More good news, Hi-Pointe Drive in is coming to Washington Ave.
https://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/ ... 737f8.html
https://www.stltoday.com/entertainment/ ... 737f8.html
Hot take: Kemoll's suckssouthcitygent wrote: ↑Oct 18, 2018Sad to hear that Kemoll's is moving to Westport however this seem to add credibility to the rumour that a major Cortex based tech firm is considering a move to the Met Square building. Interesting to see what the future holds.
I have trouble caring when a restaurant I never care to go to closes or leaves downtown i.e. Mike Shannon's, Prime 1000, Kemoll's, J Buck's, Robust, etc. Kind of a metaphor of changing taste that Sen Thai and Caruso's moved into the old Prime 1000 spot. I could list some others I could do without, or expect to go soon, but I'll never WISH for such a business to close or leave downtown.
I've been curious for a while just to see the view. I figure that alone might be worth the price of admission once. (I very much enjoyed eating at Chicago's Signature Room at the top of the Hancock Building so very many years ago.) But if they move to Westport they'll have to survive on their food alone.
Where did you hear Met Square specifically mentioned as a move for a Cortex firm?southcitygent wrote: ↑Oct 18, 2018Sad to hear that Kemoll's is moving to Westport however this seem to add credibility to the rumour that a major Cortex based tech firm is considering a move to the Met Square building. Interesting to see what the future holds.
I was taken there one time a couple of years ago. A thunder storm was passing through town and the show put on by the lightning was amazing.symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2018I've been curious for a while just to see the view. I figure that alone might be worth the price of admission once.
100% agree. I'd love to see the existing ("condemned"?) garage torn down, then rebuilt as a very large garage (10+ stories) covering the entire block, eliminating that parking lot on the NE corner, and incorporating street-level retail around the whole thing. I envision something similar to the one at the center of the Clayton Triangle (Brentwood, Forsyth, and Maryland) that feeds the surrounding office buildings. Maybe even throw a couple levels of office space on the top. I'd like to see Charlie Gitto's building remain, for aesthetic and historical reasons, but I definitely want to see that entire block turned into a massive parking structure.GoHarvOrGoHome wrote: ↑Jan 16, 2020I would be thrilled with a rebuilt higher quality garage with a similar amount of retail. Same with the crappy abandoned one at Tucker and Locust.
Some real garage love here. So rare for this forum.gone corporate wrote: ↑Jan 17, 2020100% agree. I'd love to see the existing ("condemned"?) garage torn down, then rebuilt as a very large garage (10+ stories) covering the entire block..... I definitely want to see that entire block turned into a massive parking structure.GoHarvOrGoHome wrote: ↑Jan 16, 2020I would be thrilled with a rebuilt higher quality garage with a similar amount of retail. Same with the crappy abandoned one at Tucker and Locust.
I don't think that's the case. There are major buildings all over the core of Downtown that did not require very large parking garages to be built in order for them to be rehabbed. The Alverne, Paul Brown, OPOP Tower, Hotel St. Louis, Magnolia Hotel, Gallery 515 Apartments, and probably the best example - the Arcade-Wright Building which is a 500,000 sq.ft. former office building without an attached or adjacent garage. To name a few.newstl2020 wrote: ↑Jan 18, 2020^ and ^^. My assumption is that both of you would love to see RRX rehabbed and occupied. There is zero chance of this happening without the majority of this current block being rebuilt as a very large parking garage.
The top 13 or so floors are already hollowed out. I'm not saying it'd be cheap or easy, but ground floor retail/lobby/amenities + 6 floors of parking (yielding 700+ spaces and accounting for the original 400,000 sq. ft. department store) + the upper 13 floors containing 750+ apartments (accounting for around 600,000 sq. ft of the prior May Co. offices) might be a model.newstl2020 wrote: ↑Jan 18, 2020^Agreed, I was referring to a redevelopment plan to office space. My understanding was that due to the size/layout of the building, a conversion to hotel or residential was structurally/economically not feasible. It's been a while since I've read up on the RRX though so that could certainly be incorrect.
I have zero idea what this would cost, but a multi-use conversion with the old department floors to parking, main floor as retail/lobby areas, 10 floors of office, then hollowing out the center of the building for the top floors to make residential work would be a very cool building. Assuming that would be pretty tough though as my guess is that the elevator cores are in the center of the building.
The parking is in the basement and in the core of the building, below the atrium, according to this very detailed article. So, it looks like the only exterior alteration is the folding garage doors (which I like very much, and at which Brian Hayden should take a long look).wabash wrote: ↑Jan 18, 2020
Also, I'm sure this is sacrilege to some, but there are 5-6 stories of block sized department store floors before the higher widowed floors of the RRX. Perhaps some or all could be converted to parking. The conversion of the historic May Dept. Store in Cleveland included 519 parking spaces on floors 2-5.