no opportunity to cross Washington Ave from either curb, the only direction to travel is straight ahead.  Most of the year it is just annoying that I’m forced nearly into the nearby vehicle lane.  When there is snow in the way I’m forced to go off the edge of the ramp and through some of the snow.

At other intersections I neatly got stuck because my line of travel was beyond the worn path of able bodied pedestrians.  The corner ramp is marginally acceptable when you have two crosswalks meeting at a single point.  The above ramps should have been constructed to permit a straight line of travel.  The cost would have been the same, maybe even less because a ramp is less complex in a straight curb as opposed to on a corner.

– Steve Patterson

Gee, Why No Pedestrians?

 

ABOVE: 8th & Walnut
ABOVE: 8th & Walnut

Looking at the intersection of 8th & Walnut St it is easy to see why the sidewalks are so empty. Blanks walls, no street trees.  Dead zone extraordinaire. Eventually the former Bowling Hall of Fame (far side) will be razed once Ballpark Village is completed.  That could be 5-10 years away at the current rate.  Will the replacement be any better? The garage destroys the corner anyway.

– Steve Patterson

20th Ward Endorsement: Shannon J. McGinn

 

This year I’m only making one primary endorsement: Shannon J. McGinn.  I’ve known Shannon, who is running in the 20th ward democratic primary against 4-term incumbent Craig Schmid and candidate Rod Yeager, for many years. I first met Shannon at the popular coffeehouse she started, Hartford Coffee.

Shannon J. McGinn
Shannon J. McGinn

I’ve known incumbent Craig Schmid nearly twice as long.  Schmid is a nice guy with the best of intentions.  Much has changed in the city since 1995, but Schmid hasn’t.  Schmid remains locked in nuisance problem removal mode rather than transitioning to attract residents & business mode.

From a recent article in the RFT:

“Her implication is that the current alderman, Craig Schmid, who’s held his post for 16 years, isn’t tapping into the needs of all his constituents in the 20th ward, one of most ethnically diverse, with a thriving Mexican community. It’s anchored by Cherokee and Chippewa streets, and bounded by Dutchtown, Marine Villa, Gravois Park and Benton Park West.” (RFT:  Shannon McGinn: Fresh-Faced Alderman Candidate, Discusses Her Campaign With RFT)

Shannon would bring a variety of real-world experience to the Board of Aldermen, including community involvement and as a former small business owner.If you are a registered voter in the city’s 20th ward please vote for Shannon J. McGinn on Tuesday March 8th.  Not a resident of the 20th ward? Consider volunteering and/or donating.

Find Shannon  online, on Facebook and  Twitter  @ShannonJMcGinn.

– Steve Patters0n

Readers: City Meets Snow Removal Expectations

 

ABOVE: !7th at St. Charles St was untouched
ABOVE: !7th at St. Charles St was untouched

Last week readers weighed in on the topic of snow removal:

Q: How good of a job does the City of St. Louis do at snow removal?

  1. About what I expect 68 37.57%
  2. I expect better 60 33.15%
  3. Better than I’d expect 31 17.13%
  4. Other answer… 18 9.94%
  5. No opinion 4 2.21%

A close second was the expectation of a better job. The other answers were numerous:

  1. We specifically bought an AWD drive car because we live IN the city.
  2. I am betting that “I expect better” wins.
  3. Snow removal is an unecessary expense.
  4. what about sidewalks
  5. I would like better, but realize it is not realistic due to budget realities.
  6. It’s sporadic, sometimes good, sometimes bad. unpredictable.
  7. pathetic, northern states do much, much better
  8. Worst ever for a city with annual snow.
  9. They do a great Job!
  10. Great!
  11. Snow in STL is so infrequent; the city spends to much time and energy on it.
  12. the lack of plowing side streets is a reason to live in inner suburb.
  13. I’d LIKE better
  14. Depends how good your Alderperson is
  15. About what I expect, but I expect a terrible job.
  16. Embarrasingly awful
  17. If you want side streets plowed, you need to pay more in taxes.
  18. Laughable

Clearly readers have different expectations causing a wide variety of answers. Wondering if the ice & sleet this week has changed any opinions?

– Steve Patterson

Historic Urban School to be Razed for Parking & Playground

 

ABOVE: The old Hodgen is center left and the new Hodgen is on the right
ABOVE: The old Hodgen is center left and the new Hodgen is on the right. Via Google Maps, click to view

The old Hodgen Elementary School at California & Henrietta is to be razed, the exact date is unknown.  Yesterday I had to admit to two friends, when they asked my opinion,  I was behind on my reading.

ABOVE: Along California Ave the old Hodgen relates to the street whereas the new Hodgen does not
ABOVE: Along California Ave the old Hodgen relates to the street whereas the new Hodgen does not. Source: Google

The Post-Dispatch had the story on January 27th but the demo was one sentence: “The old Hodgen School will be demolished to make way for more playground and parking at the newer Hodgen Elementary School on California Avenue.” Michael Allen posted on the school later that day.

I keep hoping we are beyond razing our great urban fabric for parking.  The new school is tolerable only because of the existence of the old school.

Further reading & great photos:

– Steve Patterson

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