Poorly Executed Pedestrian Access Around St. Louis Federal Reserve
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Yesterday I posted about the challenges crossing 4th Street at Locust (Crosswalks & Curb Ramps Needed at 4th & Locust) to get to the Federal Reserve. Â Today I want to share problems with crossing Broadway (5th) at Locust and St. Charles at Broadway to reach the Federal Reserve.
The situation, above, differs from 4th in that here a crosswalk exists on the pavement. Â However, there is no curb ramp on the far side. Like 4th, this was done when the Federal Reserve took over this block of Locust for their pedestrian plaza.
From the Post-Dispatch on December 11, 2003:
A $13 MILLION PLAN to restore the Security Building took an important step forward — and so it seems did a proposed $90 million investment by the 500-pound gorilla next door, the Federal Reserve. … The designs for the Security Building, by the way, revealed another interesting transformation: a Fed plan to replace Locust Street between Fourth and Broadway with a pedestrian plaza.
So the Federal Reserve spent $90 million but they couldn’t include a couple of curb ramps in newly poured concrete?  Unacceptable!  But in November 2005 the Downtown St. Louis Partnership (now Partnership for Downtown St. Louis) gave the Federal Reserve an award for the plaza.
There is one spot where both ends of the crosswalk have curb ramps, shown above. Â Recently the Federal Reserve completed their expansion, which included a new sidewalk along St. Charles St.
On the right you will see a curb ramp at the corner of the new work by the Federal Reserve. Â Not sure where someone is supposed to go from there. Â The detectable warnings direct the blind into the middle of the intersection. Â I suppose someone could cross Broadway since an exit from a parking garage could serve as a dangerous curb ramp on this side of Broadway.
When trying to cross St. Charles there is a curb ramp on this side of the street, between the building corner and the traffic signal. Â However, the ramp for the other side is way out at the corner, hidden from view by the blue & yellow boxes. Â Brilliant! Â I guess for only $90 million you can’t expect much?
Keep in mind that others, such as parents with strollers, use curb ramps. Â These issues are personally frustrating to me but they make St. Louis less than ideal for all pedestrians.
– Steve Patterson