Speaking only for myself, I agree that the more parking the better because that's what this market will demand. Some people may not like it, but STL isn't any different than 90% of the major metro areas in the country that are heavily car dependent. I just don't think they should label it infrastructure and get tax incentives to build it.
As for Streets of St. Charles, I can get disputing the word "urban" because it means a lot of different things, but the design style is absolutely based on fabricating a walkable work/live/play environment and dropping them in places that otherwise don't have the organic urban setting that it's modeled after. St. Louis is far from the only market where developers plant these mixed-use projects all over and they often see the best response in otherwise suburban enclaves like St. Charles.
The idea that people shop there because they like the tenants and it has nothing to do with the physical development is a chicken/egg argument. Certain types of tenants lease space in these developments because they know customers are attracted to them. I'd wager that probably 75% of the tenants at Streets of St. Charles had no interest in locating their store in a non-descript strip mall on First Capitol.
Problem is that there are only so many of those tenants to go around in a stagnant market like St. Louis and how many of them are looking to take a 5,000sf restaurant space in the middle of an area that is already restaurant heavy? How many 20,000sf anchors are sniffing around Midtown, especially after Foundry plucked out the ones they wanted?
Maybe Iron Hill will capitalize on the hospital traffic coupled with Steelcote and a possible Top Golf and the area will turn into a vibrant, dense corridor that is churning out tax revenue. Although under the current proposal, it would take a while for the city to see any of it.
As for Streets of St. Charles, I can get disputing the word "urban" because it means a lot of different things, but the design style is absolutely based on fabricating a walkable work/live/play environment and dropping them in places that otherwise don't have the organic urban setting that it's modeled after. St. Louis is far from the only market where developers plant these mixed-use projects all over and they often see the best response in otherwise suburban enclaves like St. Charles.
The idea that people shop there because they like the tenants and it has nothing to do with the physical development is a chicken/egg argument. Certain types of tenants lease space in these developments because they know customers are attracted to them. I'd wager that probably 75% of the tenants at Streets of St. Charles had no interest in locating their store in a non-descript strip mall on First Capitol.
Problem is that there are only so many of those tenants to go around in a stagnant market like St. Louis and how many of them are looking to take a 5,000sf restaurant space in the middle of an area that is already restaurant heavy? How many 20,000sf anchors are sniffing around Midtown, especially after Foundry plucked out the ones they wanted?
Maybe Iron Hill will capitalize on the hospital traffic coupled with Steelcote and a possible Top Golf and the area will turn into a vibrant, dense corridor that is churning out tax revenue. Although under the current proposal, it would take a while for the city to see any of it.








