I still want urban buildings along the new Grand bridge
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In January 2006 I posted the idea of urban buildings with retail next to a new Grand bridge (Grand Bridge Should Follow Columbus Ohio Example):
“St. Louis is planning to rebuild the existing Grand bridge by adding a landscaped median as well as wider sidewalks and bike lanes. The intent is to make it more pedestrian friendly so that St. Louis University to the north and their medical center campus to the south are better connected. You can dress up a bridge all you like but it is still hundreds of feet of dead space. No amount of median planting will make it pedestrian friendly.”
To prove my point I give you Exhibit A:
The new bridge/viaduct for Jefferson Ave (above) is what is proposed for Grand Ave, without question a huge improvement over the old crumbling bridge it replaced. It is new and pretty but to the pedestrian on the wider sidewalk it is still a long dull stretch. The planted median is there to make the drive less boring for motorists. Buildings next to a bridge? We’ve had this for decades along Tucker (formerly 12th):
Granted the Tucker bridge/tunnel is falling apart — it is roughly twice the age of the Grand bridge. The point is the Post-Dispatch, St. Patrick’s Center and Globe-Democrat buildings are all built on lower ground up against a bridge structure. From the sidewalk you don’t realize that is the case. Along with the Columbus Ohio recent example I cited in 2006 the idea is not far fetched at all. But in 2006 some felt the idea wasn’t feasible.
Some, incorrectly, thought it was too impossible because of the amount of rail lines.
But as you can see above the width for the rail lines isn’t that wide, perhaps 20% of the total span. See map.
Two city streets serve the properties on both sides of the bridge — one north and one south of the tracks.
In the left of the above image you can see a single story structure next to the current bridge. This structure actually continues under the bridge.
The plan is to redevelop both sides of grand for research facilities. The #70 Grand bus in the busiest bus line in the region and the MetroLink light rail station is currently roughly in the middle of the pack for station traffic. When this desolate area is remade transit will be key.
So here is my bridge concept:
- forget the planted center median
- plan railings that can be removed as buildings with storefront floors are built up to the sidewalks.
- Allow on-street parking along the bridge except at the transit station, which would be reserved for buses.
- The area at the station/over the tracks would be slightly wider and have room for a newsstand, food kiosks, seating, etc
- Each side would have a self-cleaning pay public restroom.
- the structures next to the two streets below could have elevators to get get pedestrians to/from the bridge level to the street level.
- the buildings could contain research offices on the lower levels, retail on the bridge level and residential above.
- with transit (bus and light rail) and a few car=sharing vehicles available for use by workers and residents the total parking count could be significantly reduced.
- The retail on the bridge would be the commercial center for all the offices and residential I envision along the bridge and in the surrounding blocks.
Unfortunately my idea won’t happen, the engineering for the new bridge is well under way. Maybe in 20-30 years the bridge can be retrofitted and it can still happen?
– Steve Patterson