St. Louis’ Cherokee Street developing organically
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I recently attended an evening open house on Cherokee Street. Not the blocks immediately East or West of Jefferson, but on the block East of Compton (aerial of Cherokee & Compton). Slowly and organically storefronts along Cherokee Street have been filled by various businesses.
Pictured above is local garment company STYLEhouse (advertiser STL-Style), gallery Fort Gondo (compound for the arts) and restaurant Tower Tacos.  Across the street snowflake/citystock was hosting an event as well. To the West is a new independent bookstore, The Archive. See Dotage St. Louis for a list of independent bookstores in the City of St. Louis. All Along Press was on this block but they recently moved East on Cherokee Street.
What is great about Cherokee is that the rebirth is very organic. There was no grandiose plan, no multi-block project.  Building by building the area is coming back. Collaboration among the individuals and entities has been important but that is different than a big physical project. In places where you have strong urban context intact all you need are measures to ensure the urban/walkable building fabric remains — no razing a block for a drive-thru. In those parts of the city what the urban fabric has already been lost you need good form-based codes to guide new construction so you eventually end up with good walls along the streets. With good zoning in place, the infill can also happen organically over time.
Whenever you have the transformation of a street or neighborhood one word often comes up: gentrification.  As it happens, gentrification is the discussion topic for the March 4th City Affair to be held at STYLEhouse (STL-Style) on Cherokee: CITY AFFAIR XIV: GENTRIFICATION.
– Steve Patterson