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, …

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Huge Traffic Increases in 2008

January 1, 2009 Downtown Comments Off on Huge Traffic Increases in 2008
 

Last year saw huge increases in traffic.  Not auto traffic, web traffic here at UrbanReviewSTL.

The number of pages viewed in 2007 was just over 3.5 million.  Not bad and certainly a healthy increase over 2006’s 1.2 million page views and 2005’s 334,000 views.  For 2008 the number of pages was around 9.5 million!  This is a year to year growth rate of over 167%!

Web traffic 2004-2008
Web traffic 2005-2008

Considering there were only two posts in February, the numbers are remarkable.  I know from my survey that just over 15% of you began reading in 2008.  In a weird way my stroke was good for traffic.  People went to the site when they heard about my stroke and many stayed around to follow my recovery.

In 2008 I had a total of 305 posts – an average of 25.4 posts per month.  Take out February and I had an average of 27.5 posts per month.  In 2007 I had a total of 370 posts for the year (30.8/month).  I don’t have a good summary on word count but my posts are noticeably shorter thanks to one handed typing – and likely more read as a result of their brevity. The stroke was sort of that editor I never had.

2009 will be a good year on many levels.  I expect growth in page views but it is hard to predict at what rate.  Since starting this site in October 2004 the growth & popularity has been so far beyond my wildest expectations.

Thank you to all of you.  May you have a joyous 2009!

Huge Increases In Traffic in 2008, More Expected in 2009

January 1, 2009 Downtown 9 Comments
 

Traffic increased substantially in 2008.  Not on the roads but here at UrbanReviewSTL.com.

In 2005, my first full year, traffic was a few hundred thousand page views.  In 2006 it reached 1.2 million pages.  Incredible!  For 2007 it shot up to 3.4 million page views.  And 2008?  An amazing 9.4 million page views!

Page views, 2005-2008
Page views, 2005-2008

I’m targeting 25 million page views for 2009.  I’m also predicting/hoping more local businesses will see the value of advertising on local sites such as UrbanReviewSTL.

Thank you to everyone for reading UrbanReviewSTL.  May you all have a spectacular 2009!   – Steve Patterson

Good Riddence 2008, Hello 2009

December 31, 2008 Site Info, Steve Patterson 4 Comments
 

2008 was not a good year, especially for me personally.  2008 did have some great moments though.

About two hours into2008 my father passed away.  He had taken ill in December 2007 and was in the hospital.  I was staying at my brother’s house in Oklahoma City when the call came from the hospital for us to get there – he had “coded.”  Coincidentally, this was the same hospital where this brother was born in December 1959.  My mom passed away 18 months before my Dad, in June 2006.   I’ve written posts saying goodbye to my mom & dad.

So now I start off 2008 at age 40 with no parents.

A week later friend of a friend needed a ride to Rhode Island to start a new teaching job.  She had just bought my friend’s used car but she was still learning to drive a stick and she wasn’t comfortable driving that distance in an automatic car much less a manual.  The drive up was great — we got to know each other on the road.  She is a black female in her 50s – a native of St Louis.  She is a Harvard PhD (undergrad too). She was a Hillery supporter, I was for Obama.  We left St Louis early in the morning of Monday the 14th.

When we arrived at our destination the following afternoon, I left her and her car at her new apartment in Bristol, R.I. (map), just south of Providence.  From that point I became a transit user.  I caught the bus a block from her new place that took me to downtown Providence (map).  After a night in Providence I took the train up to Boston.

Boston was a great experience.  It was cold out but the sidewalks & subway were teaming with people.

I flew back to St Louis arriving back at my place around 1:30am on the 18th – less than four days after leaving.  From the airport I was on the final MetroLink train.  But as we were heading back to the city the conductor announces the last stop would be Grand.  Realizing I did not want to be at the Grand stop after midnight, tired with luggage, I got off at the CWE stop and called a taxi to take me home.

The trip was certainly a good distraction from the loss of my father.

Back home I jumped right back into my life by attending a charrette in Old North St Louis on the 19th.  It was cold but I rode my scooter to get there – I didn’t own a car so my choices were few.

On Tuesday the 22nd I started the semester at Saint Louis University.

The following week started off normally enough — Gateway Mall press conference, Preservation Board meeting, Marine Villa neighborhood meeting watching residents elect new officers, and a hearing at City Hall on the morning of the 31st.  On the 24th I finally got an iPhone – the price had come down and AT&T now offered business accounts.

An Aunt of mine, wife of one of my Dad’s brothers, died in Texas on the 27th of January.

I had a real estate closing scheduled for the 31st at noon but there was a delay on the Buyer’s side — I had the Seller’s side of the deal.  That night it snowed.

The morning of Friday February 1st I snapped a few pictures of the snow from my balcony and from the roof.  I discussed having dinner with a friend.  I continued my email conversation with my friend Richard Kenney in Seattle about wanting to find a good spot at Bellefontaine Cemetery for when my time was up.  Then, around 5pm, it happened – a hemorrhagic stroke.  I’ll save the details for the anniversary of the stroke but basically I didn’t think I would survive — and I nearly did not.

I spent February 2nd – April 30th in three hospitals.  My recovery has been amazing.  I’m probably 65% at this point.  I’ll probably be at 95% in a year or so.

I started driving again in July and I bought my first tank of gas for my newly purchased car on July 14 — the day St Louis gas prices peaked.

In August I resumed work on my Masters degree at Saint Louis University.  I’m past the halfway point and I expect to graduate on December 11, 2009.

The economy took a nosedive in 2008. Foreclosures rose sharply as did the list of unemployed.

In November the country impressed me by electing Barack Obama to be President.  We’ll see how well he does.  Some are naturally upset by some of his choices for his cabinet.

Going into 2009 I’m optimistic about my own future and that of our city, state, country and world.  I’m in a better mindset than I was a year ago.

Thank you to all of you for your continued support in 2008.  Peace. – Steve

Board of Aldermen Has Lots of Dead Weight

 

I know from my reader survey that nearly 10% of you are 18-24 years old.  I also know from the Board of Aldermen Seniority List (PDF) that Phyllis Young and Fred Wessels have been Aldermen your entire lives.  All through your period in diapers, kindergarten, grade school, those awkward teen years, and college.  Both are up for re-election next Spring.  The filing deadline for candidates is 5pm Friday.

Others are not far behind.  In my view the majority of them need to step aside at this or the 2011 election cycle (depending upon if they are from odd or even numbered ward).  They are dead weight holding the city back, keeping an entire generation from participating.  It really is very selfish of them.

In 2009/10 I’ll be working on a ballot initiative to get term limits for city offices.  I know many of you say “just vote them out.”  That is fine assuming they have a challenger.  I’ve also heard people say without institutional memory the lobbyists take over.  I hate to tell you this, but these aldermen have been buddies with the same lobbyists for decades now.  Decades!  If these selfish folks won’t step aside on their own we need a mechanism to do it for them.

The other high priority is reducing the number of Aldermen from the current 28.  Some say half – 14.  I’m thinking even less, like 9 or 10.

Males Dominate Readership

December 30, 2008 Site Info 17 Comments
 

Results to date on gender question
Results to date on gender question.

The reader survey is still open but I thought I’d share the results so far on one question: gender.  As the pie chart to the right shows, nearly 75% of the respondents to the survey are male.

I’m kinda shocked by this.  I was guessing maybe 60/40 but not 72/28.  I know lots of women that are into urban issues.  Is the material covered here just more appealing to men?

After the survey closes at the end of 2008 I’ll begin to prepare charts to show the answers on all questions, except the ones I’m tossing out such as sexual orientation, race & religion.

Happy New Year to my readers – male & female.

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