onecity wrote:Both those cities are capital cities (or next door to capital cities) and have the big state U in them. Denver has the mountains, Minneapolis has the lakes and river bluffs, both have great climates. They are the crown jewels of their states. In many respects, we are at least 50 years behind. There are at least that many years of white flight to reverse - I'd argue more since so much of the urban cultural apparatus was dismantled in the process - whatever intellectual/creative/idea scenes the region may have had the capability to produce, it couldn't do so effectively without a healthy urban setting in which to flower - and so culturally we have a big discontinuity that is only now starting to be rebuilt. Institutions to establish that never existed in the first place. When your city has the trifecta of corporate might, flagship public research U, and state gov, it's unstoppable. Add the remarkable natural amenities those cities enjoy, and it's hard to imagine competing under any circumstances. Those things create the demography a city needs to be successful: an endless supply of well-educated people, top paying jobs, outsized political influence, and quality of life. We're struggling to hang onto the corporate piece, most natural amenities are outside the city, and don't have the other two at all. CORTEX is great but limited. Wash U isn't big enough and it isn't really in the city. We need a big state University very badly.
So, you want 500k people? The city has to establish a big public research university and do everything humanly/civically possible to make it incredible and successful and huge. That is the single most important step. The state and STL county will not support this effort - it will be entirely up to the city. With the built environment that already exists, that is our city's single best shot at reversing the job loss, nurturing more homegrown talent, make ourselves attractive to out of town firms, and create a big educated mass of people that will pay taxes and do amazing things.
Getting Saint Louis State University off the ground is the most important thing all of us contributors to this site could get behind, contribute our talents to, and force to happen. It is the make or break future of this place.
So f*** fragmentation. We don't need their help.
You're completely right.
St. Louis is never going to be in the same class as Denver and Minneapolis and we need to stop comparing to them.
-Denver and the Twin Cities are THE metropolitan areas for their state.
-Denver and the Twin Cities are state capitals
-Colorado's main university campus is basically in a suburb of Denver. Minnesota's main campus is right in the heart of Minneapolis with a satellite campus (agriculture and biology IIRC) in St. Paul.
-Denver is located pretty much at the dead middle of the state and the Twin Cities have no battles with Wisconsin.
-St. Louis is fragmented: City vs County vs St. Charles vs East Side.
St. Louis is St. Louis and we need to stop comparing ourselves.
Do we really need Saint Louis State University? Why not:
-let Wash U expand? Just wait until they can't build any more and buy Fontbonne University as well as Concordia Seminary
-keep SLU expanding. And I'm not talking about grass lots, fountains, fences and gates.
-help move UMSL from Normandy to the North Side
-help move Webster downtown.