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PostAug 12, 2021#726


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PostAug 12, 2021#727

Ebsy wrote:
Aug 12, 2021
I almost forgot about the race numbers. As anticipated, I can report that the City of St. Louis is now plurality white:

City of St. Louis
Percent Black/African American alone or in combination: 45.4
Percent White alone or in combination: 49.2
Percent Asian alone or in combination: 5.1

Changes to how the numbers are calculated means that we can't do apples to apples to the 2010 numbers, but even looking at White Alone vs. Black Alone, White alone has edged ahead. 

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PostAug 12, 2021#728

Well all things considered this is pretty positive - I have a planner friend who was convinced the city was going to be at  295,000 or lower 

The county gain is an unexpected surprise - I was thinking a small loss 

Want to have about 15 minutes of fun - Here is the density map per census tract for 2020 - CWE is the densest neighborhood but some of the south side neighborhoods get pretty dense 

https://mtgis-portal.geo.census.gov/arc ... 2fd7ff6eb7

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PostAug 12, 2021#729

addxb2 wrote:
Ebsy wrote: St. Louis City: -5.5% | Population: 301,578
If the momentum continues, we’re near the bottom of our barrel! Come on Mayor Jones and Jason Hall! 310 by 2030!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Jason Hall’s goal is 330k by 2030 fwiw


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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PostAug 13, 2021#730

moorlander wrote:
Aug 12, 2021
This... this doesn't support the 'Downtown is dying' narrative though.

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PostAug 13, 2021#731

Found this tool for 2010-2020 comparison by census tract: https://www.citypopulation.de/en/usa/metrostlouis/

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PostAug 13, 2021#732

^Thanks for that: 

A few initial takeaways. The rate of decline seems to be significantly flattening on the Southside, with some central corridor growth extending into it. Overall the Southside really seems to be stabilizing. The central corridor growth is more evenly spread across the central corridor (as opposed to centered on Downtown). The decline on the Northside continues unabated and has accelerated. 
Orange/Yellow: Increase
Bright Green: Small Increase
Light Bluish green: flat to small decrease
Blue: Decrease

2010 -> 2020


Random observation. Somehow Skinker-Debaliviere & Wydown/Skinker added a combined 500 residents. Thanks Everly Building. 

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PostAug 13, 2021#733

^ that’s a very impressive contrast. It looks like so many things are working, we just need to focus on being a much more friendly city for AA families.

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PostAug 14, 2021#734

https://cinycmaps.com/index.php/2-uncat ... ge-2010-20

Here is an interactive map by census designated place. Interestingly, Wildwood, Valley Park and Fenton all lost population while much of far west county and south county saw anemic growth, vs much stronger growth for the inner wing suburbs in the South and West. Collinsville also lost population, though the picture on the east side is much worse overall.

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PostAug 14, 2021#735

Some pretty dramatic swings in momentum for the Southside. Census tracts don't match up directly with neighborhood boundaries, but some are pretty close: 
Neighborhood (census tract) 2000-'10 2010-'20 Change in rate per decade
Shaw (CT 1172) -1,436 +101 +1,537
South Grove / North Botanical Heights (CT 1181) -686 +267 +953
Eastern Bevo / Western Dutchtown (CT 1153) -815 +89 +914
McKinly Heights (some BP and Soulard) (CT 1233) -471 +342 +813
Tower Grove East (CT 1165) -843 -31 +812
Benton Park West (CT 1242) -933 -131 +802
Compton Heights (CT 1174) -826 -47 +779
Clayton-Tamm / Cheltenham (CT 1045) -81 +674 +755
Southwest Garden (CT 1171 & 1272) -601 +97 +698
TGS (CT 1162) -840 -150 +690
Fox Park (CT 1231) -547 -116 +431
Benton Park (CT 1243) -496 -72 +424
Southampton (CT 1143) -669 -263 +406
The Gate (CT 1273)                                                           -414           -40             +374                                             
Total for census tracts listed above                            -9,658        +720          +10,378                                       
Princeton Heights, St. Louis Hills and Lindenwood Park (CT 1021, 1022, 1031, 1038) taken together went from around -1,150 to +15.

Overall these 19 census tracts went from losing nearly 11,000 residents to gaining around 700. 

The only Southside pockets that appear to have accelerating population declines are :
  • Eastern portion of Carondelet/Patch (CT 1018): -108 -> -263 (-155)
  • Bevo west of MorganFord & Gravois (CT 1024, 1151): -207 -> -585 (-378)
The others (as far as I can tell) are muddling along with similar (within 100 or so) increases (Soulard, Lafayette Square), decreases (Franz Park, Western Carondelet, Mount Pleasant), or stayed flat (Hi Pointe, The Hill, Boulevard Heights).

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PostAug 17, 2021#736

Census data show Black people leaving city in droves as St. Louis, St. Charles counties become more diverse
https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/new ... ensus.html

North City lost 23% of its population.
South City lost 2%.
Central Corridor saw 13% growth.

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PostAug 17, 2021#737

It's no real shocker that North City is emptying out. 

I actually am shocked that South City didn't lose more, and am shocked that the Central Corridor didn't grow more. 

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PostAug 17, 2021#738

Not sure what your definition of shocked is but this seems pretty much in line (if not better than what I expected).  13% is higher than St. Charles County’s rate of growth (granted a much lower raw number).  2% seems about right for the South Side as much of it has stabilized over the years while there are still pockets of disinvestment.  North City needs to be the focus.

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PostAug 17, 2021#739

How many people moved vs passed away?

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PostAug 17, 2021#740

North City absolutely needs to be the city's focus. No question about that. 

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PostAug 17, 2021#741

What are the boundaries of North, Central, and South and their respective populations now?

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PostAug 17, 2021#742

that 2% probably encompasses quite a few multifam to SFH conversions as well.

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PostAug 18, 2021#743

The city defines North City as north of Delmar, South City as south of I-44 and Central Corridor in between. Dogtown, Botanical Heights, Gate District, etc. are all in the CC according to the city.

If my memory serves me right, in 2010 the Central Corridor had 61k, North City ~100k and South City ~150k. If someone wants to actually crunch those numbers you can add up the neighborhood populations based on the table here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_n ... _St._Louis

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PostAug 18, 2021#744

flipz wrote:
Aug 17, 2021
What are the boundaries of North, Central, and South and their respective populations now?
I don't think there's a formal definition of north, central or south. Obviously Delmar has loomed large historically as a dividing line. The Southside is a little more debatable (generally between Chouteau/Manchester and 44). There are always grey areas like Franz Park, Ellendale, Grand Center, Columbus Square and Carr Square. 

They don't match up directly, as one used neighborhood data and the other census tract data, but here are two different takes that provide a pretty close comparison from 2000 to 2020. 

NEXTSTL 2000 -> 2010 (1st map below)
Northside: 116,811 -> 99,241
Central: 49,372 -> 54,817
Southside: 181,871 -> 165,179

Dyland Kennedy 2010 -> 2020 (2nd map below)
Northside: 94,468 -> 73,000
Central: 56,308 -> 63,775
Southside: 168,365 -> 164,800

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PostAug 18, 2021#745

^So growth in the middle has accelerated, the bleeding has slowed nearly to a stop on the south, but up north it's gotten even worse. (Though in fairness, the raw number only increased by 4K. It just looks bad when that even larger number is measured against an even smaller total.) While the neighborhood numbers don't technically say this I'd guess the outmigration numbers have dropped quite a bit while the inmigration has ticked up nicely. (There could in theory be a lot of moving around inside city limits instead of movement in and out, but . . . I doubt it.) Rising land prices in CentCor should continue to encourage developers to look for cheaper prospects and we can hope to see some real growth outside the magic middle.

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PostAug 18, 2021#746

wabash wrote:
Aug 14, 2021
Princeton Heights, Sunset Park and Lindenwood Park (CT 1021, 1022, 1031, 1038) taken together went from around -1,150 to +15.
Great analysis Wabash, thanks. What is Sunset Park?

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PostAug 18, 2021#747

MarkGroth2020 wrote:
Aug 18, 2021
wabash wrote:
Aug 14, 2021
Princeton Heights, Sunset Park and Lindenwood Park (CT 1021, 1022, 1031, 1038) taken together went from around -1,150 to +15.
Great analysis Wabash, thanks. What is Sunset Park?
Thanks for catching that. I meant St. Louis Hills. Somewhere between Sunset Park in Brooklyn (picturesque views of NY Harbor v. River Des Peres?) and Sunset Hills in St. Louis County (geographically sort of the St. Louis Hills of the County) I got my wires crossed. 

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PostAug 18, 2021#748

Ah, as a former resident of Sunset Park Brooklyn I thought it was interesting there was a St Louis neighborhood with the same name that I had never heard about!

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PostAug 18, 2021#749

Everyone keeps talking about people moving. How many died?

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PostSep 08, 2021#750

Census has migration data out - Domestically we are losing to the usual suspects - Sunbelt cities - Springfield Mo is the number one destination from StL metro, we get the biggest influx from Chicago 

 https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2018 ... ation.html

https://fox2now.com/news/missouri/where ... -the-most/

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