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, …
A week ago Sunday I drove the Northbound detour as all traffic was routed onto surface streets as MoDOT closed I-70 downtown as they removed the Madison Ave overpass.
Traffic made its way up Broadway and back onto I-70 between Madison and St. Louis Ave. It was not fast but it kept moving.
I’m now more convinced than ever that after I-70 is moved to the new bridge that we can convert the existing highway lanes to a tree-lined boulevard. The grassroots group City to River has organized a walking tour downtown this coming Saturday, March 20th (first day of Spring). The tour begins at the Stan Musial statue on the West side of Busch Stadium, 3pm (City to River is hosting a walking tour of Memorial Drive). Arrive via the stadium MetroLink station, the tour concludes near the Eads Bridge MetroLink station.
Today the St. Louis Board of Aldermen passed a resolution approving Mayor Slay’s nominees to serve on the initial Gateway Mall Advisory Board. The advisory board was formed last year by ordinance 68407. The 14 appointed positions are:
1. A designee of the St. Louis Public Library;
2. Four representatives of businesses with physical locations adjacent to the Gateway Mall;
3. A real estate developer with one or more projects adjacent to the Gateway Mall;
4. A representative of the Downtown St. Louis Residents’ Association;
5. A representative of an organization which has conducted a festival or other special event in the Gateway Mall within two (2) years prior to appointment;
6. An architect or landscape architect;
7. A representative of a public arts organization or agency;
8. A person with expertise in urban sustainability;
9. A person appointed at large; and
10. Two persons, one designated by each of the Aldermen of Wards Six and Seven , respectively; after revision of ward boundaries, one person designated by the aldermen of any ward in which any part of the Gateway Mall is located.
Not all positions were filled by Today’s resolution, the remaining will be filled shortly. An additional 10 ex-officio positions round out the board.
From the press release:
Appointed by the Mayor to the Gateway Mall Advisory Board are A.J. Bruning, Downtown Resident’s Association; Jack Reis, EVS Realty; John Sondag, AT&T; Pat Shannon, Shannon’s Restaurant; Byron Marshall, Union Station; Waller McGuire, St. Louis Public Library; Steve Smith, The Lawrence Group; Mike Kocielo, Entertainment St. Louis; Andy Trivers, Trivers & Associates; Chris Fannin, HOK; Sarah Smith, Community Development Ventures; Mike Kinman, Christ Church Cathedral; Steve Patterson, Urban Review; and Les Sterman, Downtown Resident.
Serving in an ex-officio capacity will be Pete Rothschild, Red Brick Management; 6th Ward Alderman Kacie Starr-Triplett; 7th Ward Alderman Phyllis Young; Don Roe, St. Louis Planning & Urban Design; Gary Bess, Director of Parks, Recreation & Forestry; Maggie Campbell, Partnership for Downtown St. Louis; Ann Chance, Special Events Manager; Lynnea Magnuson, Soldier’s Memorial; and Patricia Roland-Hamilton, Gateway Mall Conservancy.
The Gateway Mall Advisory Board will likely convene in April.
Yes, my name is on the above list. Thank you to Ald. Kacie Starr Triplett for agreeing to allow me to fill the slot representing the 6th ward. The Gateway Mall Conservancy Board was also recently created:
Named to the Gateway Mall Conservancy Board were Peter Fischer, Gateway Foundation; Robert Archibald, Missouri Historical Society; Steve Cousins, Armstrong Teasdale LLP; John Ferring, Plaze, Inc.; David Mesker, retired, A.G. Edwards; Emily Rauh Pulitzer, Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts; Kitty Ratcliffe, St. Louis Convention and Visitors Commission; Henry S. Webber, Washington University; Josephine Weil, Community Volunteer; and Patricia Roland-Hamilton as Executive Director.
As I visit different offices downtown I’m always looking for interesting views. From some of the tallest buildings you get spectacular views across the skyline. But from the fourth floor you get a view I treasure much more.
Recently while driving down Cherokee Street I noticed something I had never noticed before.
I’m usually so distracted by the beautiful glazed terra-cotta on the building on the right above, 2817 Cherokee. But the void between the buildings is what caught my eye. The short stone wall with the break and steps. Was there a narrow building between these that was torn down, I wondered? The answer is yes and no. The building we see today was constructed in 1936. The date on the building on the left is unknown except it is newer.
From the alley on the side of 2817 Cherokee to the corner at Oregon Ave contained five one-story brick homes (pink) with wood back porches & sheds (yellow) at the 9ft alley in 1909. What was platted as five parcels of approximate equal width in 1909 is now three parcels of different widths (27.5ft, 25ft , & 75ft). The above 1909 Sanborn Fire Insurance map is from the University of Missouri Digital Library.
Neighborhoods and streets are not static. As the streetcar line on Cherokee Street brought more and more people to the street homes gave way to commercial development.
In 2025 the 30-year lease of the Edwards Jones Dome to the St. Louis Rams will expire. Last week’s poll was a revision of a poll a few weeks earlier.  This time around I get a better sense of what you, the reader, expect. The biggest number want football to stay in the same spot, here are the results:
Q: Forget funding, where would you place a new stadium for the Rams?
Rebuild/build in current location 44 [ 23%]
East bank of the Mississippi River (IL) 41 [22%]
Old Nooter Co site just South of Chouteau 24 [12%]
downtown St. Louis (River/Cole/Tucker/Chouteau) 18 [9%]
Just adjacent to downtown 14 [7%]
As long as it is open air or has a retractable roof I don’t care. 12 [6%]
elsewhere in City of St. Louis 7 [3%]
Unsure/don’t care 7 [3%]
Metro East (IL) 6 [3%]
Other answer… 6 [3%]
St. Louis County 3 [1%]
anywhere in the region is OK 2 [1%]
St. Charles County 1 [0%]
Jefferson County 0 [0%]
Besides the same location, a few adjacent locations also ranked high. In this post I want to focus on the existing location, shown in green below.
Along Cole Street the Edward Jones Dome and convention center is a four block long wall (Broadway/5th to 9th). A four block wall. So here are my thoughts about rebuilding a football stadium on the existing site. The first thing that needs to happen is 7th Street needs to continue through (blue above) rather than be cut off. I’d like to see the new facility be open air. Not a retractable roof, but no roof. Such a facility would be less intrusive in the urban context.
Seventh Street was a through street before the dome was added onto the convention center so it can be removed. The back of the 1977 convention center will continue to be an ugly edge to Cole St. – two blocks of loading docks. Allowing pedestrians and traffic to go through 7th Street will help connect our central business district to the areas to the North of Cole.
AARP Livibility Index
The Livability Index scores neighborhoods and communities across the U.S. for the services and amenities that impact your life the most
Built St. Louis
historic architecture of St. Louis, Missouri – mourning the losses, celebrating the survivors.
Geo St. Louis
a guide to geospatial data about the City of St. Louis