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Showing posts with label Downtown West. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Downtown West. Show all posts

Monday, April 19, 2010

Conceding Tucker Boulevard to Blandness

St. Louis doesn't have a system of comprehensive planning. Thus it surprises few observers in the urbanist community when an individual developer floats his or her project without regard to its surroundings.

Today comes (overall, great) news that the AFL-CIO Trust will commit $108 million to two downtown development projects--the Laurel Building (also known as the Dillard's Building) and the Park Pacific building at 13th and Olive.

So what's the bad news? Tucker Boulevard--a street whose grandiose size might confuse visitors into thinking it's St. Louis's "Main Street"--is being dedicated as the parking garage elevation for the Park Pacific building's redevelopment. A tiny rendering is shown in the article:


Some might say, in autocentric St. Louis, it's necessary to have dedicated parking (it's probably also tied to financing, in some way). Truthfully, I don't dispute that some parking is needed to redevelop this building. However, the above rendering is unacceptable for Tucker Boulevard if this street is ever to become active, urban, and attractive.

The City of St. Louis recently constructed a monster of a parking garage at the northeast corner of Tucker and Clark. See a Google Streetview capture of the garage, without its retail bays added as of yet, below:


I commend the city for attempting to make a statement with a parking garage rather than constructing a series of bare concrete decks (sort of like the kind shown in the Park Pacific rendering, on the north side of the site). However, parking is in severe oversupply downtown when all off-street spaces are accounted for. And the Tucker garage shown here at Clark Street is not even attached to any one project--it's a municipal garage. If every downtown redevelopment project includes its own dedicated parking garage with more than one space per visitor or resident, not to mention separate municipal garages, opportunity for a true urban environment is squandered. Transit is disincentivized as driving becomes easier. Every new parking space drives the cost of parking down, and as parking becomes cheaper, it becomes the better option. Convenient parking reduces walking times and distances, cutting down the chances that a pedestrian will linger downtown and walk around to discover its retail, restaurant, and entertainment offerings.

But this post is not even really a statement against downtown St. Louis's parking oversupply, primarily. It's about poor urban design on one of St. Louis's major downtown streets. Across from the new municipal garage at Tucker and Clark is a surface parking lot serving City Hall. Just north of the Gateway Mall blocks are the Park Pacific site, a pair of deadening and severe mid-rises, a woefully underused parcel that a one-story US Bank branch sits on, and several other gaps as well. Filling in the Park Pacific site with an unsightly parking garage relegates Tucker to third class status as an urban boulevard.

I wrote on a previous post in agreement with a statement that said people desire to live in cohesive urban environments. That means that few people will be proud of a place that is beautiful in one area (Washington Avenue), while dreary just a block or two over (Tucker Boulevard). We must reposition our downtown so that its dead zones are not so apparent.

Park Pacific developers should include a four-story mixed-use building that wraps Tucker, Pine, and Olive on all sides. Parking could be hidden in the core of this building. Street-level retail is not enough to mitigate the damage of exposed parking decks on a street with as many issues as Tucker has already. Here is an example of what I mean, from Baltimore's Fells Point neighborhood.


This new mixed-use building may not be flashy, but it's a nicely scaled urban building. Do you see its attached parking garage? I don't.

Walk too fast and you might even miss the spot to pull in to its large dedicated parking garage. It's located behind the building, on the inside and invisible to the public portion of the block.


Park Pacific should not proceed with plans that would concede Tucker to blandness. It's a visually important street for St. Louis.

Tucker--once 12th Street--has an important legacy that should be respected. 12th Street was once symbolic enough of St. Louis for postcard representation.


Especially as St. Louis bids for the Democratic National Convention and wishes to play host to tens of thousands of visitors from across the nation in 2012, we should be cleaning up the face of our region--downtown St. Louis--not further scarring it.

Friday, April 3, 2009

Downtown West: Manifest Destiny?

Downtown West, bordered by Cole on the north, Tucker/12th on the east, Chouteau on the south, and Jefferson on the west, is quite simply one of St. Louis's most exciting and potential-laden neighborhoods.

First of all, it's worth noting that a portion of the neighborhood is already rather hot. The focal blocks of the Loft District are the 1200-1400 blocks where the streetscape underwent major surgery a fews years back (Check out some delicious before and after shots at Built St. Louis's Wash Ave blow out.). While some lament the loss of the gritty urban district that existed before the Downtown St. Louis Partnership targeted this area of hulking, empty, early 20th century garment manufacturing buildings, most realize now that the Loft District is a(n increasingly) lively urban neighborhood that any downtown should have.

But it goes beyond a smattering of buildings on one street. The list of amenities and landmarks in the neighborhood is staggering. Moreover, Downtown West is perhaps the best example of civic and planning experimentation in the city, with nearly all trends in planning realized, from the City Beautiful Movement around the turn of the last century to the "SoHo Syndrome" at the turn of the recent century.


First, you have the beginnings of the never-fully-realized St. Louis Civic Complex dreamed up by City Beautiful adherents at the turn of the century. This movement, which Chicago's 1893 Columbian Exposition's magnificent "White City" is often credited with starting, called for monumental public buildings to be arrayed along large, radial boulevards whose very prominence and order would become an analogy for the city at large. These were meant to be uncontested civic gathering grounds, where a circa-1900 urban monster like St. Louis could find some organization and constancy amidst constant change and chaos.


From Downtown West

This was the Civic League's 1907 Plan to organize the chaotic St. Louis waterfront. I couldn't find the image of their Civic Center proposal between 12th and 14th, Clark and Chestnut.

Therefore, it's not just City Hall. St. Louis's most attractive "skyscraper"--the Civil Courts building, technically in downtown proper--was then built diagonally from City Hall. But in Downtown West itself, you also have the Municipal Courts Building (presently vacant), the Kiel Opera House (also vacant, but with plans to reopen), the Soldier's Memorial, and the Public Library's Cass Gilbert-designed Neoclassical masterpiece.


The buildings therefore came; the huge paved boulevard/public plaza where pedestrians would stagger in admiration for the civic spirit's physical embodiment never did truly arrive. At least not yet.


Earlier in its history, Downtown West was both the entrymarker for hundreds of thousands arriving at the landmark Union Station and, a little farther back, a private place (Lucas Place) for the wealthiest St. Louisans beginning their inexorable westward movement out of the growing city. Luckily, Union Station survives and is as beautiful as ever. It is yet another demonstrator of a bygone planning movement--the festival marketplace craze of the 1980s. After the Rouse Company put Boston's Faneuil Hall back on the map as a place of shops, restaurants, and nightlife, cities turned to their neglected, once-magnificent public spaces and emulated the proven idea that they could be revived as urban "malls" with a dash of culture and a grandiose setting that trumped any enclosed, boxy, 1980s mall.


Lucas Place's low rise, upscale residential setting is not entirely lost either. The Campbell House Museum at 1508 Locust (once Lucas) is not only a nice example of Civil War-era St. Louis architecture but, inside, contains a history of the otherwise destroyed Lucas Place neighborhood.

From Downtown West

Lucas Place from the 1875 Compton and Dry Atlas. Source.

From Downtown West

All that's left of Lucas Place. Image Source.

It was probably the modern era (1945-75) that changed Downtown West the most. Interstate 64 sliced through the Mill Creek Valley, only exacerbating a historic disconnect between downtown and south St. Louis. It took with it dozens of blocks of residential housing dating to before the Civil War, starting at Union Station and extending to Grand, eventually. Soon, someone developed the grand idea of connecting I-64 and I-70 at 22nd Street, creating the never-realized 22nd Street Parkway. MODOT, luckily, seems interested redeveloping the interchange so that this gaping hole can be filled and urbanism can perhaps be reestablished. Urban Renewal was not limited to Mill Creek Valley. A series of blocks between Pine and Chestnut was razed for the Plaza Square development, leaving only a historic church unscathed. Today, the once colorful modernist complex has been recognized as part of the city's history and is listed on the National Register. One of the buildings has even been restored to the original, striped design and is marketed as City Blu Spaces. I'll give you a couple guesses as to which color was reintroduced.

Still, the 1980s, with the Gateway Mall, and the 1990s, with Metrolink both introduced a new character to Downtown West as well. Metrolink stops in the neighborhood twice; once at the Civic Center and once again at Union Station.

SoHo Syndrome--a term created by Roberta Brandes Gratz, to my knowledge--is a strategy used by cities to renovate empty manufacturing buildings and turn them into lofts for artists and other creative types in a "back to the city" movement that generally started in the 1980s. She calls it a "syndrome" because, she says, often cities don't understand how to integrate these fledgling SoHos into the larger urban fabric, and the result is contrived. New York's "South of Houston" area (that's House-ton, by the way) started its revival in the 1970s and did inspire countless imitators trying to present a positive image of the industrial city amidst decades of decline. Some succeeded. Overall, I would say St. Louis's Washington Avenue is one of them, but, starting in the late 1990s, it was late to jump on the bandwagon. One of the best outposts of the District prior to its renovation was the incomparable City Museum--a fantasyland developed by Bob Cassilly in the early 1990s.


More recently, SoHo Syndrome seems to be growing less a syndrome and more that organic revival that Roberta Gratz admired. Prior to the downturn, Downtown West was, compared to its recent past, booming. Locust became a two-way street from Jefferson to 14th, the library planned a jazzy expansion, Harmon Mosley announced an independent St. Louis Cinemas movie theater for a renovated Jefferson Arms (now canceled?), Loft District residents took to cleaning up long neglected Lucas Park (referred to derisively by some as "Bum Park"), Crepes in the City moved out of the Washington Ave. Post to new digs on St. Charles St. flanking the park, the Skyhouse development was announced for 14th and Washington (it's supposed to be an office tower now...), the Lucas Avenue Industrial National Register District was approved (and since expanded), the Tudor development came online along with a redesigned streetscape, several other Downtown West loft buildings were developed, a new multi-modal transit center is now open (replacing the "Amshack" disgrace), etc. Perhaps most exciting of all was the announcement of the Chouteau's Lake and Greenway project, which would create a series of lakes and pathyways over the current railway junctions (the old Mill Creek watershed). All of this is in addition to some of the Downtown West businesses that make and have made it such a dynamic neighborhood: the Schlafly Tap Room, the Tin Can, Syberg's, and formerly Everest Cafe (now in the Grove). Look for several new tenants in the Tudor Building.


So what's next for this neighborhood?


Filling in the gaps, of course. Here are a couple highlights as to how the neighborhood could continue to grow and what its priorities are (especially when this sad economy improves):


1) Redevelop the St. Mary's Infirmary (1500 block of Papin).

From Downtown West

Source: Built St. Louis

While redevelopment costs would be huge, this large building could be a premiere charter school (or a collection of several different charter schools). It's centrally located, beautiful, and is already formatted as an institutional building. Plus, if Chouteau's Lake becomes a reality, this will be an even more prime location. I-64 is a huge, double-stacked barrier, but putting the threatened St. Mary's Infirmary back online could really start the sea change that's needed.


2) Develop on the 22nd Street Exhange; Eminent Domain lots to the north of it; re-develop the area to the west of Union Station.


This area is a semi-industrial wasteland that is disconnected from the rest of the city. It once was an urban neighborhood. There is no reason it cannot be again. This would seem to me a great space to premiere the city's new stock of Class A Office Space and later residential units. As far as residential, it might be advisable to build some nice rowhouses, since human scale neighborhoods are entirely missing from downtown St. Louis and since, well, that's what used to be there!

From Downtown West

This is the 22nd Street Interchange, from MODOT's website. Note that "north" is actually west here, with Jefferson Avenue at the top of the photograph.

From Downtown West

This is the site just west of Union Station--a parking lot. Not an attractive entrance to one of St. Louis's most prominent landmarks.

From Downtown West

Here's another view, farther north, towards Market. Maggie O'Brien's is visible at right. ("North" here is actually west).

From Downtown West

The worst offender is this series of blocks just north of the 22nd Street Interchange, which includes a truck lot and a whole lot of nothing on top of that.

From Downtown West

A simple re-imagining would restore a street grid in the area and open up acres and acres for small scale, human scale development. These small blocks would be excellent for corner buildings. It has been said, by Jane Jacobs and others, that urbanism is almost directly related to the number of small blocks and, therefore, street corners you have in your city. I could see 4-story rowhouses with commercial storefronts facing Market Street, and a smattering of everything in one of the new 21 city blocks created from this current monstrosity. Like I said, bring on the Class A Office Space!

3) 1632 Delmar (and the rest of Delmar)


File this under "small scale", but this commercial building is simply a gem and should be a focal point in enhancing interest in redevelopment along Delmar itself. There is still a considerable lot to work with along this stretch.

Here is a Google Streetview:


View Larger Map

There are plenty of vacant lots on Delmar, but also a lot of surviving commercial and light industrial/manufacturing buildings that are prime for development and redevelopment.

Downtown West should be St. Louis's answer to Memphis' South End, which is just south of their traditional downtown and is of a very similar character. The difference: the South End is building some very cool, contemporary stuff, while Downtown St. Louis hasn't started the infill process yet. Check out some of their stock by clicking here or viewing the captures below:

From Downtown West


From Downtown West




Above is a new condo development in the South End.


This photo shows a historic South End streetscape.

Downtown West will become the premiere neighborhood of St. Louis--more so than it has been thus far, even--if our leaders develop a vision of this large area as a cohesive neighborhood. It offers that gritty industrial aesthetic our city is so well known for already, but it could be a fully-knit neighborhood of contrasts between old warehouses and manufacturing buildings on one hand, and sleek new mid-rise office buildings and residential units as well on the other.



Monday, June 9, 2008

Tucker Boulevard should be, could be an urban street...

..if not for things like this:



That's the rendering for the new parking garage at Tucker and Clark. Even the announcement that the garage will feature LED lighting (changed periodically for sports and civic events) is simply not enough to distract from the simple fact that downtown needs no new parking provisions at all.

It should be clear enough by now that the more "convenient" (read: plentiful, cheap) parking is in an urban area, the less urban that area becomes. Visitors to and even residents of downtown may find it easier to drive everywhere and walk the least amount possible. All of the potential points between point A and point B are missed, leading to squandered opportunities for urbanism.

I saw the pared down plans for the Tucker facade of Park Pacific on Downtown St. Louis Business, and I am not impressed either. Another parking garage to front Tucker?

Already, the two bare minimalist high rises on Tucker just north of Chestnut and Pine are perhaps the most hideous high profile buildings anywhere--this coming from a supporter of mid-century modernism, mind you.

Tucker is so wide it appears to spar with Market Street for the title of preeminent downtown boulevard. It is tempting to say that the parking garage is better than the surface lot, but the surface lot is much more likely to be turned into offices, residential, clean industry, shops, or all of the above in the farther future.

We do not need two extra parking garages on this nearly (urbanistically speaking) dead street. It has the potential to be a real showcase street--a moniker New Orleans' similarly wide Canal Street is fighting valiantly to attain once more.

Monday, April 7, 2008

Grand Avenue Bridge

I don't know your thoughts, but I think this photo rather singlehandedly points to all that was wrong with urban renewal.

The Grand Avenue Bridge was a 700 foot long suspension bridge over the railroad tracks of Mill Creek Valley. It was built in 1891.



And another, this time in profile:



This is an oh-so-flattering profile shot of today's bridge, constructed in 1961 for the Mill Creek Valley Urban Renewal that also claimed a neighborhood of some 20,000 people and innumerable and astounding examples of never-to-be-replaced St. Louis architecture.



Imagine what a dramatic entry to Midtown that bridge must have provided! All plans for redeveloping the bridge and environs for the Chouteau Lake project should consider a new, more pedestrian friendly and aesthetically pleasing bridge.

Head on over to Bridge Hunter for some more examples of bridges both present and lost. Unfortunately, in the latter category, this steel bridge on 21st Street over the Mill Creek tracks was demolished as well, this time in 1984, having been built in 1892.



The enshrinement of the automobile in public policy was the culprit for such redesigns as the Grand Avenue Bridge, which resembles a minimalist highway overpass and is also, sadly, one of the busiest stops along the Metrolink system, where pedestrians are forced to use it at their own discomfort and peril.

Who knows why the 21st Street bridge was sacrificed? Deferred maintenance? Redundancy? Whichever way, these beautiful bridges should still be here today.

In the future, it would behoove us to ask ourselves as a city if what we allow to be built in such a highly trafficked space will ever be worthy of a postcard (like the Grand Avenue Bridge). If not, why build it?

I know one major candidate that failed the postcard test miserably: the Poplar, one of the most underwhelming linkages to a major city that you'll ever find.



[Edit (4/8/08): Must have killed Bridge Hunter's bandwidth or something...the pictures aren't working. I replaced the ones I could with some suitable subs.]

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Ambivalence



Another photo from the Mercantile Library's Globe Democrat collection. Looking east on Chestnut Street from 17th.

This neighborhood was once called Lucas Place (or, at least, was one street over from said neighborhood).

To see the demolitions of these rowhouses in downtown is painful, but I am convinced that the resulting Plaza Square Apartments (for which this site is being prepped--circa late 1950s) constitute a sound replacement. Built in 1961, Plaza Square is the first site in St. Louis (to my knowledge) to be listed on the National Register of Historic Places prior to its 50th birthday (it was placed on the list summer of last year).

This is a meandering post, reflecting my ambivalence about what I see--the potential of those buildings that was lost on those that financed this project and yet my affinity for Plaza Square.

I suppose I'm happy we have something to remind us of the good old days of Lucas Place, one of the first "suburbs" of St. Louis and truly the first leg of the westward march of the middle and upper class of our city.



The Campbell House (c. 1851) at 1508 Locust is now a museum, some of which is dedicated to Lucas Place itself.



Sometimes diminishing contexts give way to a new and equally good context. Unfortunately, as of late, this is becoming ever so rare in our fine city.

Ahem...

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