Home » Downtown »Planning & Design » Currently Reading:

Improving the Urban Wall Around Citygarden, Part 1

July 2, 2009 Downtown, Planning & Design 10 Comments

The new Citygarden, a 2-block sculpture garden in downtown St. Louis, is a wonderful space.  The surrounding buildings are not so wonderful.  For the long-term viability of the area we need to improve the urban edge around Citygarden.

Across Market Street to the South is the first place I’d start, the Bank of America tower.  A horrible Urban Renewal era building with no relationship to the sidewalk.  The building is mostly in the 800 block of Market St but the base of the tower extends over 9th St with part of the building in the 900 block.

Above is looking West from Market St at 8th.  The raised terrace is the main disconnect between the sidewalk and building.  In a walkable environment you want minimal separation between the pedestrian on the sidewalk and entrances to interior spaces.  Each city block needs 4-6 distinct entries to make the journey interesting for the pedestrian.  Razing the building and starting over would work but it would be wasteful and is not necessary.

Plants can do wonders.  If they replaced the boring ivy with something that would drape over the wall that would do wonders.  Lose the button down collar look in the planter.  Replace serious with fun.  The first block of the Citygarden is to the right, across Market St.

Above: we are approaching 9th Street.  The sign up on the terrace is for a restaurant space for lease.  Yeah, good luck with that.  To make it work you’d need a sign & menu board down at the sidewalk level.  Some potted plants on the steps (away from the rails) would soften these stairs and make it more inviting.  The brass handrails are like shoulder pads on the show Dynasty: classy at the time but oh so dated now.

Above: At 9th looking back East at the opposite view of the steps.  A step down planter on this end attempts to mask the huge change in height above the sidewalk but the plantings are too wimpy for the massive space.  Like the retaining wall earlier the plantings should hang over the wall and vary in height.  Some color would be nice too.

Above: 9th Street looking South.  Just horrible. I can see guests of the hotel 2 blocks South using this route to get to Citygarden.   Removing the section over the street is ideal but not likely.  So I look for alternatives to improve this street.

Four lanes?  Four!  Insanity.  Thankfully Citygarden cuts this down to two after crossing Market Street. Ideally I’d put on-street parking on the two outer lanes.  But I’m guessing they don’t want vehicles parking under the building here.  Fine, but we still only need two travel lanes.  The sidewalks should be widened so that only two lanes remain.  The section of the building between 9th & 10th at grade is the drive thru.  A blank wall faces Market St & 10th concealing the drive-thru.  That is both good & bad.  Good because we don’t want to see a drive-thru in a city but bad because blank walls are no better.

Above: Continuing along Market St we see the blank wall along the side of KSDK channel 5.  To the left we see open space.  Yes, the trees are nice and the grass is green but this space, across Market St from the 2nd block of Citygarden is screaming out for a building(s).

 

Currently there are "10 comments" on this Article:

  1. toby weiss says:

    Dynasty shoulder pad railings…. absolutely spot-on hilarious.

     
  2. Brian S. says:

    The lot at 10th street desperately needs a building. Getting a tenant for the General American Building would help matters as well.

     
  3. Brian says:

    In addition to the blue space on Steve’s map at 10th & Market, there is similar space along Market beside Gateway One between 7th and 8th. Of course, the no-buildings-on-the-mall purists would likely frown on that idea. But then again, when you can’t alter street walls for better dynamics, build new ones! And then if you narrowed Market, you may even find space on the Citygarden blocks.

    But is building anything between Chestnut and even a narrowed Market really off-limits?! The Starbucks in Portland’s Pioneer Square adds life to that urban plaza. There’s clearly a need to build new spaces along and even (eek!) within the Mall’s dead spaces.

     
  4. I visit 800 Market often — I agree with all of this.

     
  5. Bob says:

    Love your idea about reducing the traffic lanes in the underpass section of 9th. Maybe we can take a negative (the tunnel) and turn it into a positive by widening the sidewalks and officially sanctioning that stretch for food vendors and the like. It would bring some life to a lifeless zone and for people who stand outside all day, the overhang would be a blessing.

    Food for thought.

     
  6. Infra says:

    If you are concerned about urban development in St. Louis, share your perspective today at http://www.infrastructureusa.org, where you can upload video, read expert commentary, and demand change from influential policy-makers.

     
  7. GMichaud says:

    The area surrounding Citygarden is a failure. The government is a failure. The proof is endless.
    The Citygarden is good as far as it goes, which is not far.

    Okay, we know the city leadership does not know how to build cities, urban cities. I assime you will look north also, where the city was originally built for walking and the results be different and mixed.

    Still the wall of modern, who cares about the street, buildings prevail, especially near the mall.

    This area could perhaps be transformed with street merchants on the order of the flea markets of Paris or perhaps the continual street closings in London.

    Small scale economic development for sure: “but damn we don’t want the citizens to share in prosperity, we want it all for ourselves.” Malls and car orientated shopping is the result, not walking.

    The existing buildings along Market you illustrate are almost worthless to the city as they sit. And as you demonstrate, they are faceless, mindless and certainly not conducive to a nice stroll.

    (But hey, lets give the whole area over to a mega developer, he will solve our problems, you know like Ballpark Village and the North Side)

    .

     
  8. Could we modify some of the buildings as done in Lincoln Center?

     
  9. jdb says:

    Build out a new single story addition along the street side with restaurants, shops etc. Both sides (north and south). This is what the area needs.

     
  10. ed hardy clothing says:

    We'r ed hardy outlet one of the most profession
    of the coolest and latest ed hardy apparel, such as
    ed hardy tee ,ed hardy bags,
    ed hardy bathing suits, ed hardy shoes,
    ed hardy board shorts , don ed hardyt,ed hardy tank tops, ed hardy for women,
    ed hardy swimwearand more,
    ed hardy clothing. We offers a wide selection of fashion
    cheap ed hardyproducts. Welcome to our shop or just enjoy browsing through our stunning collection available wholesale ed hardy in our shop.

    our goal is to delight you with our distinctive collection of mindful ed hardy products while providing value and excellent service. Our goal is 100% customer satisfaction and we offer only 100% satisfacted service and ed hardy products. Please feel free to contact us at any time; we are committed to your 100% customer satisfaction. If you're looking for the best service and best selection, stay right where you are and continue shopping at here is your best online choice for the reasonable prices. So why not buy your ed hardy now, I am sure they we won’t let you down.

     

Comment on this Article:

Advertisement



[custom-facebook-feed]

Archives

Categories

Advertisement


Subscribe