2,419
Life MemberLife Member
2,419

PostFeb 02, 2021#51

I think any two-part development that comes to the city for incentives should have them entirely revoked if part two does not come to fruition. 

4,553
Life MemberLife Member
4,553

PostFeb 02, 2021#52

KansasCitian wrote:
Feb 02, 2021
I think any two-part development that comes to the city for incentives should have them entirely revoked if part two does not come to fruition. 
Agreed. And I am extremely dubious about all these calls that "the garage should be able to accommodate future construction on top of it." If we're left with some crappy soulless garage (surrounded by other garages) that further detracts from one of the City's most intact urban stretches, there's not going to be a whole lot of comfort in "but someone could technically build on top of it some day!" 

Is there any evidence of Midtown being able to support new construction pricing, outside of SLU's own dorms and the Pulitzer passion project? I suppose The Verve along Lindell will be the first to test that market. 

466
Full MemberFull Member
466

PostFeb 02, 2021#53

wabash wrote:
Feb 02, 2021
KansasCitian wrote:
Feb 02, 2021
I think any two-part development that comes to the city for incentives should have them entirely revoked if part two does not come to fruition. 
Agreed. And I am extremely dubious about all these calls that "the garage should be able to accommodate future construction on top of it." If we're left with some crappy soulless garage (surrounded by other garages) that further detracts from one of the City's most intact urban stretches, there's not going to be a whole lot of comfort in "but someone could technically build on top of it some day!" 

Is there any evidence of Midtown being able to support new construction pricing, outside of SLU's own dorms and the Pulitzer passion project? I suppose The Verve along Lindell will be the first to test that market. 
I foresee Midtown being a hot residential destination.  If there's one 'hood that can become 24/7/365 active, it's Midtown.

2,481
Life MemberLife Member
2,481

PostFeb 03, 2021#54

bwcrow1s wrote:
Feb 02, 2021
I do wonder if they have engaged the existing garage owner in leasing a chunk of the spots.  Seems like a blunder to just build another garage here that condemns that parcel for another 30 years.
That parking garage, which takes up half the block along Olive, is owned by the Scottish Rite lodge. It's for sale, along with the "Cathedral" building itself. 

So, as hard as it is to imagine in this city, the new owners could conceivably find a better use for that parcel than a single-use parking garage, someday, maybe...

1,677
Totally AddictedTotally Addicted
1,677

PostFeb 03, 2021#55

urbanitas wrote:
Feb 03, 2021
bwcrow1s wrote:
Feb 02, 2021
I do wonder if they have engaged the existing garage owner in leasing a chunk of the spots.  Seems like a blunder to just build another garage here that condemns that parcel for another 30 years.
That parking garage, which takes up half the block along Olive, is owned by the Scottish Rite lodge. It's for sale, along with the "Cathedral" building itself. 

So, as hard as it is to imagine in this city, the new owners could conceivably find a better use for that parcel than a single-use parking garage, someday, maybe...
Interesting.  Thanks.  Do you have a link to any relevant sales materials? I'd love to pass along to my alder, for them to take a month to respond to it.

2,481
Life MemberLife Member
2,481

PostFeb 04, 2021#56

bwcrow1s wrote:
Feb 03, 2021
urbanitas wrote:
Feb 03, 2021
That parking garage, which takes up half the block along Olive, is owned by the Scottish Rite lodge. It's for sale, along with the "Cathedral" building itself. 

So, as hard as it is to imagine in this city, the new owners could conceivably find a better use for that parcel than a single-use parking garage, someday, maybe...
Interesting.  Thanks.  Do you have a link to any relevant sales materials? I'd love to pass along to my alder, for them to take a month to respond to it.
There's a brochure here:
Scottish Rite Cathedral & Parking Garage (pdf)

There's also the Scottish Rite thread here.

PostFeb 05, 2021#57

SLBJ-'This has been a problem for years': In heated public meeting, debate rages over whether city follows protocol with developments

"...The Planning Commission is tasked with reviewing blighting studies and redevelopment plans before providing recommendations to the Board of Aldermen, which approves projects.

But questions arose as to what the commission was supposed to do with the Jesuit Hall blighting study during Wednesday's meeting since Alderwoman Marlene Davis introduced a bill on Jan. 8 that stated the Planning Commission had already recommended its approval to the Board of Aldermen.

"If it’s halfway through the Board of Aldermen, then what are we doing?" said Commissioner Jacob Long, who serves as spokesman for Mayor Lyda Krewson.

..."


The meeting was about the blighting study for the Jesuit Hall project. At least it's good to see someone finally asking the question.

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostMar 11, 2021#58

Not sure if this will be paywalled for you folks...but a rare piece of journalism from the BJ:
https://www.bizjournals.com/stlouis/new ... -hall.html

12K
Life MemberLife Member
12K

PostMar 11, 2021#59

^T'would be nice. I'm still skeptical about this one, though. 

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostMar 11, 2021#60

^ I think maybe they get the rehab done...but I'm very skeptical about the additional mid-rise.  

Seems like a good project for Greater STL's investment arm to get involved in...

1,677
Totally AddictedTotally Addicted
1,677

PostMar 12, 2021#61

Where's the garage at?

13K
Life MemberLife Member
13K

PostMar 12, 2021#62

Within the building, I'd wager.

1,677
Totally AddictedTotally Addicted
1,677

PostMar 12, 2021#63

Just asking because I thought the garage was set to have a chunk fronting Lindell, then spidering its way to the Olive frontage.

I mean, if we get no garage that's definitely a win.  None of that render looks like a garage.  Maybe they somehow bought that Scottish Rite garage.

sc4mayor
sc4mayor

PostMar 12, 2021#64

^ I'm just hoping they eliminated the Lindell fronting garage...I'd put damn good money on there still being a garage component in there somewhere though.

5,261
Life MemberLife Member
5,261

PostMar 12, 2021#65

Reached out to the developer here for my own story and got some updated information about this project as well as a clearer rendering and elevations.
  1. Apartment count is tentatively set at 364 units (169 in the Jesuit Hall and 195 in the new building).
  2. A total 20,000SF of first floor retail space between both buildings.
  3. As we've been told before, $80 Million for the project (or close to $220,000 per unit, which seems reasonable according to two developer friends of mine).
  4. Parking, which is perhaps the most debated thing on here, is not included in the renderings or elevations, mostly because the parking situation is still being looked at. Fernando Cepeda did not confirm or deny that they're looking at the Scottish Rite garage for parking but he also didn't explicitly say they were going to build some here. It's still up for consideration and a parking plan should be finalized prior to the start of construction on Phase 1.
The design of the new building reminds me a bit of the Element Hotel and original plans for "The McKenzie" at Delmar and 170, which makes sense since it's the same architect. Part of me feels like the new building we see here is simple like this because a firm plan hasn't been established yet. More or less, I view it as more of a massing with the idea to change prior to construction. If it is the design they're going with, I'll take it. It's a simple design that gets the job done. I could see some accent lighting being included here (along the rooflines of both the old building and the new one).

Finally, I like the fact that the name of the development is "The Melbourne". Great to see the original name of the building come back for something new.

Here are the elevations and rendering...




PostMar 19, 2021#66

2nd floor floor plan from the LCRA document.

PostMay 08, 2021#67

Tishaura vetoed the tax abatement request. There should've been an exception made here since the developer is still small and the neighborhood is still changing.

https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/gov ... a5aa2.html

951
Super MemberSuper Member
951

PostMay 08, 2021#68

Uninspired floor plans; numerous plans have the entry to the units directly  into the kitchen

5,261
Life MemberLife Member
5,261

PostMay 08, 2021#69

chris fuller wrote:Uninspired floor plans; numerous plans have the entry to the units directly  into the kitchen
That’s pretty standard in the buildings I’ve toured. If it works, don’t fix it

226
Junior MemberJunior Member
226

PostMay 08, 2021#70

chriss752 wrote:Tishaura vetoed the tax abatement request. There should've been an exception made here since the developer is still small and the neighborhood is still changing.

https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/gov ... a5aa2.html
Can the veto be overridden by 2/3 majority or no?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

443
Full MemberFull Member
443

PostMay 08, 2021#71

95% abatement for 10 years for apartments across the street from a major university is a lot to ask

12K
Life MemberLife Member
12K

PostMay 08, 2021#72

I'm not too concerned with the veto on this project (they already don't pay taxes, right?), but I hope it's not a sign of things to come. This could kill all of our momentum.  

Edit - Oh, wait, I was thinking this was the new Jesuit apartments on West Pine. My mistake. Now yes, I am concerned that she's gonna just veto every abatement bill.  

1,044
Expert MemberExpert Member
1,044

PostMay 08, 2021#73

I don't get the veto other than it's politics over common sense. With the city getting such a large portion of its budget from earnings tax, having more earnings tax paying residents/ employees should be the focus. Especially on a building like this that has essentially been none revenue producing for years.

2,675
Life MemberLife Member
2,675

PostMay 08, 2021#74

I think this is Mayor Jones setting her standards. All developers will take note and come back with better projects. She maintained a pro-business and pro-school messaging.

95% for 10 years is way too much in central corridor. Especially when a massive amount of the project budget is to build parking garages that back into existing parking garages.

289
Full MemberFull Member
289

PostMay 08, 2021#75

We new she was going to something like this soon to show that she’s following through on campaign promises. This seems like a good one to use to set a message. The developers are inexperienced so there was already a good chance this one wouldn’t work out anyway.

Read more posts (58 remaining)