This is big. A huge link between the CWE and SLU/Midtown:
http://nextstl.com/central-corridor/260 ... l-west-end
http://nextstl.com/central-corridor/260 ... l-west-end

Well of course it does, because nothing is built yet. The point is to shape the area into something from a clean slate. Hope that the city doesn't budge.Cook said that, for now, the neighborhood lacks the foot traffic to support stores at West Pine Lofts
Actually why couldn't this meet the form based code requirements. Just make street level windows that present the activity inside toward the street. The leasing office is a store that sells apartments and the fitness center is essentially a members only gym. Perhaps make the gym open to non residents to workout there for a fee. If it is appropriately oriented it would, at least to my mind, meet the form based code criteria . Am I wrong?The developer wants zoning variances of some code provisions, including the requirement for street-level stores along Sarah. Hallmark wants to provide a fitness center for tenants and a leasing office instead. Cook said that, for now, the neighborhood lacks the foot traffic to support stores at West Pine Lofts.
Yes, Hallmark will reconstruct the streetscape immediately adjacent to the project. That will include lighting, sidewalks and street trees. (6 North did the same sort of thing immediately adjacent to the south.)kmurph42 wrote:Does anybody know whether any improvements to the sidewalks and/or streetscape of West Pine and Sarah will be included as part of this project? In particular, the sidewalks/street of West Pine could use some work here...
That's like 80 lawsuits waiting to happen.Gateway City wrote:I think it would be cool if some street and park trees had fruit on them. We have nuts and flowers, but why not something we can pick right off and eat? Seattle is building a food forest, why don't we just put a few fruit trees somewhere? I would love living somewhere that I can grab some off a tree and eat it whenever I want. If I were looking at moving into this building, such a thing would be attractive to me. It would definitely add a lot of gumption to the area.
Why?Ebsy wrote:That's like 80 lawsuits waiting to happen.Gateway City wrote:I think it would be cool if some street and park trees had fruit on them. We have nuts and flowers, but why not something we can pick right off and eat? Seattle is building a food forest, why don't we just put a few fruit trees somewhere? I would love living somewhere that I can grab some off a tree and eat it whenever I want. If I were looking at moving into this building, such a thing would be attractive to me. It would definitely add a lot of gumption to the area.
I like it and I don't think there is too much of a liability issue. I found a couple pear trees in a Memphis park once and they weren't struggling with lawsuits. One thing to keep in mind is to maximize fruit production and to make to keep the fruit pest free (no worms) ussually requires pruning and sparaying with pesticides. I doubt in the Parks or Streets department is going to take that initiative so hopefully a civic minded volunteer will take it upon themselves.I think it would be cool if some street and park trees had fruit on them. We have nuts and flowers, but why not something we can pick right off and eat? Seattle is building a food forest, why don't we just put a few fruit trees somewhere? I would love living somewhere that I can grab some off a tree and eat it whenever I want. If I were looking at moving into this building, such a thing would be attractive to me. It would definitely add a lot of gumption to the area.