tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-211284372024-03-07T16:46:03.154-06:00Built St. Louis - Web LogA companion to the <A HREF="http://www.builtstlouis.net/">Built St. Louis</A> web site, with comments on the urbanism and architecture of St. Louis and elsewhere.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.comBlogger281125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-46038242582459911462014-04-20T08:01:00.000-05:002014-04-20T08:21:20.963-05:00An open letter to the St. Louis County Library District Board of Trustees<a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/13925381286" title="IMG_0803a by Robert Powers, on Flickr"><img src="https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3807/13925381286_94a82352ee.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="IMG_0803a"></a>
<p>To the Board of Trustees of the St. Louis County Library:</p>
<p>At this moment, the Board of Trustees holds in its hand a rare and remarkable opportunity. With one simple decision, the Board has the chance to:</p>
<uL>
<li>Serve its patrons above and beyond their expectations</li>
<li>Make wise and efficient use of taxpayer dollars</li>
<li>Celebrate the history of St. Louis County</li>
<li>Conserve a significant and beautiful work of art</li>
<li>Practice innovative, creative governance</li>
<li>Leave a lasting legacy</li></ul>
<p>All this and more will be accomplished in a single stroke – if the Board will simply choose to let the original William and Clark library building remain standing.</p>
<a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/13925372921" title="IMG_0464a by Robert Powers, on Flickr"><img src="https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7306/13925372921_65b108bc21.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="IMG_0464a"></a>
<p>Save the building, and a smaller, much less expensive addition can be added to it – saving taxpayer money, and keeping tons of material out of landfills.</p>
<p>Save the building, and future County residents will have a direct link to the past, through a building that their parents and grandparents used when they were children.</p>
<p>Save the building, and its stained glass will remain in its original, intended context – and will continue to delight generations of County residents.</p>
<p>Save the building, and library patrons will continue to have access to a delightful, whimsical, unique space – and it will serve their needs better than ever.</p>
<p>I urge the Board not to destroy this building, but to shepherd it through its middle years, update it and make it better than ever. Do not fall victim to the notion that age alone is reason enough to demolish a building – a community cannot gain the historic legacy of a hundred year old building if everything is knocked down when it turns fifty. Renew and update Lewis and Clark, so that in another 50 years, it will still be proudly serving its patrons, a historical legacy and landmark for the County. </p>
<a href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/13925564946" title="IMG_0469a by Robert Powers, on Flickr"><img src="https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7381/13925564946_b7fc3c6055.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="IMG_0469a"></a>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-4955792860697316722014-02-16T21:39:00.000-06:002014-02-16T21:39:00.476-06:00Looking for Technical Help Moving Forward<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
Are you a web content management guru (or guru-in-training)? Ever wanted to lend a hand to Built St. Louis, but didn't know how? Here's your chance!<br />
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Built St. Louis has always been a hand-tagged site - that means that I typed in, or copy-pasted, every scrap of HTML and CSS on every page. When I brought the site into its current format back in 1999, that was the only way to do it. It wasn't such a problem back then. Now, however, with approximately 1,200 pages and several dozen tours, it has become extremely unwieldy, to the point that it inhibits my ability to add new content. I need to focus on writing, research, grammar and spelling, dates and names, selecting and touching up photographs - not making sure that baden-north03.html links to baden-church02.html in all the right places.<br />
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I have a strong vision of how the site should work, but I lack the technical know-how to implement any of it, or handle the migration of a huge number of manually built pages to a standardized system. I need someone who knows about Content Management Systems to help me get things set up, or at least advise on how I can get going down the right road.<br />
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If you or someone you know is willing to lend some technical help in the name of the city's architecture, please contact me at builtstlouis@gmail.com. I'll see to it that any and all assistance is recognized on the site, and I will be hugely grateful.</div>
Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-57478511629885750342012-12-27T12:33:00.000-06:002012-12-27T22:05:48.194-06:00Wash U learns from recent mistakes<div dir="ltr" style="text-align: left;" trbidi="on">
I can't say how much protest and outcry there was 6 years ago when Washington University <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/princehall02.html">demolished Prince Hall</a>. The small sampling of comments I saw ranged from my own howls of protest, to some general agreement and "isn't it a shame" head-nodding, to the also-typical endorsement of the status quo - "Well, it was a hard building to work with" and "Oh, you can't save every building."<br />
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Maybe, though, just maybe, Wash U heard some of those protests, and listened, and learned.<br />
<br />
<div style="text-align: -webkit-auto;">
The recently completed renovation of Umrath Hall has taken a building of similar size, scale and<span style="font-family: .HelveticaNeueUI;"><span style="-webkit-composition-fill-color: rgba(175, 192, 227, 0.230469); -webkit-composition-frame-color: rgba(77, 128, 180, 0.230469); -webkit-tap-highlight-color: rgba(26, 26, 26, 0.292969); font-size: 15px; line-height: 19px; white-space: nowrap;"> difficulty</span></span>, and radically transformed its interior into a modern academic setting, while leaving its venerable stone exterior untouched. The solution was both extreme and extremely creative - take off the roof, remove the entire interior, and rebuild it from the inside out.
Umrath was built as a dormitory, and like its demolished contemporary Prince Hall, it was divided by load-bearing walls into a warren of small spaces and non-communicating interiors. The gut rehab removed those walls to allow an all-new interior to go in with modern hallways and larger spaces.</div>
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It is the kind of respectful, thoughtful, and inventive project that should have happened at Prince Hall. But Prince was less prominently visible - Umrath forms a busy and popular plaza space along with the 1970s Mallincrodt Hall and also has a striking relationship with Graham Chapel. Prince was also less aethetically striking - Umrath has a prominent central archway and tower that makes it one of the most charming buildings on campus. Prince had no historic interiors, while Umrath had the original men's dining hall, a flexible space with beautiful wood trim and carvings. And Prince had something of a reputation as the red-headed stepchild of campus, the little building that nobody wanted. Booted from department to department over the decades, saddled with a misguided sunken plaza from the 1950s, it didn't inspire enough love or loyalty to save it from the wrecking ball.<br />
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Whenever the University touts the amazing collection of circa-1900 buildings that forms the core of the main campus, they must forever acknowledge a permanent black mark on the list. Perhaps that mark because a lesson that helped push Umrath towards renovation instead of replacement - but it remains a heavy price to have paid.<br />
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Read a full account of the Umrath renovation <a href="http://magazine.wustl.edu/2012/december/Pages/iconic-buildings-adaptive-reuse.aspx">here</a>.</div>
Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-28482319325084794472012-03-11T12:26:00.004-05:002012-03-11T12:39:59.214-05:00Mid-Century Madness<img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/mod/images/alton-savings-and-loan01.jpg"><br /><br />My pace of updates on BuiltStLouis may have slowed, but I've been working furiously behind the scenes - cleaning up, organizing, tying together related pages, updating and reformatting old pages, and adding lots of new material. There have been some updates I simply haven't bothered to post on the front page. With about 1,500 pages total on the site, all manually created and maintained, it can take time to get things done.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/mod/images/citizens-bank-alton10.jpg"><br /><br /><a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/arch.html">Today's update</a> - with a batch of fresh Mid-Century architecture - is only a preview of a bigger update to the MidCentury tour, which I hope to have up in April.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/mod/images/sam-bassett-office11.jpg"><br /><br />And did I mention I reworked the pages for the late, lamented <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/century00.html">Century Building</a>?<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/images/century30.jpg"><br /><br />'Cause I did. Rescanned every image, added some additional pics from the archives, and added a shot or two of the reviled Garage Mahal.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-60040160119384537432011-08-07T22:51:00.002-05:002011-08-07T23:18:22.893-05:00The in-between zoneWithin the city limits of St. Louis, there are two skylines - the big one downtown, and a small one in Midtown. Between the two lies an area that tends to be overlooked. Thinned out by urban disinvestment, full of scattered vacant lots, it nevertheless retains a large number of important and interesting buildings.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/images/olive-street19.jpg"><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/images/washington-avenue142.jpg"><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/images/downtown-west27.jpg"><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/images/midtown-deco-police02.jpg"><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/images/midtown-east-808.jpg"><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/images/midtown-east-994.jpg"><br /><br />I've arbitrarily split this zone into two areas, called one <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/downtown-west/index.html">Downtown West</a> and the other <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/index.html">Midtown East</a>, and documented almost everything of note within them. These twin tours have been in the making for a good six months or so; I started photographing almost two years ago. Hopefully the results are worth it.<br /><br />Exploring these areas has been an exciting treasure hunt. I've visited a half dozen churches (and met several pastors and congregants), found several <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/midtown-east/2675-washington-avenue.html">MidCentury gems</a>, and finally taken a good look at iconic landmarks like the <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/downtown-west/butler-building01.html">Butler Brothers Building</a> and the <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/downtown-west/locust-street09.html">General American Life Building</a>. <br /><br />Perhaps the greatest find was a building that has been altered beyond recognition today - the spectacular <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/downtown-west/century-electric-company.html">Century Electric Company</a> building across from Union Station, a MidCentury building lost in the 1980s to a Post-Modern reskin. This was one of the earliest, largest and - in my opinon - most significant Modernist buildings in St. Louis; I remained surprised that it is not more widely known in preservation circles.<br /><br />This area abounds in National Register of Historic Places properties, which means a vast amount of information is available for many of the buildings. I've included short histories of the buildings on each page, with links to the much more detailed nomination forms immediately after.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/downtown-west/images/locust-street16.jpg"><br /><br /><a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/central-corridor/index.html">The new tours</a> incorporate a number of existing pages and are tied in with various other existing tours - you can either plow straight through or take detours to your heart's content. Either way, I hope you'll enjoy them and that they will compel you to spend some time on these fascinating and often-overlooked streets.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-23524197760893455372011-07-18T05:30:00.000-05:002011-07-18T05:30:01.780-05:00Midwest MidCentury fights<a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/5945040980/" title="save-our-midcentury by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6135/5945040980_e3e5802285.jpg" width="500" height="235" alt="save-our-midcentury"></a><br /><br />I'm duplicating this post across two blogs, because two parallel battles are being fought right now over MidCentury buildings in Chicago and St. Louis.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/5945011168/" title="Prentice by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6018/5945011168_d990c0a1f5.jpg" width="500" height="315" alt="Prentice"></a><br /><br />In Chicago, a well-publicized fight has been going on for many months over the fate of the Prentice Women's Hospital at Northwestern University Hospital's downtown campus. Prentice is a high-rise building by Bertram Goldberg, the same architect who developed the corn-cob Marina Towers on the Chicago river, and two other complexes in a similar idiom south of downtown. The building has been vacated by Northwestern Hospital, which originally expressed a desire to demolish it, though no plan for using the land has been developed.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/mod/images/midcentury-del-taco03.jpg"><br /><br />In St. Louis, Midtown's "flying saucer" building - originally a gas station, now a Del Taco fast food outlet - has been the center of a much swifter controversy, as the owner announced plans to demolish it and build a new retail building in its place. The St. Louis community immediately rose up in righteous grassroots wrath. Driven by an unholy alliance between MidCentury architectural preservationists and fans of Del Taco chain (a mainstay of late night food, particularly for students at nearby Saint Louis University), the issue has flared across local news and been debated at the level of the city council.<br /><br />Several interesting parallels stand between these buildings and their champions. Both are from the 1960s, built of concrete, and defined by dramatic cantilevers and round forms. And both lend themselves to diagramatic simplification in the form of the line drawings up above - a simple, clear expression of the buildings' big ideas, a clear illustration of the dramatic simplicity that defines them. Those two drawings summarize one of the big trends in Modernism - simple, bold design moves, with dramatic but carefully considered lines and proportions. <br /><br />Such representations are eminently useful in getting people to see past the more transitory elements of the buildings. A number of St. Louis residents have commented about bad memories or experiences with Del Taco, and called for demolition - as if the building itself were responsible for the business within it. Likewise, Prentice has the maintenance issues one would expect of any building that's approaching 50 years old, with stained and spalling concrete in need of cleaning and repair.<br /><br />Finally, both buildings are fine examples of the growing need for Midcentury awareness and preservation. Nobody is building these things anymore - once they're gone, they're gone forever.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-61571388777724255272011-03-14T21:35:00.003-05:002011-03-14T21:44:56.923-05:00Central High deteriorationI had not been by the old Central High School for a while, but after photographing the northwest corner of the JeffVanderLou neighborhood - home to several lovely blocks lined with dozens of Craftsman style homes - I paid a visit to the old school. Last time I was by, back around 2002, the school was in fine shape. So I was shocked to see the condition it's in today.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/schools/images/yeatman-high-school08.jpg"><br /><br />The copper domes have been stolen for scrap metal, and most of the windows are missing. Some of the windows might be tornado damage from January, but most of it has to be deliberate work of vandals or thieves - tornadoes don't selectively remove the frames on one floor and just the glass on another floor. <br /><br />Vandals have also done a number on the beautiful formal approach to the school, smashing the balustrade railings and even the limestone globes.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/schools/images/yeatman-high-school26.jpg"><br /><br />The School Board of St. Louis still owns the abandoned building, and has failed to board it up properly. Boarding up is an imperative first step to secure the building and protect this significant city landmark.<br /><br />More info and photos on the <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/schools/ittner08.html">Yeatman / Central High School page</a>.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-82904802205046278282011-01-15T22:41:00.002-06:002011-01-15T23:11:23.757-06:00Industrial-strength updatesAs promised, I've been working like a madman on Built St. Louis. <br /><br />I've added a ton of little updates all over the place - spinning major buildings off onto their own pages, combing through a two-year backlog of visits and adding newer photos, getting rid of those annoying thumbnail images so that you don't have to click a million times to see all the photos. There's way too many updates to list on the front page; you'll find them all over the place.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/industrial/images/merchants-bridge01.jpg"><br /><br />With the online world having converged to a blog-focused mindset, and a vast crop of bloggers having taken up the mantle of sharing current events from St. Louis, I've come to see Built St. Louis as less of a current news site and more of a book - a slow, long-term project, rather than a constantly-updating fountain of quickly-forgotten news. I try to write from a more long-term perspective now, so that if I don't get back to update a page for a couple of years, it won't sound ridiculously dated in the meantime. <br /><br />Example: in updating the <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/eads01.html">Eads Bridge</a> page, I realized that some of the text about "current" conditions had not been changed in almost ten years! Equally startling was the realization that the time period of my own observations, from when I first encountered that structure up to the present, now encompassed a whole historical period of the bridge's life - its existence without an upper deck - that has long since passed. (Yes, I'm really obsessed with bridges right now. <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/industrial/mississippi-river-bridges.html">Can you tell?</a>)<br /><br />I also look over some of my earlier writings and conclude that, on occasion, I could stand to tone down some of my vehement enthusiasm. This site began as nothing more than my own observations - but time, technology, reading and experience have granted me access to plenty of information about the city's history, so there's relatively little excuse for writing everything in the first person. I'm trying put a clearer and more structured separation between facts, observations, and opinions. I still have strong opinions, and I still intend to use the site as a platform to voice them, but I want it to be useful as a reference source as well.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/industrial/images/venice-power-plant01.jpg"><br /><br />I'm slowly moving everything toward integrated navigation, where a tour of a geographic area will also scoop up buildings from other tours that are in that area. So when you tour, say, The Hill (not up yet, but like many others, it's coming) you'll also come across pages from the Historic Churches tour, and the Ittner/Milligan schools tour, etc. etc. etc. So far, you can best see this on <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/northbroadway01.html">The Eastern Edge tour</a>, which combines the old "Forgotten Houses" tour with several of the Industrial City pages and a few new ones.<br /><br />This creates some <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/industrial/mckinley-bridge.html">navigational chaos</a> at times, but it avoids duplicate pages, it ties everything together nicely, and most importantly, it makes future updates a lot easier.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/industrial/images/chain-of-rocks-bridge24.jpg"><br /><br />But you don't care about any of that, right? You care about pretty pictures of amazing buildings.<br /><br />Well, I recently got an email from a site visitor who provides exactly that, in spades, on the SkyscraperPage.com forums. Go check 'em out and be reminded why St. Louis is so fantastic.<br /><br /><a href="http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=186909">Part 1</a><br /><a href="http://forum.skyscraperpage.com/showthread.php?t=186911">Part 2</a>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-71559383508722928672010-12-07T23:15:00.004-06:002010-12-07T23:42:55.317-06:00Still aroundNo, St. Louis, I haven't forgotten about you.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/5243307448/" title="IMG_2187 by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5129/5243307448_0bcbc8b0d4.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="IMG_2187" /></a><br /><br />I had a spectacular visit to the city over Thanksgiving weekend, my second trip into town this year. The sun shone for three solid, beautiful days, and I saw many spectacular sights, old and new.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/5243306576/" title="IMG_1785 by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5201/5243306576_4685008d4a.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="IMG_1785" /></a><br /><br />I'm currently working on some revisions and fixes to the site's existing pages, unifying the formatting, fixing broken code, and setting up a standardized navigation scheme. It's a big job and won't be finished any time soon, but stay tuned. In the meantime, here's <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/sets/72157625428401509/">a bunch of random photos</a> from two weekends ago.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/5243305090/" title="IMG_1221 by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5285/5243305090_6538e002fd.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="IMG_1221" /></a>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-30223620547203043902010-05-05T22:40:00.002-05:002010-05-05T22:45:16.884-05:00Syndicate Trust Building, visited and re-visitedI visited the model apartment at the Syndicate Trust recently. Like most of downtown's new lofts, it's a pretty slick, clean, modern space, well-lit and elegant.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/images/syndicate-trust105.jpg"><br /><br />It offers some pretty impressive views of downtown, too. Check out the views, the renovation, and a bevy of new and re-scanned photographs at <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/syndicate1.html">Built St. Louis</a>.<br /><br />It's always interesting to rework a project page I haven't touched in a while. In this case, I'm reminded of how hopeless and frustrating the Syndicate's situation seemed in the late 1990s. The building repeatedly came within weeks of demolition, and while we lost the Century, the Syndicate survives. Today it's nearly everything that's right about downtown St. Louis - beautiful architecture, mixed use, a bright future. <br /><br />They just need to fill up that ground-floor retail space, and we'll be all set.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-79861442322481480472010-04-27T22:29:00.002-05:002010-04-27T22:33:22.635-05:00I can hear the wild wind blowin'Myself and my two intrepid companions were inside the Calvary Cemetery mausoleum Saturday afternoon, when the eerie silence and occasional rumbles of thunder were broken by the creepy wail of the tornado sirens. The mausoleum was closing down for the day, so we had to leave. We got in the car, drove about 30 yards, and the heavens opened up. We stopped outside the cemetery gate and waited out one of the most intense storms I've ever seen.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/4558916819/" title="4:40pm, W. Florissant Avenue by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4062/4558916819_74bc5b8daf.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="4:40pm, W. Florissant Avenue" /></a><br /><br />90 minutes later, we were in Old North, enjoying some beautiful sunshine.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/4559546604/" title="6:10pm, Old North St. Louis by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3630/4559546604_7bbd2ac2d6.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="6:10pm, Old North St. Louis" /></a><br /><br />Both were startling contrasts with what was by and large a gray and dreary weekend.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-32186167958976452422010-02-28T14:59:00.003-06:002010-03-09T19:28:23.050-06:00Arch Grounds - Too much wasted spaceIt's been a good long while since I got up on my soapbox, but talk about the Gateway Arch grounds always gets me good and riled up.<br /><br />The <a href="http://www.cityarchrivercompetition.org/">Framing a Modern Masterpiece</a> limited competition has selected 9 teams to redesign the surroundings of the Arch grounds and reconsider ways of "integrating open space into a city’s urban fabric".<br /><br />Thing is, the problem is not just one of integration, but also of proportion. There's too much "open space" and not enough "urban fabric". This is the basic problem and if it is not directly and boldly addressed, nothing of substance will be accomplished.<br /><br />Solving that problem requires doing something utterly blasphemous: getting rid of green space, and I mean <i>lots</i> of it. In the Arch's case, that means the gigantic swaths of unused land - including the reflecting ponds that sit to the north and south of the walkways approaching the Arch. These are utter dead zones - uncrossable, unused, unnoticed, and speaking for myself at least, unloved. They are photo opportunities, but not part of the city.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/4396354154/" title="Aerial view of the Arch grounds by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2704/4396354154_f42044d6b2.jpg" width="500" height="399" alt="Aerial view of the Arch grounds" /></a><br /><br />The reflecting pond shown here is ringed by distant walkways. I would be thrilled to see everything inside those walkways filled in, the street grid extended into them, and new buildings in the 2- to 6-story range constructed on them. A curving line of modern facades could front the walkways approaching the Arch, bringing the life of the city and the destination power of the Arch together, framing the Arch as <i>part of the city</i> rather than an abstract and distant sculpture. Hold the buildings back a few feet, enough to preserve the line of trees on the north and south walkways, include retail and restaurants and living space, and you've created a streetscape as lovely as any in the city, while answering the inevitable question of tourists walking out after visiting the top of the Arch: okay, what do we do now?<br /><br />I would urge the competition teams not to get lost in grand visions of cutting-edge design philosophies, abstract notions, and isolated instances of avant guard design. St. Louis is a gridded 19th Century American city. This is a simple, basic concept that has worked for two hundred years, and it is what will work best here, too. The entire problem is that the grid was violated, desecrated, and ignored. This is not a new problem, requiring radical and untried visionary solutions; it has been confronted and solved many, many times in recent decades.<br /><br />The mission is to bring the city and the Arch grounds together. This is not an abstract or philosophical mission. There is no reason not to be quite literal about it - in fact, anything else will result in failure. The Arch isn't going anywhere, so bring the city to the Arch.<br /><br />The Arch grounds stole away <i>forty square blocks</i> of downtown St. Louis. It's time to give some of it back.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com23tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-869768820418788012010-02-25T07:34:00.002-06:002010-03-09T19:35:02.709-06:00A different face of North BroadwayEveryone knows the old tenement by I-70. Its wide facade, marked with fire escape balconies and a regular grid of windows, is one of the highway's most distinctive sights. Local graffiti artist Ed Boxx made it his canvas for a time. And every time I passed it, I thought to myself, I have <i>got</i> to photograph that place some time.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/northbroadway/northbroadway-chris-102.jpg"><br /><i>Image courtesy of Chris Naffziger</i><br /><br />That thought eventually combined with an exploratory adventure in the summer of 2006, when I was first introduced to the idea that, among all the heavy and light industry east of the highway, there were actually <i>houses</i>. Whole or fragmentary neighborhoods once stood on this land. Michael Allen once observed that today's "Old North" neighborhood doesn't even include the original North St. Louis town boundaries to the east. Today, abandoned and recycled houses could be found left and right, in a long thin swath from Old North to Baden... but they were disappearing fast, like this batch from that 2006 trip.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/northbroadway/northbroadway410.jpg"><br /><br />This was a fascinating notion. Did people still live there? (Yes, but not many.) What kind of environment are they in? (Isolated.) What would happen to the surviving houses? (Abandonment, followed by demolition.) Here was a conundrum - not many people would be willing to move into such environments, totally surrounded by industrial uses, which means that as each current occupant gives up the ghost and moves on, the houses tend to fall into abandonment. And yet, people do still live in a few of these places. Others have been converted to businesses, or even assimilated by the industrial concerns that devoured their neighborhood.<br /><br />I still have some areas left to document fully, but the <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/northbroadway01.html">Forgotten Houses of North Broadway</a> shows the bulk of these isolated survivors, fragments of an earlier era for the St. Louis riverfront.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-86047523961010013532009-12-07T20:38:00.002-06:002010-03-09T19:35:02.712-06:00Dissecting SoulardWhere ever I live, I pride myself on <i>not</i> being that guy who, when his friends come from out of town, is seeing the sights for the first time right along with them. Whatever the big attractions are, I become familiar with them in short order. By the time visitors arrive, I can tell them all about whatever they want to know.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/southside/images/soulard/soulard429.jpg"><br /><br />Soulard is certainly one of St. Louis's top attractions, and my first photographs there are now over a decade old. I've visited it many times. So it was a surprise to find how little I've photographed there. However much you wander across a neighborhood, you don't find out what you have and haven't documented until you try to put it on a map. <br /><br />On reflection, in my endless quest to find the city's more exotic, far flung, forgotten, neglected, and endangered corners, I have always regarded photo expeditions to Soulard as a guilty pleasure, an overdone cliche, something to be avoided in favor of seeking out places and buildings that might not be there tomorrow. In spite of its near-demise after World War II, Soulard today seems like a safe bet to stay put. So I've never put in the serious hours there needed to truly document it and capture its essence.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.builtstlouis.net/southside/images/soulard/soulard413.jpg"><br /><br />Nonetheless, I have gotten many of the highlights and landmarks, and present them on a humble <a href="http://www.builtstlouis.net/southside/soulard01.html">tour of Soulard</a>. This will be the first of many south St. Louis tours, and some day it will be more extensive. It doesn't fully capture the charm of this amazing neighborhood, but it's a start.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-61473088300068576862009-08-24T09:21:00.002-05:002009-08-24T10:18:55.812-05:00This and thatEncountered this article while cleaning out email:<br /><br />* "<A HREF="http://suburbanjournals.stltoday.com/articles/2009/03/25/south/news/0325ssj-savingstl00.txt">Saving a Sense of the City</a>" - Michael Allen shows a sampling of endangered south side buildings<br /><br />In other news, the San Luis is coming down. I was in town in July and wistfully snapped a few photos of it before the wreckers could get too far along. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3767123634/" title="Last days of the San Luis by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2656/3767123634_cbdc87521b.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Last days of the San Luis" /></a><br /><br />The fight to assert preservationist rights in St. Louis, however, is still going on:<br />* "<A HREF="http://ecoabsence.blogspot.com/2009/08/why-friends-of-san-luis-continue.html">Why the Friends of the San Luis Continue</a>"Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-21771002808815568872009-06-04T12:52:00.003-05:002009-06-04T13:02:33.790-05:00Death of a lensMy basic workhorse camera lens has reached the end of a long, painful death. It covered the medium-to-wide range (18-55mm), and it is damn difficult to photograph city buildings without it!<br /><br />If anyone out there has a spare wide-angle lens for a Canon Digital Rebel they need to get rid of, or knows where I can pick up one on the cheap, drop me a line. <A HREF="http://www.usa.canon.com/consumer/controller?act=ModelInfoAct&fcategoryid=149&modelid=10512">This</A> was the style of my old one, but anything that covers the 18mm zoom region would be swell.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-58370061362344652622009-05-25T21:24:00.005-05:002010-03-09T19:28:23.053-06:00Of overwhelming scaleMichael Allen has posted photos of <A HREF="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jerkinhead/sets/72157618714779481/">McEagle's May 21st presentation slides</a> at Flickr. At last, the initial schemes are visible to the public.<br /><br />In general, the slides are fairly unrevealing. Several show the near north side as it currently stands (minus the last year or so's worth of demolitions.) There are a few abstract diagrams showing things like the project area, proposed land uses and schematic building layouts. <br /><br />Particularly frightening is <A HREF="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jerkinhead/3565262648/in/set-72157618714779481/">an acquisitions map</a> showing property that McKee has (or apparently thinks he can get via the city) in blue. It's an ocean of blue, dotted with some little white islands. What's it like to be living on one of those islands right now, watching the waters rise as they have for the last five years?<br /><br />There's not a whole lot to react to in the plan; all that can be seen are vague generalities. There is one big question to be asked, though: Why does it need to be so big?<br /><br />What about this plan requires such a vast acquisition? What kind of synergies are planned here that require this scale?<br /><br />The question is very important, because this land is in the city - an urban environment with all the complexities that entails. Anybody who's studied their Jane Jacobs -- or taken a stroll down a functioning urban street like Delmar Avenue or Cherokee Street -- knows that the best city environments are highly complex and largely organic. They grow and thrive much like a living creature. Small cells appear -- businesses, houses, apartment buildings. They divide, they grow, they endure, and each adds its complexity to the whole, creating something greater than the mere sum of its parts. These small parts are crafted at the scale of human beings, and they create lovely, pleasant, desirable places to live. Just as a complex ecology resists being wiped out by a catastrophe, so too is a complex city resistant to the vagaries of economy, fashion, and time.<br /><br />So why does this project need to be so huge? Why does it need to happen all at once? We need to ask such questions, because such a vast scale implies a monoculture, and it implies a broad brush, and it implies a non-human scale, and it implies sledgehammer solutions to problems that require a scalpel.<br /><br />In fact, it sounds a lot like old-style mid-century urban renewal -- the kind that wiped out big swaths of Soulard, that nearly claimed Lafayette Square, that obliterated the Mill Creek Valley, that gave us phenomenal successes like Darst-Webbe and Pruitt-Igoe. The kind we're still cleaning up from over fifty years later. <br /><br />To insist that redevelopment can only be done on a vast scale shows a profound lack of understanding of the nature of cities.<br /><br />Here's my hypothetical suggestion instead: start with Old North St. Louis, a neighborhood that's long been pulling itself up by the bootstraps. Take the 30 or so Blairmont-owned buildings in the neighborhood, and rehab them all. Sell some, rent some, do a mix of market-rate and income-restricted, whatever -- just get them occupied and looking healthy again. Thirty properties, figure maybe $50,000 apiece on average to get them up to snuff -- $1.5 million in initial investment. If I'm way off on my estimate, maybe it's $3 million -- somewhere in that ballpark.<br /><br />That's chump change to a fellow with McKee's pockets, but it would be a HUGE shot in the arm for a neighborhood the size of Old North. Thirty vacant properties, gone in a flash! If Paul McKee Jr. had done this three years ago, the locals would've carried him down the streets on their shoulders. And aside from the trust and good will that would've been built up, the neighborhood would be visibly stronger, that much more desirable, more attractive to other developers -- <br /><br />-- so much more, in fact, that you could then maybe start spreading the success across West Florissant, into St. Louis Place. Rehab another thirty houses between Florissant (a major barrier) and St. Louis Place Park (a desirable amenity lined with occupied houses). Suddenly eastern St. Louis Place is on its way to becoming as strongly entrenched as Old North.<br /><br />Phase 3? Well, now that you've reinforced your assets, then you can start to think a little bigger. There's a lot of vacant land in Old North - how 'bout some infill? How 'bout pushing west of the park? A big project out on the 22nd Street prairie would get a lot of support by this point.<br /><br />...and so on. If this type of plan had been started in 2003, we'd be through several grand ribbon cuttings by now.<br /><br />This is how cities -- not suburbs, not strip malls, not shopping malls, not <I>lifestyle centers</I>, but <I>cities</I> -- have grown for hundreds of years, and it is a pattern and a truth that we ignore at our own peril. Attempts to inflict massive change inevitably result in massive trauma. <br /><br />This doesn't take money ranging into the billions of dollars. This doesn't take five years of land acquisition. This doesn't take endlessly gargantuan juggling acts. This doesn't require monolithic land assets or totalitarian site control or eminent domain. <br /><br />It does, however, require understanding that a true and proper city is vastly complex, finely grained and multifaceted. Furthermore, it takes patience and care. Paul McKee Jr. has demonstrated that he is endlessly patient. Whether he cares remains to be seen, but to date the track record does not look good.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-27716227339622432332009-05-13T10:11:00.004-05:002009-05-13T10:31:38.221-05:00At last, the first inklings of a planAt a community meeting this week, representatives of Paul McKee's McEagle development company met with residents of the north side neighborhoods targeted by Blairmont and its sister shell companies, and announced their grand vision for the area. <br /><br />Because the meeting was targeted at local residents and not open to the press, full details are still forthcoming (specifically, at an upcoming May 21st meeting.) Attendees have reported a wide-ranging plan, encompassing "job centers", retail and residential. The details seem to be rather skimpy at this point, particularly in light of looming funding deadlines. Questions and comments from the area's residents are reported to have been fiery and uncompromising, befitting McEagle's years of abusive tactics in the neighborhood.<br /><br />The Post-Dispatch recounts more of the details <A HREF="http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/89502D7C47BA07A7862575B5000E80BF?OpenDocument">here</a> and <A HREF="http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/stlouiscitycounty/story/FB0A745D9410E552862575B4001198D8?OpenDocument">here</a>.<br /><br />I really haven't heard enough details to have a real reaction. There's been nothing to indicate if the plan involves clear-cutting existing houses, or if preservation will be a priority. Nothing about how urban or non-urban the new construction will be - will this be about rebuilding the city or reproducing the suburbs in its place? No visuals released to the public yet, and you can't really talk about buildings without visuals. I'm slightly heartened that McEagle is at last, finally, talking to residents, acknowledging a plan, getting information out there. But after all this time, it's only a minimal start.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-2036205849286289952009-02-13T14:41:00.002-06:002009-02-13T14:43:45.720-06:00Love-in for the San Luis!<IMG SRC="http://builtstlouis.net/images/sanluis06.jpg"><br /><br />Tomorrow, on Valentine's Day, Saturday, February 15th at 12:00pm noon, urbanists, architecture buffs, and plain common-sense folks will come together at Lindell & Taylor to celebrate St. Louis's MidCentury heritage by showing the love for the former DeVille Motor Hotel.<br /><br />The St. Louis archdiocese plans to demolish the building and replace it with a surface parking lot. The group hopes to promote a preservation and reuse plan, which could benefit both the church <I>and</I> the neighborhood.<br /><br />Read more at <A HREF="http://www.noparkinglotonlindell.com">www.NoParkingLotOnLindell.com</a>.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-77420593912785015042009-01-18T17:02:00.005-06:002010-03-09T19:35:02.715-06:00Washington Avenue revisitedIt's been several months in the making: the <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.net/washington/index.html">Washington Avenue tour</a> is now completely revitalized and up to date. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/235528439/" title="Washington Avenue ? by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm1.static.flickr.com/95/235528439_c70dd5bce7.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Washington Avenue ?" /></a><br /><br />So much has happened on the Avenue, and my own standards for page and image format have risen so much, that a complete revamp was the only option. I've re-scanned all the old photographs, in many cases setting them alongside new ones taken on my most recent St. Louis trip or in the intervening years. Huge amounts of information about many of these buildings is now available online, and I've pulled some of that together as well. I even snuck in <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.net/washington/18b.html">the Tudor Building</a>, which featured on a <I>very</i> early version of Built St. Louis but had since fallen off the radar.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3102217514/" title="Washington Avenue by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3213/3102217514_76e98219fd.jpg" width="500" height="380" alt="Washington Avenue" /></a><br /><br />The transformations are amazing. Dingy, battered storefronts have been reworked all up and down the Avenue. Dirty facades have been cleaned and repaired. The 2004 streetscape improvements have transformed the area's vibe. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3101382685/" title="Levin's by night by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3157/3101382685_ac1f6f8ce4.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Levin's by night" /></a><br /><br />The last fragments of the street's old life, its gritty urban and garment district days, are fading away. Of all the storefront operations visible from the street, only a handful predate the 1990s (<a HREF="http://builtstlouis.net/washington/13a.html">Levin's</a>, <a HREF="http://builtstlouis.net/washington/13c.html">Levine Hat Company</a>, <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.net/washington/11b.html">Mankofsky Shoe Company</a>, possibly the relocated <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.net/washington/13e.html">Erlich's Cleaners</a>). Most are less than five years old, and almost none of the businesses I photographed in 2001 remain today. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/2178860179/" title="Washington Avenue neon by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2405/2178860179_e75c427c90.jpg" width="366" height="500" alt="Washington Avenue neon" /></a><br /><br />But the new generation of businesses has brought new life to the street, people and light, neon signs and sidewalk dining. Rising from its threadbare state of ten years ago, Washington Avenue has become the most urbane street in St. Louis.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-38604924800374304782009-01-03T22:27:00.005-06:002010-03-09T19:36:55.900-06:00The mournful town of Cairo, IllinoisNearly two hundred years ago, settlers began trying to construct a town where the mighty Ohio and Mississippi Rivers came together. Intimately tied to the water and the river trade, Cairo, IL rose to great fortunes in its heyday. <br /><br />But the river trade changed, and the fortunes of economy passed Cairo by. Today the town is a sad shell of its former self, its glory long wilted. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3165659626/" title="Commercial Street by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1003/3165659626_ffdbf5eb25.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Commercial Street" /></a><br /><br />This is Commercial Street, the main shopping street of the town back in the day. I arrived about 4:30pm on January 2nd, a Friday. The street looked like this: empty. Deserted. Not a soul was to be seen. No cars. No lights. No people. Nothing.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164828761/" title="Commercial Street by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3133/3164828761_8ddeebe7c8.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Commercial Street" /></a><br /><br />Three or four solid blocks of Victorian commercial buildings have been left to rot. Some are literally collapsing onto the sidewalk. Others are gutted, every piece of glass shattered. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164827701/" title="Commercial Street collapse by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1035/3164827701_50156d7fb9.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Commercial Street collapse" /></a><br /><br />Nearby Washington Avenue is doing better, and has most of the city's businesses. It is a more suburban-styled street, but has some architectural gems.<br /><br />The town's struggles with racism are legendary. In the late 1960s, the city's black community organized a boycott against segregated white-owned businesses. The owners so adamantly refused to give in that one by one they simply went out of business, over the course of a few years. <br /><br />Those days may be past, but the city's struggles continue. The town's fall probably has as much to do with the overall centralization of river traffic as any problems created by racism. Cairo isn't much of a port anymore. The Interstates have passed it by, and there isn't much room to grow. The Bunge Corporation maintains a soybean processing plant there, and railroads still loop around and through the town, so little Cairo isn't entirely off the economic map. But there is little else.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164829379/" title="Bunge Corporation by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1004/3164829379_65324d8c81.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Bunge Corporation" /></a><br /><br />Cairo's geography is unfathomable. Sited on a narrow wedge of land between the two rivers, it is perpetually in danger of being washed away by the whims of the mighty rivers. Thus a huge levee rings the entire town. To the south, one simply drives over it. But to the north, where land is lower, a gargantuan metal gate descends to close off a tunnel through the railroad embankment when flood waters rise.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3165949454/" title="Confluence by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1147/3165949454_4fb2f6a6e9.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Confluence" /></a><br /><br />At Fort Defiance Park, one can literally stand at the confluence, the exact point where two thousand miles of river join together. The two channels unite to form a river nearly a mile in width. The view is awe-inspiring. The water was nearly level with the park land on the evening of my visit, an obvious warning of the rivers' power. <br /><br />Two mighty bridges cross the rivers, connecting the city to Kentucky to the east, and Missouri to the west. They carry two-lane roads, long surpassed by I-57 to the west.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164826823/" title="Ohio River Bridge by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3112/3164826823_a3a3c82e03.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Ohio River Bridge" /></a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3165655746/" title="Mississippi River Bridge by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3075/3165655746_33810830df.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Mississippi River Bridge" /></a><br /><br />Traces of Cairo's glory days remain. Scattered churches, mansions, and public buildings have been restored and maintained.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3165658872/" title="Cairo First Presbyterian Church by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1150/3165658872_4e4ae3811e.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Cairo First Presbyterian Church" /></a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164829165/" title="Cairo Custom House by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3101/3164829165_d88d5cde3f.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Cairo Custom House" /></a><br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164826275/" title="Whopper of a house by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1110/3164826275_c662ae98f5.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Whopper of a house" /></a><br /><br />But they sit in a landscape wrought with the physical signs of abandonment, of despair: empty lots, reclaimed by forest. Wrecked and ruined buildings. Streets leading nowhere. <br /><br /><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/3164826111/" title="Ruins by repowers, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1133/3164826111_45f4ae309c.jpg" width="500" height="333" alt="Ruins" /></a><br /><br />It's hard to imagine a bright future for long-suffering Cairo, but there remains a peculiar beauty to its ruins, amplified by its precarious place upon the fickle rivers. <br /><br />Links:<br />* <A HREF="http://www.flickr.com/photos/repowers/sets/72157612133931890/">More photos</a><br />* <A HREF="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cairo,_Illinois">Cairo, IL</a> at Wikipedia<br />* <A HREF="http://users.stlcc.edu/jangert/cairo/cairo.html">Mississippi River web site</a> page on Cairo.Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com19tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-5028898969374730852008-11-25T00:05:00.005-06:002008-11-25T00:05:01.333-06:00Daily Dose of Blairmont 204<UL><LI>2322 Montgomery Avenue (Larmer LLC, March 2008, $55,000)</UL> <IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2322montgomery01.jpg"><br /><I>May 2008</I><br /><br />It's a peculiar little HUD house, no longer resembling its mass-produced brethren. It wouldn't be the end of the world if Blairmont demolished it to clear the way for new blocks of urban development, but wouldn't it be charming and clever if they managed to build around it?<br /><br />More on 2322 Montgomery at <A HREF="http://ecoabsence.blogspot.com/2008/10/lemonade-remade-section-235-house.html">Ecology of Absence</a>.<br /><br /><UL><B>Links:</B><br /><LI><A HREF="http://stlcin.missouri.org/citydata/newdesign/data.cfm?handle=11084000090&Parcel9=108400090"> at the city's Geo St Louis database</a><br /><LI><A HREF="http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&FORM=LMLTCP&cp=qf7nxy7ggc4t&style=b&lvl=2&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=8426390&phx=0&phy=0&phscl=1&encType=1">Aerial view</a> from Maps.Live.com<br /><LI>More on Blairmont: <br /><A HREF="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/blairmont00.html">Built St. Louis</a> || <A HREF="http://www.eco-absence.org/blairmont/">Ecology of Absence</a> || <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.blogspot.com/2008/04/blairmont-what-can-i-do.html">What Can I Do?</a></UL>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-57992449202355993702008-11-24T00:05:00.004-06:002008-11-24T00:05:00.559-06:00Daily Dose of Blairmont 203<UL><LI>2541 W. Sullivan (Union Martin LLC, May 2008, $66,500)</UL> <IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2541wsullivan01.jpg"><br /><I>May 2008</I><br /><br />It's obvious that Mr. McKee has not yet found time to visit this block in person. If he had, he'd surely be working to renovate its charming cottages and get them occupied again, assuring that no more of them would be lost to arson or brick theft. The magnetic pull of this block is irresistible, and any savvy developer would surely capitalize on that charm. Right??<br /><br /><UL><B>Links:</B><br /><LI><A HREF="http://stlcin.missouri.org/citydata/newdesign/data.cfm?handle=11073000230&Parcel9=107300230">2541 W Sullivan at the city's Geo St Louis database</a><br /><LI><A HREF="http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&FORM=LMLTCP&cp=qf8c1n7gg478&style=b&lvl=2&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=8349988&phx=0&phy=0&phscl=1&encType=1">Aerial view</a> from Maps.Live.com<br /><LI>More on Blairmont: <br /><A HREF="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/blairmont00.html">Built St. Louis</a> || <A HREF="http://www.eco-absence.org/blairmont/">Ecology of Absence</a> || <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.blogspot.com/2008/04/blairmont-what-can-i-do.html">What Can I Do?</a></UL>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-39595915760754269232008-11-23T00:05:00.004-06:002008-11-23T00:05:00.440-06:00Daily Dose of Blairmont 202<UL><LI>2532 W. Dodier Street (Union Martin LLC, September 2008, $85,000)</UL> <IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2532dodier01.jpg"><br /><I>August 2003 - photograph by Kevin Kieffer</I><br /><br />I'm sure Paul McKee Jr. wants to get this little frame house occupied again as soon as possible. After all, an arson spree devastated much of his property elsewhere on this block, and no upstanding developer or wise builder would want to see historic brick buildings lost to fire. That's throwing resources down the drain. You don't have to be a rich developer to see that, right?<br /><br /><IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2532dodier02.jpg"><br /><I>March 2007</I><br /><br /><IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2532dodier03.jpg"><br /><I>May 2008</I><br /><br /><IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2532dodier04.jpg"><br /><I>"Thou shall not steal!! Exodus 20:10 In Jesus Name, You shall not Steal!!! Exodus 20:15 In Jesus Name! Jesus Loves You & Forgives You!!! Repent of your sins and die SAVED."</I><br /><br /><UL><B>Links:</B><br /><LI><A HREF="http://stlcin.missouri.org/citydata/newdesign/data.cfm?handle=11070000120&Parcel9=107000120">2532 W Dodier at the city's Geo St Louis database</a><br /><LI><A HREF="http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&FORM=LMLTCP&cp=qf870p7gg3xg&style=b&lvl=2&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=8426390&phx=0&phy=0&phscl=1&encType=1">Aerial view</a> from Maps.Live.com<br /><LI>More on Blairmont: <br /><A HREF="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/blairmont00.html">Built St. Louis</a> || <A HREF="http://www.eco-absence.org/blairmont/">Ecology of Absence</a> || <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.blogspot.com/2008/04/blairmont-what-can-i-do.html">What Can I Do?</a></UL>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21128437.post-68720919946175890362008-11-22T00:05:00.004-06:002008-11-22T00:05:00.260-06:00Daily Dose of Blairmont 201<UL><LI>2209 Sullivan Avenue (Union Martin LLC, September 2008, $8,000)</UL> <IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2209sullivan01.jpg"><br /><I>March 2007</I><br /><br />This poor little house! Its front face has been mutilated, almost all the windows bricked in. Blairmont here has a rare opportunity to truly restore a piece of lost historic fabric. Even if no records exist of the house's original configuration, a multitude of precedents surround it. <br /><br />Alternately, a new, contemporary design could be put in place. So much of the original facade has been lost that it wouldn't be out of place to perform a purely contemporary intervention.<br /><br />Either way, Blairmont has a host of wonderful things they can do with this house, now that they own it. By rights, the only problem should be choosing from among the several options.<br /><br /><IMG SRC="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/images/blairmont2/2209sullivan02.jpg"><br /><I>August 2003 - photograph by Kevin Keiffer</I><br /><br /><UL><B>Links:</B><br /><LI><A HREF="http://stlcin.missouri.org/citydata/newdesign/data.cfm?handle=11089000210&Parcel9=108900210">2209 Sullivan at the city's Geo St Louis database</a><br /><LI><A HREF="http://maps.live.com/default.aspx?v=2&FORM=LMLTCP&cp=qf851t7ggntq&style=b&lvl=2&tilt=-90&dir=0&alt=-1000&scene=8429697&phx=0&phy=0&phscl=1&encType=1">Aerial view</a> from Maps.Live.com<br /><LI>More on Blairmont: <br /><A HREF="http://www.builtstlouis.net/northside/blairmont00.html">Built St. Louis</a> || <A HREF="http://www.eco-absence.org/blairmont/">Ecology of Absence</a> || <A HREF="http://builtstlouis.blogspot.com/2008/04/blairmont-what-can-i-do.html">What Can I Do?</a></UL>Robert Powershttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11639365590964995479noreply@blogger.com0