Urbanstl got a mention in Chicago Tribune.
http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com ... arch-.html
I get the feeling that the jury had a scoring criteria up front, such as connection to the city, respect for Saarinen/Kiley original design, etc., that they used to score each team. The team that best mathes the scoring criteria wins. The only problem with this type of system is that it doesn't give credit for new ideas the award team had not already thought of upfront, such as Memorial Boulevard, which is why nobody had it in their base proposal. I assume juries also look at the team and the team's track record as much as their specific proposal, and MVVA has a great reputation in similar waterfront and landscaping renovations.
I've always said I could accept any of the five proposals. The MVVA design has some very nice things -- like Cathedral Square, and the new Arch garage under Luther Ely Smith park, which means visitors will start their experience in the middle of downtown, and end it there. They also want visitors to use the abundance of existing downtown parking garages that bring them into downtown and keep them there for a while. They also advocate remote ticketing with time stamps, so a visitor can buy his Arch tram ticket at Luther Ely Smith park, see that he has 2 hours to wait, and then go wander downtown until he needs to get to the Arch.
They aslo have a nice understated but visible entrance from the West to the expanded underground museum. Their design respects the Kiley landscape vision and makes it more accessible with walkways, and replaces ash trees with Kiley's desired tulip trees. It is also kind of nice to keep a cobblestone riverfront where people can walk down and interact with the water the entire length of the park, but it will be interesting to see when and if that reshaping of the current cobblestones happens in the five year period.
Their design also repsects Eads Bridge and opens all the original arches into Laclede's landing, although I'm not sure how car traffic will flow through the Landing with Washington Blvd no longer running along side the brigde to the water. Although they close Sullivan Wharf street in their plans, I'm not sure why it couldn't remain in some new form even with their design, and it may need to be accessible to emergency vehicles. Their proposal for a Beer garden on the South is a must for St. Louis and probably got them a checkmark on the scoring criteria.
East side access and plans are a little weak, which could dampen funding enthusiasm from Illinois. But the East side plans from the other four finalist looked very ambitious, very expensive, and not doable in five years.
MVVAs design may be the only one that could be entirely compelete in five years, but it will be interesting to see what gets prioritized first to make sure it is complete by the anniversary. So I think it came down to, what did the foundation say that it wanted and who best matched up with that scoring criteria. And who had a track record for landscape renewal. Overall, I'm OK with MVVA.