Just a reminder of what Downtown STL has to compete with,a mere 8 miles away. I don't think any city our size has a secondary business cluster this big, this close (image courtesy Arch City):
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That's the key question. While corporate, municipal and developer investment has been vastly greater in Downtown St. Louis than Downtown Clayton in the last 50-60 years, many may not have been the right investments or the kind that really contributed to the sustainability or continued success of the CBD. Also, it doesn't help that all of the major investments had a much greater context to enliven and influence - the 2+ square miles of Downtown and Downtown West - than the relatively diminutive DT Clayton.San Luis Native wrote: ↑Jan 02, 2018Unfortunately, if investment has been "many times more" in downtown St. Louis verse Clayton over the last 5-to-6 decades this is even more troubling than simply comparing the two at current face valuewabash wrote: Downtown St. Louis has had much more, probably many times more, investment and construction in the last 50-60 years as Downtown Clayton.![]()
Minneapolis has St. Paul
IIRC Centene second (or third?) phase has a 34 story office building planned. It'll be interesting to see what happens with both of these plans over the next few years.wabash wrote: As an example of that difference in scale, this development will be a modest addition to Downtown's skyline and building stock, but at 33 stories will be taller than anything ever built in Clayton.
yeah, I was thinking of past decades helping get to our current point. On the one hand, things are more difficult here than in a lot other cities. Like Detroit and Cleveland, we do not have a state capitol, major medical institution and/or flagship university downtown to help anchor a diverse economy and are in part products of macro-economic forces that were not kind to the Rust Belt in the post-war world. But I think there are things we could have done better... downtown leaders should have been worried more about smaller details like sidewalks and cleanliness and safety and every day issues that make people want to be there and pursuing a more logical, strategic redevelopment plan and less about Urban Redevelopment schemes that pushed silver bullet ideas. Having a better resourced and competent downtown group like Cincy's 3CDC I think would have been helpful over the course of the more recent decades.San Luis Native wrote: ↑Jan 02, 2018^STLRainbow didn't specify, but I took it upon myself to suspect he meant more with respect to "over decades"
Some good points here, dredger. As has been said it isn't uncommon for cities our size to have relatively close-in edge cities/corporate clusters and my beef isn't so much with Clayton as a secondary CBD but all these corporations locating well beyond -- on the i-64 traffic sewer and such.dredger wrote: ↑Jan 02, 2018I think a fair statement is the companies that have expended, from Monsanto, Edward Jones, Express Scripts, RGA, Bunge NA, WWT, Enterprise are all county based and decided to stick with campus feel. Even Enterprise on edge of Clayton CBD wants to keep it suburban feel. At least give WWT some credit for making an acquisition and keeping/expanding that business downtown. Just wish the trigger would have been pulled on Cupples X instead of renting more space in Cupples if I understood correctly what was behind Cupples X in the first place. Maybe Nestle will finally be the one for a major announcement but between WWT, Enterprise IT needs either one could have a much bigger downtown presence
Downtown is seeing some progress, possibility of getting expanding Square presence in RX & Jeff Arms going forward, Nestle building up its IT presence downtown, seem decent hotels, BPV II tower and a legit second tower proposal in 300.
I really believe the best solution is a different site if we're trying to preserve the existing building. These additions feel so awkwardly forced that it cripples the aesthetic of both old and new together.urban_dilettante wrote: ↑Jan 08, 2018If this can be done in Milwaukee then it sure-as-sh*t can be done here.
I don't think anyone ever said it cant be done, of course it can be done but at what costurban_dilettante wrote: ↑Jan 08, 2018Just came across yet another example of a modern tower soon to rise out of a preserved, historic building in Milwaukee:
https://www.biztimes.com/2017/industrie ... velopment/
If this can be done in Milwaukee then it sure-as-sh*t can be done here.
subjective, i know, but i like the aesthetic (though it doesn't always work).
i was more referring to having the will to do it. i mean, i'm sure it would be cheaper for the dev in Milwaukee to demo and build new as well. if the cost is that prohibitive i think they should find a different site. i suspect they're going to make a pretty penny off of this tower though due to proximity to Busch (along with plenty of tax abatement), so i don't have much sympathy for them re having to spend a little more to preserve the facade.dbInSouthCity wrote: I don't think anyone ever said it cant be done, of course it can be done but at what cost
Thsi wouldv'e been cool to see. IF it ever happens, there will eb another building beween One Cardinal Way and 300 Broadway. The tower would be visible abve the Deloitte Building. Now, I personally belive thta this will not happen. A resuidential tower with views of the Arch and city is great, but this was now almost 4 years ago and whoever had the idea may have did it only for marketing purposes.STLrainbow wrote: ↑Jan 12, 2018With so much development news recently like 300 S Broadway proposal you have to wonder if any other high-rises will be announced...perhaps these two possibilities from 2014 as candidates...
Gateway Tower office building for sale
http://www.stltoday.com/business/column ... 22645.html
Sovereign Partners did a feasibility study of a plan to build a 16-story residential tower on top of KMOV, which occupies Gateway Tower's lowrise portion. The preliminary plan is for 80 residences ranging in size from 1,200 to 1,500 square feet.
I have called and emailed The Drury Company about it. The phone call was me being placed on hold and then being hung up on. And the city also won’t answer my questions on the garage. One of my family friends is an Aldermen and he asked Tishaura’s office and they had nothing to say on it.STLrainbow wrote:^ interesting on the Drury tower/garage, sounds like you've inquired?
My vision is for these to be replace by the tallest apartment high-rise in the state but that'll never happen
