New rendering
Nextstl - La Collina Apartment Building Set to Rise
https://nextstl.com/2021/01/la-collina- ... t-to-rise/
Nextstl - La Collina Apartment Building Set to Rise
https://nextstl.com/2021/01/la-collina- ... t-to-rise/
^I don't think the Hill is very vigilant on design. They let people build McMansions with street facing garages all the timeurbanitas wrote: ↑Jan 28, 2021
Just think of them as party hats!
Is the cream-colored part of the facade EIFS? It's not even 1/4 brick. How did this get approved (if it did)?
Looks like they got their approval as per Biz Journal article
3 story mixed use on the corner. 3 story proper setback triplexes. Make it happen. I can't believe these have been sitting this long. "Welcome to Rigazzi's! Hope you enjoy our vacant land."KansasCitian wrote: ↑Jan 28, 2021I don't personally think the design looks that bad. I just also don't think it looks good.
Anyway, I hope something will be built on that ugly lot at the southwest corner of Shaw & Boardman. And I hope something will be built on the grassy southeast corner, too.
I would think a developer could make some money there. It would also be pretty nice to have a better entrance into The Hill.
I wonder if the neighborhood could stomach a 150-250 unit apartment complex there, or if the developer would be in for a major fight.
I would be inclined to agree, but I will say that these homes are built out of the same materials my parents West County home was built out of in the very early 90s. It was even built by the same company. Provided they’re well taken care of (as I expect most homes on the Hill to be) they’ll probably last a good long while. Obviously various components (like siding) will have to be replaced over the years but I’d imagine that’s pretty common these days.chriss752 wrote: ↑May 11, 2021I just hope they are built to last. McBride slaps these things up in record time, which makes me question build quality. I saw them slap up a single-family development on Union Road in the County in just a few months and the siding on those homes is starting to warp (if the sun hits it just right) and they're starting to slap up some homes on Gravois in Affton next door to New Mount Sinai Cemetery.
Agreed. And keep in mind too that asphault shingles are designed to lay flat. Hang them vertically (or near-vertical in this case) and they're susceptible to being blown about by strong winds. That can lead to water seepage in strong storms.sc4mayor wrote: ↑May 11, 2021I do hate the siding (and the f*cking fake mansard roofs...seriously what is the point with those? Literally no mansard roof can look good with regular shingles...even if it was an original house in Hyde Park, Lafayette Square or Soulard).
Also agreed; never have liked a mullet house. But at least the siding appears to be clapboard and not vinyl. That's... something? And the massing is indeed nice.sc4mayor wrote:I'm also a bit surprised the Hill doesn't require the brick to wrap around a little further than it does on these.
......and its still the best looking house in that shoturbanitas wrote: ↑May 11, 2021
I'm not even sure if this is a McBride home, since it seems to be a completely different style than the others, but what in the actual f*ck is going on at the roof? It's like the architect couldn't decide between a gable roof or a cornice, soz, "Let's do both!"
And those porch posts... It's all vaguely, I don't know...like some sort of Georgian-Italian Renaissance mishmash? Is this trying to mimick some architectural style in the area of which I am completely unaware?





