Ramps inside the buildings would allow residents to drive to their apartments on what, in effect, would be indoor streets.
The future as I've always envisioned it!
The future as I've always envisioned it!
http://www.stltoday.com/business/local/ ... f4f51.htmlFormer Mercantile Library
Except for the Hotel Indigo site, developer Brian Hayden owns the block bounded by North Broadway and Olive, Sixth and Locust streets. The block includes the Millennium Center, the former Mercantile Library and other buildings of five or six floors.
Hayden already has rehabbed the Millennium Center as a mixture of offices and apartments. In August, he described for the Post-Dispatch his intention to redo the other buildings on the block as apartments with parking at their front doors.
Ramps inside the now-vacant buildings would let residents to drive to their apartments on what, in effect, would be indoor streets. The interior ramps would have to be constructed.
Hayden said each floor could have features to signify a theme — rocks to simulate a desert and fake snow to set a winter scene — for examples. He said the apartments could be ready in 2018.
A city building permit issued Dec. 13 outlines a $327,000 project that indicates construction of parking on several floors. Efforts this week to reach Hayden for comment were unsuccessful.
The garage across from Locust belongs to Stifel and the garage across from Broadway belongs to the Federal Reserve.
They expanded the old building from half a block to cover the entire block, the north side of the Fed building looks like the south side but is actually much newer.
An old coworker showed me an image of the original once but I've never been able to find it since. It was a jaw dropping moment. I believe the image was from an AIA St. Louis article.
If 1014 Locust (Alverne) is any indication, I'd keep my exterior expectations LOW. 1014 still has boarded up windows, a cross mounted to the masonry, wood paneling in place of exhaust grates, tons of brackets and fasteners sticking out of the facade from the old awning(s), and even the address hung over the builder-grade wooden entryway is off center.newstl2020 wrote: I am very perplexed by this building. The units look nice enough and the balconies look better from the units than the street, but my god is this an ugly building. I would've expected...something. Paint? I don't know. Just seems like the outside is a complete afterthought.




















