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:

Celebrating the New Year

December 27, 2009 Sunday Poll 1 Comment
 

Remember 10 years ago when everyone was worried about “Y2K“?  The new year starts later this week and as we go from 2009 to 2010 we don’t have the same concerns as when we went from 1999 to 2000.

Y2K had people stocking up on supplies and moving to rural parts to avoid the predicted chaos in cities:

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tFt8hMi32Jk

Oh the good ole days.  Y2K came and nothing much happened.   The last 10 years haven’t been the best, no doubt.

My poll this week asks where you’ll be celebrating as we start the new year.  Will you be at home, the home of others, out at an event or at a business? Perhaps in another city?  I’ve done all of those over the years.  This year I’ll go up to the roof to see the city skyline and watch the fireworks.

I had a great New Year’s celebration in Chicago as we started 2001 (I think).  The drive up from St. Louis was slow due to snow & ice.  I was driving  and seeing all the cars wrecked along the highway was a bit unnerving.  Once in Chicago my car was parked and we took the El and walked through lots of snow as we tried to find a place for dinner.  We didn’t have reservations but we ended up at a great little place.  As the new year came in we were at one of many neighborhood bars (gay) in Chicago.  I recall the fresh snow on New Year’s morning and the sound of the snow plow in the alley next to the Bed & Breakfast (map).  Residential streets in St. Louis don’t get plowed, much less alleys.

Speaking of getting plowed, no matter where you are, please party responsibly this week.

– Steve Patterson

St. Louis’ Lambert Airport needs sleeping rooms

December 26, 2009 Travel 15 Comments
 

Earlier this month the idea of airport sleeping rooms caught my attention in the news:

Tiny airport sleeping rooms — similar to the cubicles that Asian travelers use to catch a snooze in between flights — have arrived in America.

Atlanta, the world’s largest airport, opened five Minute Suites this month where tired passengers can doze for $30 an hour. The rooms — 7 feet by 8 feet, or about the size of two office cubicles put together — are equipped with a daybed sofa, pillows (with disposable covers), fresh blankets, a small desk, Internet access and a flat-screen 32-inch monitor with DirecTV and flight information. They have systems to mask noise. (full story: USA Today)

Hopefully airport administrators across the country will be watching Atlanta to see how well this idea works in the states. Creative thinking to serve the needs of travelers could help the airport get more flights.

– Steve Patterson

Think about giving back

December 25, 2009 STL Region 2 Comments
 

For those of you celebrating a religious holiday today, Merry Christmas.  For the rest of us, Happy Holidays. I’ll be enjoying dinner with friends, their young children and their family.

Many things will be opened today but when I spend time with these kids (ages 1 & 3) I am reminded it is our obligation to make a better world for them.  In the four decades since I was that age many things have improved – increased equality for example.  But many have gotten worse, such as air pollution.

In 2010 consider giving back to your community.   We typically have a surplus of money or time – rarely both.  Give what you can.  A good place to start is the United Way of St. Louis Volunteer Center.  Maybe your passion is around animals, education, or the elderly.  Whatever your passion, there is likely to be a way to help others.  So enjoy your new things today but next week please start searching for ways to combine your interests with helping the community.

And please recycle wrapping paper, packaging and boxes.

– Steve Patterson

St. Louis’ 2011 municipal election season starts in less than a year

December 24, 2009 Board of Aldermen 17 Comments
 

Every two years brings municipal elections in the City of St. Louis.  In 2011 we will elect half the Board of Aldermen (14 even numbered wards) as well as the President of the Board of Aldermen.  Four members of the St. Louis School Board are also elected at the general election.  For more detail see the St. Louis Board of Elections page on How to Declare Your Candidacy for Any Federal, State, or City Office.

I ran for alderman in the 25th ward in 2005 and lost to the then incumbent, Dorothy Kirner.  Participating in our electoral process as a candidate was a tremendous experience.  In 2007 I moved downtown.  My loft is located in the 6th ward represented by Kacie Starr Triplett.  I will not be running in 2011 as I am generally pleased with Ald. Triplett’s performance so far. Her communications with constituents is among the best.  Also, as long as many in St. Louis call their alderman about fixing potholes, requesting stop signs and other such non-legislative tasks I don’t want the job anyway.  My hope is we can begin to get away from pothole politics so our elected reps can set policy, leaving potholes to the bureaucrats.

I would like to see a number of the other 14 aldermen from odd numbered wards replaced with new blood.  A year from now we need at least 15 people having filed to seek office.  Since we go through the trouble and additional expense of having a partisan primary and a general election it would be nice to see contested offices in the primary and general election.  If all the candidates are Democrats it will prove my point that we don’t need to waste money pretending we have multiple parties in our municipal elections.

Important dates:

  • Filing opens at 8am on Monday November 28, 2010 (“Filing for municipal offices opens at 8:00 A.M. on the date that is 100 days prior to the date of the applicable Primary Municipal Election.”)
  • Filing closes at 5pm on Friday January 7, 2011 (“Filing for municipal offices closes at 5:00 P.M. on the date that is 60 days prior to the date of the applicable Primary Municipal Election.”}
  • The partisan primary will be Tuesday March 8, 2011.
  • The general election will be Tuesday April 6, 2011.

Resources:

With filing less than a year away, if you are thinking of running for office in the City of St. Louis, you’d better start firming up those plans now.

– Steve Patterson

Transportation and the Urban Form

 

The host of this site, Steve Patterson, and I are both passionate about urban design issues. One area where we differ is how the interaction between transportation options and the urban form plays out in the real world. Steve, and others, believe that requiring “better”, more appropriate and/or more restrictive design standards, through efforts like moving to form-based zoning and reducing available parking, will somehow convince the uninformed public to become more enlightened and to change their ways.  I have a different perspective, that available transportation options inform the urban form, including our land use regulations and their application on a daily basis.

I’m not going to go back to the discovery of the wheel, but I am going to go back 150 years.  Prior to the Industrial Revolution / the American Civil War, transportation options were limited to human, animal, water or wind power – you could walk or row, ride a horse or a mule, use a sailboat or “go with the flow”.  The result was a world made up of farms, relatively small settlements, seaports, river ports and a few larger centers of banking, trade and government.  There was no zoning, as we know it, but we did have our westward expansion, with land being given away for free to anyone willing to “tame the wilderness”, through farming, ranching or mining.

Cities were just starting to build rudimentary water supply and sewer systems, and elevators and air conditioning were non-existent.  You got an urban environment marked by row houses, small, local retail establishments and tiny signs.  You didn’t have drive-throughs or dry cleaners, computers or gas stations; you did have hitching posts and coal for heat, telegraph and manure in the streets, Bob Cratchet and Tiny Tim.  You can find many preserved examples up and down the east coast, including Colonial Williamsburg.  And St. Louis started to grow as the Gateway to the West, primarily as a trading center and a transportation hub.  Examples around here include Soulard, Carondelet and Baden

The ability to capture the power of steam, through the boiler and the steam engine gave us railroads, cable cars and steam heat.  It also gave us the ability to run machinery with something other than water power, greatly expanding where factories could be located and how much they could produce.  More importantly, electricity was staring to be harnessed, with major improvements in generation, lighting and motors.  From the 1850’s through the 1890’s, city life changed rapidly.  Factories, along with their need for lots of workers, worked better in urban settings than in rural ones.  Cities like St. Louis became industrial centers as well as trading centers.

Quoting from a story in the 12/13/09 edition of the Daytona Beach News-Journal;

According to the Web site trolleystop.com, the first successful trolley system in the United States began operation in Richmond, Va. in 1887.  After the initial success in Richmond, almost all of the horse car lines in North America were converted to electric power.  The electric trolleys became so popular that the street railway industry experienced explosive growth almost overnight.  As the popularity of automobiles and buses boomed in the 1920s, however, most trolley companies began converting their lines to bus service.

That was certainly the case here.  We had multiple streetcar companies competing for riders and we saw explosive growth of streetcar suburbs, both inside and outside the city limits.

Streetcars and buses allowed workers to live further away from work.  You still needed to walk to the transit line, but it meant living within walking distance of your job was no longer an essential requirement.  People had more options, and many of those, that could afford to, moved out of the older, denser parts of town, leaving them to new waves of immigrants or to see them torn down and replaced by factories.  Retailers were still expected to offer home delivery, so stay-at-home moms (yes it’s a stereotype, but it was the reality) shopped for fresh food pretty much every day and kids walked or biked to neighborhood schools.  This was also the time when the first attempts at zoning started to occur, primarily to separate industrial uses from residential ones.

The next big “step forward” was Henry Ford’s efforts to produce an affordable automobile.  His success, in the 1920’s, was the next big step in the suburbanization of America and St. Louis.  Throughout south city one can find garages that are too small for many contemporary vehicles – they were built to shelter the vehicle that expanded Dad’s transportation options, Ford’s Model T.  The residential neighborhoods of that time were still walkable (with sidewalks) and they still had corner groceries, but they were growing less dense.

The next big impact on the urban environment was World War II, both directly and indirectly.  Factories moved from multi-story to single-story, sprawling structures.  The internal combustion engine became more reliable and synthetic rubber made tires much less of a pain in the a**.  Women entered the work force in large numbers and pent-up demand for consumer products continued to build.

Once the war ended, we experienced several decades of unprecedented prosperity, from the mid ’40’s through the ’70’s.  We built the interstate highway system and moms learned to drive.  FHA and VA loans favored single-family homes, primarily new, suburban ones, over denser, multi-family options.  We went from single-car families to 2-car families.  We embraced the suburban shopping center and the enclosed mall.

Just because it was a whole lot easier, people chose driving themselves over taking public transit.  They chose living in the new suburbs over living in established urban areas, especially those that had experienced decades of deferred maintenance (the Great Depression followed by wartime rationing).  Employers, schools and retailers all responded by offering more and more “free” parking, either by planning for it from the start, in new suburban developments, or by buying up and tearing down existing buildings in more-established urban areas.  This mobility also resulted in the Euclidean zoning that many of us are questioning today – it codified a preference for convenient parking over both density and walkability.

The end result is the world we live in today.  It reflects the hopes and aspirations of the majority of Americans, as reflected by the actions of our elected officials.  We trade sprawl and congested highways for the “freedom” to live where we want, work where we can find jobs and to shop at generic chains who have mastered the worldwide logistics supply chain.  We have seen St. Louis lose both population and jobs.  And we have two choices – we can continue to become more suburban, building more shopping centers, single-family homes and “free” parking.  Or we can redirect our efforts, differentiate ourselves from our suburban neighbors, encourage density and create viable transportation alternatives.

To attract people out of their cars and trucks won’t be easy.  There’s a real attraction to privacy, control and convenience.  But, as a big believer in the Law of Unintended Consequences, I find it interesting that more members of the Generation Y are willing to embrace mass transit.  It turns out that people who text, tweet and surf the mobile net would actually rather let someone else do the driving, IF they can figure out how to make it work.  Whether that involves reinventing Metro’s system and creating a market for higher densities or developing a taxi infrastructure that mimics that in New York, it appears that we may be on the cusp of a another significant change in how people want to live, work and commute.  Combine that with the growing success of, and the reliance many people have on, online shopping, and in many ways we’re returning to the “home delivery” model of yore.

Steve’s belief in the need for form-based zoning could very well be reflected in actual change, just not one driven by direct logic and/or nostalgia.  I doubt that we’ll see the imminent demise of the suburban shopping center or the type of store Schnuck’s or Direbergs typically builds.  But I can see a future where Transit Oriented Development will gain traction on both the residential side and on the employment/educational side – it’s actually slowly playing out here locally at the Barnes campus on Kingshighway.  The single-occupant vehicle could very well become an anachronism for the daily commute, saved only for shopping, recreation and regional out-of-town trips.  Whether it ends up being garaged for days at a time or rented only when needed will be a personal decision.  But these decisions will inform what “sells”, and in turn, what gets built, and ultimately, what our legislators will see a need to codify.

– Jim Zavist

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