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Connecting St. Louis’ Downtown Sports Facilities Via 7th & Clark

I’ve made this argument before, but it’s worth repeating: Clark Street needs to be a connector street. On the west end, at 18th, you have Union Station. At 14th you have the Scottrade Center, home of the St. Louis Blues NHL team, and the Civic Center Transit Center/Station. To the East at 8th Busch Stadium and Ballpark Village. People are already walking back & forth between these dots along Clark, despite the poor conditions. Just imagine if we improved the streetscape along both Clark Ave and 7h Street.

Triangle Plaza ar 14th & Clark is lifeless
Triangle Plaza at 14th & Clark is lifeless, but will remain when the Civic Center Transit Center is expanded. Click image to see yesterday’s post.
Map showing Clark (horizontal) and 7th (vertical), click to view in Google Maps
Map showing Clark (horizontal) and 7th (vertical) with Edward Jones in upper right, Ballpark Village in lower right, and Union Station at left end of  red line. Click image to view in Google Maps
The south side of Clark at the two I-64 on ramps from 14th & Clark aren't friendly or ADA-compliant
The south side of Clark at the two I-64 on ramps from 14th & Clark aren’t friendly or ADA-compliant
The venues on the ground floor of this public parking garage at Tucker & Clark attract many sports fans
The venues on the ground floor of this public parking garage at Tucker & Clark attract many sports fans
When the previous Treasurer bought this building the plan was to turn the ground floor into leasable restaurant space once the adjacent garage opened.
When the previous Treasurer bought this building the plan was to turn the ground floor into leasable restaurant space once the adjacent garage opened.
The SE corner of 11th & Clark is park of the Cupples Warehouse district, ann ideal candidate for new construction.
The SE corner of 11th & Clark is park of the Cupples Warehouse district, an ideal candidate for infill construction.
Joe Buck's BBQ in on the ground floor of an old warehouse facing Clark
Joe Buck’s BBQ in on the ground floor of an old warehouse facing Clark
More ramps for I-64 create an odd parcel, well suited for an iconic structure facing Clark
More ramps for I-64 create an odd parcel, well suited for an iconic structure facing Clark

The [parcel on the NW corner of 9th & Clark is awaiting new construction
The [parcel on the NW corner of 9th & Clark is awaiting new construction
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Looking north on 7th Street from Washington Ave
Looking north on 7th Street from Washington Ave, Embassy Suites hotel with the Edward Jones Dome in the background
Two years ago the Partnership for Downtown St. Louis held an event focusing on several streets downtown, one was 7th. Here the 7th St group is crossing Locust. In the center is former Partnership President Maggie Campbell and Ald Phyllis Young
Two years ago the Partnership for Downtown St. Louis held an event focusing on several streets downtown, one was 7th. Here the 7th St group is crossing Locust, in the center is former Partnership President Maggie Campbell and Ald Phyllis Young

Just as Washington Avenue serves as the connector for the downtown loft district, 7th and/or Clark could serve to connect our sports venues to each other, to entertainment venues, hotels, transit, etc.

— Steve Patterson

 

Civic Center Transit Center Sans Trees, Awaiting Redo

In late March the Civic Center Transit Center, serving MetroBus and MetroLink, got a visually shocking change: all the trees were cut down. Take a look:

In October 2011 many brown areas could be spotted on the evergreen trees
In October 2011 many brown areas could be spotted on the “evergreen” trees
Aerial from Apple Maps, click image to view location in Google Maps
Aerial from Apple Maps, click image to view location in Google Maps
In March 2014 all the frees were cut down
In March 2014 all the trees were cut down
Looking north toward the Scottrade Center at 14th & Clark
Looking north toward the Scottrade Center at 14th & Clark, noticed the bare dirt
For years transit riders wore paths going from bus & light rail
For years transit riders wore paths going from bus & light rail in a more direct pattern than the paved routes provided
The official route from 14th to the MetroLink platform involves steps or two switchback ramps
The official route from 14th to the MetroLink platform involves steps or two switchback ramps
Back up at Clark we have an useless plaza
Back up at Clark we have an useless plaza
The plaza to MetroLink connection is direct. October 2011 photo
The plaza to MetroLink connection is direct. October 2011 photo before the trees on the left were cut down
Numerous bus lines stop on 14th street, the sidewalk  gets very crowded during busy times
Numerous bus lines stop on 14th street, the sidewalk gets very crowded during busy times
The ramps/crosswalk to the main MetroBus area is too narrow during peak times each day
The ramps/crosswalk to the main MetroBus area is too narrow during peak times each day
A portable trailer has sat here for years
A tacky trailer on blocks has sat here for years
Looking south toward the double-loaded aisle
Looking south toward the double-loaded aisle
The #99 Downtown Trolley parks on 14th because no room exists in the center. The able-bodied can easily make the walk across the curbs but the rest of us have to return to near Spruce St to get where we can cross
The #99 Downtown Trolley parks on 14th because no room exists in the center. The able-bodied can easily make the walk across the curbs but the rest of us have to return to near Spruce St to get where we can cross

The reason the trees were cut down was to clear the site for the construction of a larger MetroBus area, so more can pull into the center rather than stay on 14th. Metro has talked about this for a number of years, but the process is moving forward now.  On Monday I inquired with Metro about plans, yesterday they posted information on their blog, see Metro Moves Forward With New Transit Projects, and sent me the text that will appear on the project page shortly:

Civic Center Transit Center Expansion

The Civic Center Transit Center is one of Metro’s busiest transit hubs and it presently lacks the space needed to adequately serve the number of MetroBus routes converging at this location. The location at 14th and Spruce Streets in Downtown St. Louis is served by MetroLink, 18 MetroBus routes and Metro Call-A-Ride service.

Metro secured federal funding to redesign the Civic Center Transit Center to more effectively accommodate more buses and to provide greater customer safety, convenience and comfort.

The expansion will include:

  • 18 MetroBus bays
  • 2 Call-A-Ride bays
  • Space for 60-foot articulated buses
  • Construction of a new building with
    • An indoor, climate-controlled waiting area
    • Public restrooms
    • Digital messaging boards
    • A security sub-station
    • Concessions

The design contract for the project was awarded to Arcturis Inc. on October 2013. The project is scheduled to be completed by next fall with construction expected to begin late summer or fall 2014.

To redesign the property for the expansion, it was necessary to cut down the bald cypress and oak trees. The trees were removed prior to April 1 so as not to affect migratory birds. Metro will plant the same number of trees at another location or make a donation to a local forestry project.

Here’s the proposed site plan:

Click image to view larger version on Scribd
Click image to view larger version on Scribd

This changes the flow for buses and pedestrians, after I’ve had a chance to absorb the proposed design I’ll share my thoughts in a separate post.

— Steve Patterson

 

Readers Prefer Public Transit Over Car Sharing & Taxicabs

Ford Transit Connect Taxi
Ford Transit Connect Taxi at the 2011 St. Louis Auto Show

In the poll last week I was trying to see if there was a preference among readers for an app-based service (CARmil, Lyft, Uber, etc) vs local taxicab. Just before posting the poll I changed the options, adding public transit to the mix. I very quickly regretted the change but it was too late.

Q: Next time you need to get from A to B (not in your own car), which type of service would you use?

  1. Public transit 42 [56%]
  2. App-based service (CARmil, Lyft, Uber, etc) 12 [16%]
  3. Unsure/no answer 12 [16%]
  4. Local taxicab company 9 [12%]

The app-based services did come out slightly ahead of taxicabs, but based on the totals I don’t think we can draw any conclusions.  I do have some thoughts on the topic though. While a few taxicab  companies have their own apps or are part of Taxi Magic, they’re boring by comparison. The local apps don’t simplify the payment process at your destination, one taxicab company we took last year handed us a credit card receipt to sign after swiping our card on their reader up front. Really? The other we took last year had credit card machines in the back and no paper receipt to sign, but we still had to get our card out. I used Taxi Magic once last year, which only required me to use the app on mu phone, but the driver made a big deal out of it.

In fact many drivers don’t like credit cards at all; companies take a bigger cut, are slow to pay, or something. Sorry, I’m the customer and I rarely carry more than $5 in cash.  I know a few former & current taxicab drivers, I support them in earning a living. But industries that don’t adapt to change will die off.

With the app startups I do worry about issues of riding with an unknown person using their personal vehicle.  I wonder how a whimsical taxicab company would do in St. Louis, shake up the establishment or struggle among the big players?

— Steve Patterson

 

I’m Now a St. Louis Rams Fan

May 13, 2014 Featured, Popular Culture, STL Region Comments Off on I’m Now a St. Louis Rams Fan
The Rams proposed expanding the EJD across Broadway and Baer Plaza
The Rams proposed expanding the EJD across Broadway and Baer Plaza

I’ve never had an interest in football, despite my mom and a brother being huge fans. Back in the 80s, the architecture department at the University of Oklahoma was in the building under the bleachers of the football stadium, a huge distraction when trying to complete a project for a Monday presentation. In the 20 years since the Rams moved here from Los Angeles I had zero interest in seeing a game, we even sold the two tickets to a game we got last year. To my surprise, I’m suddenly a Rams fan.

The St. Louis Rams drafted Michael Sam, football player, in the NFL draft on Saturday. They drafted Sam in the seventh round, not because they thought the league or the world owed him a job because he announced he was gay on his way out of the University of Missouri. They drafted him because they thought he might be one of those low-round picks who might pay off and help them be a better team someday.

As good as Sam was in college, the SEC defensive player of the year as a senior, there were always going to be concerns about where he fit in the NFL, because of his height (6-foot-2), because he is smaller than most defensive linemen, because nobody was sure if he could make the switch to linebacker in the pros. (New York Daily News)

We still don’t know what the Rams will do about the Edward Jones Dome, they will be free to leave St. Louis after the upcoming season ends, a decade earlier because we’ve not upgraded the dome to be in the top quarter of NFL facilities. I still don’t like NFL downtown, but I’d like the Rams to remain the St. Louis Rams, staying in the region.

When Sam came out in February there were many who compared him to Tim Tebow, a distraction that couldn’t cut it in the NFL:

While some compare this to the distractions Tim Tebow brought to the team, the two couldn’t be more different. Sam won’t be tweeting about his sexual orientation and slipping his sexuality into every statement the way Tebow did with Jesus and the Bible. Tebow infused his religion into everything he did, praising god to the press, leading a very public team prayer after every game, kneeling before God after success on the field. For Sam, his sexual orientation is just part of him. He doesn’t feel the need to proselytize for the “gay cause.”

Unlike Tebow’s religion, Sam will not make his sexual orientation the story. Tebow invited the media attention; Sam is already doing what it takes to minimize its impact on his future team. (Time)

Until Sam takes the field we don’t know how good of a player he’ll be, but I’ll be rooting for him and the St. Louis Rams.

— Steve Patterson

 

Reopening 13th Street, The Good and The Bad, Suggestions

When the Washington Avenue streetscape project happened more than a decade ago, 13th & 16th Streets shouldn’t have been completely closed to vehicles. Rather than become wonderful pedestrian spaces, they became dead isolated spaces.  Sixteenth between Lucas & Washington Ave is still closed to traffic, but 13th Street was recently reopened.

This June 2013 photo shows the closed 13th behind a model being photographed. The planters were bare dirt, an unloved space.
This June 2013 photo shows the closed 13th behind a model being photographed. The planters were mostly bare dirt, the design not really functional other than as a pass through space — a for fashion photos
On April 29th major equipment was ripping out the unloved center planters
On April 29th major equipment was ripping out the unloved center planters
By May 1st the spots where the planters had been were paved over.
By May 1st the spots where the planters had been were paved over, planters move to the east side. The deck for Lucas Park Grille overhangs the former sidewalk on that side.
Weekend nights traffic gets backed up on Wash Ave between Tucker (12th) and 14th, a laughable problem compared to actual congestion experienced un bigger cities
Weekend nights traffic gets backed up on Wash Ave between Tucker (12th) and 14th, a laughable problem compared to actual congestion experienced in denser cities. June 2013

So the St. Louis Police and the Partnership for Downtown St. Louis consulted with adjacent building owners, not the actual people impacted by a change, and got the city to act quickly to open a street designed to be closed to traffic. This will allow officers to direct eastbound motorists to turn right on 13th (now one-way southbound) to relieve congestion.

The two block stretch of Wash Ave from Tucker to 14th was designed as a festival street, to be closed to host special events. Because 13th Street to the south had been closed to traffic and 13th to the north just a single lane after most of the right of way was taken for restaurant patios there was no way to close just one block — both had to be closed regardless of the size of the event. Now, with 13th southbound open, it’ll be possible to close just one block for a smaller event.

I support reopening our street grid, it has been chopped up all over the city. My issue is with how this happened. It didn’t happen in a transparent manner, with input from many. Once again we failed to engage citizens in meaningful dialog, instead thinking building owners can speak for residents & business owners.  They cannot, and don’t.

This is the "before" at Wash Ave
This is the “before” at Wash Ave, the planters & signs were removed but no other change made. I saw one car turn onto 13th and the driver freaked out when it dropped off the curb
I view this as a raised crosswalk, no need foe expensive physical changes, but the lack of crosswalk stripes across Wash Ave mean drivers & pedestrians lack needed visual clues
I view this as a raised crosswalk, no need foe expensive physical changes, but the lack of crosswalk stripes across Wash Ave mean drivers & pedestrians lack needed visual clues. This is a bus stop for the #99 Downtown Trolley.
The city quickly placed signs against parking on 13th. Why? Because of ingress & egress issues only one lane can be used for traffic so why not pity in meters and allow a few cars to park here? Issues that should've been discussed in public before the street was reopened.
The city quickly placed signs against parking on 13th. Why? Because of ingress & egress issues only one lane can be used for traffic so why not pity in meters and allow a few cars to park here? Issues that should’ve been discussed in public before the street was reopened.
Having a full row of parked cars would give a visual clue to pedestrians, but even then it could function as a shared space
Having a full row of parked cars would give a visual clue to pedestrians, but even then it could function as a shared space. On weekends the parking spaces could be used as a shared valet lane or as a taxi stand, freeing up spaces on Wash Ave for public use.
This truck was parked here for at least 20 minutes, the drivers told me she wasn't aware 13th was now open to traffic
This truck was parked blocking the south end at St. Charles St for at least 20 minutes, the drivers told me she wasn’t aware 13th was now open to traffic
Advance public discussion and temporary warnings for motorists and pedestrians would've made the transition smoother.
Advance public discussion and temporary warning signs for motorists and pedestrians would’ve made the transition smoother.

Here are my suggestions for what still needs to be done:

  1. Do something to direct motorists turning onto 13th from Wash Ave to stay centered so they stay on the ramp, not drop off the curb; planters, vertical reflective lane markers, etc
  2. Add parking meters on the west side for 24/7 parking except weekends when used by valets or taxicabs.
  3. Designate the corner next to Wash Ave as motorcycle parking, free or at charge if striped and numbered.
  4. Put up temp orange signs on Wash Ave & St Charles St to alert everyone about the recent change.
  5. Consult actual citizens, not just building owners, next time.

This is not to say residents of the immediate area should’ve been allowed to veto the change, just have been included in discussing the problems and possible solutions.

— Steve Patterson

 

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