Like Peter points out, it looks like the entrance will be moved to the back. Not good.
And that house is awesome!
Dislike.
And that house is awesome!
Dislike.
What about the plan makes you feel that it's not being "done well"?symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022The lines at Powell aren't usually that bad. It's a lot smaller than the fox, and the experience is much more social, thanks to the wine and cheese aspect of the concessions. (And the inability to take said into the hall.) I can live with a little bit of a plaza at the door, but the huge landscaped thing looks like more than a bit of overkill. Especially with another such directly across the street.
I do agree that we shouldn't insist on residential or commercial. It's an orchestra. Let them do orchestra. They were one of the true pioneers investing in the neighborhood. I do think the addition should be good, but I don't think they need to pretend to be landlords trying to rent space out in a neighborhood where that's at least a little challenging. I want them to leave the house alone. (Restore it, actually, since they already own it and have for a bunch of years now. The current condition is clearly a case of "we're going to tear it down anyway so why fix it?" demo by neglect.) But the goals seem pretty reasonable. They understand what they need. They want a way for elderly and disabled patrons to be able to use the hall easily; to have easy journeys into and through the space. They want musicians to have easy access and good spaces to rehearse and store valuable instruments. They want communication from the front of house to backstage to flow smoothly, but in a controlled fashion. They need more elevators. They want more concession space. They want the balcony seating to be more comfortable and safer for the less mobile. All of this is pretty laudable. And I favor finding a way to let them do it. (Not that my opinion matters all that much.) But I do think we can ask for it to be done well.
What about Stifel Theater: $80 million?dbInSouthCity wrote: ↑Mar 16, 2022Decade of investments in St.Louis City’s cultural institutions;
Art Museum $160million
Powell Hall $100m
Central Library $70m
Arch grounds $380m
Botanical Garden $100m
STL Zoo $50m
Forest Park $100m
$960,000,000, at least.
Really just demolishing the house. That and I'm not a fan of the amount of green space. Apart from that there's only so much you can read from a single sketch floor plan.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022What about the plan makes you feel that it's not being "done well"?symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022The lines at Powell aren't usually that bad. It's a lot smaller than the fox, and the experience is much more social, thanks to the wine and cheese aspect of the concessions. (And the inability to take said into the hall.) I can live with a little bit of a plaza at the door, but the huge landscaped thing looks like more than a bit of overkill. Especially with another such directly across the street.
I do agree that we shouldn't insist on residential or commercial. It's an orchestra. Let them do orchestra. They were one of the true pioneers investing in the neighborhood. I do think the addition should be good, but I don't think they need to pretend to be landlords trying to rent space out in a neighborhood where that's at least a little challenging. I want them to leave the house alone. (Restore it, actually, since they already own it and have for a bunch of years now. The current condition is clearly a case of "we're going to tear it down anyway so why fix it?" demo by neglect.) But the goals seem pretty reasonable. They understand what they need. They want a way for elderly and disabled patrons to be able to use the hall easily; to have easy journeys into and through the space. They want musicians to have easy access and good spaces to rehearse and store valuable instruments. They want communication from the front of house to backstage to flow smoothly, but in a controlled fashion. They need more elevators. They want more concession space. They want the balcony seating to be more comfortable and safer for the less mobile. All of this is pretty laudable. And I favor finding a way to let them do it. (Not that my opinion matters all that much.) But I do think we can ask for it to be done well.
Perfect solution. With the big budget and donators who seem to be civic minded, you'd hope logic prevails.debaliviere wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022If any house can/should be moved, it's that one. Move it one block to the south, next to the existing house on Samuel Shepard near Theresa.
It feels like a suburban site plan on an urban site. Specifically the setbacks, the pick-up drive, and demoing buildings in the way rather than working around them. Granted it's a fairly vague site plan in that we can't see the interior floor plan or if they plan on incorporating the existing house somehow, but that's the feeling I get from it. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to see the investment and a lot of their goals and plans seem good, I just think the site plan could improved.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022What about the plan makes you feel that it's not being "done well"?symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022The lines at Powell aren't usually that bad. It's a lot smaller than the fox, and the experience is much more social, thanks to the wine and cheese aspect of the concessions. (And the inability to take said into the hall.) I can live with a little bit of a plaza at the door, but the huge landscaped thing looks like more than a bit of overkill. Especially with another such directly across the street.
I do agree that we shouldn't insist on residential or commercial. It's an orchestra. Let them do orchestra. They were one of the true pioneers investing in the neighborhood. I do think the addition should be good, but I don't think they need to pretend to be landlords trying to rent space out in a neighborhood where that's at least a little challenging. I want them to leave the house alone. (Restore it, actually, since they already own it and have for a bunch of years now. The current condition is clearly a case of "we're going to tear it down anyway so why fix it?" demo by neglect.) But the goals seem pretty reasonable. They understand what they need. They want a way for elderly and disabled patrons to be able to use the hall easily; to have easy journeys into and through the space. They want musicians to have easy access and good spaces to rehearse and store valuable instruments. They want communication from the front of house to backstage to flow smoothly, but in a controlled fashion. They need more elevators. They want more concession space. They want the balcony seating to be more comfortable and safer for the less mobile. All of this is pretty laudable. And I favor finding a way to let them do it. (Not that my opinion matters all that much.) But I do think we can ask for it to be done well.
In a way it does. But I’m not going to get angry about the drop off lane given the average age of the SLSO attendee. Yes it would be nice if there was little parking and everyone arrived/departed via public transportation. But we need to be honest about the demographics. We need to not look at this from the point of view of mobile 20 to 50 year olds._nomad_ wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022It feels like a suburban site plan on an urban site. Specifically the setbacks, the pick-up drive, and demoing buildings in the way rather than working around them. Granted it's a fairly vague site plan in that we can't see the interior floor plan or if they plan on incorporating the existing house somehow, but that's the feeling I get from it. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to see the investment and a lot of their goals and plans seem good, I just think the site plan could improved.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022What about the plan makes you feel that it's not being "done well"?symphonicpoet wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022The lines at Powell aren't usually that bad. It's a lot smaller than the fox, and the experience is much more social, thanks to the wine and cheese aspect of the concessions. (And the inability to take said into the hall.) I can live with a little bit of a plaza at the door, but the huge landscaped thing looks like more than a bit of overkill. Especially with another such directly across the street.
I do agree that we shouldn't insist on residential or commercial. It's an orchestra. Let them do orchestra. They were one of the true pioneers investing in the neighborhood. I do think the addition should be good, but I don't think they need to pretend to be landlords trying to rent space out in a neighborhood where that's at least a little challenging. I want them to leave the house alone. (Restore it, actually, since they already own it and have for a bunch of years now. The current condition is clearly a case of "we're going to tear it down anyway so why fix it?" demo by neglect.) But the goals seem pretty reasonable. They understand what they need. They want a way for elderly and disabled patrons to be able to use the hall easily; to have easy journeys into and through the space. They want musicians to have easy access and good spaces to rehearse and store valuable instruments. They want communication from the front of house to backstage to flow smoothly, but in a controlled fashion. They need more elevators. They want more concession space. They want the balcony seating to be more comfortable and safer for the less mobile. All of this is pretty laudable. And I favor finding a way to let them do it. (Not that my opinion matters all that much.) But I do think we can ask for it to be done well.
I'm not going to get angry about it either, but I think there are more urban-friendly ways of accomplishing it such as laying it out as a cut-through from Delmar to Samuel Shepard. There are ways to get a drop-off without a 40-50 foot building setback and driveway arc. I think it'll be a nice addition the way it is, but that doesn't mean there isn't also room for improvement.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022In a way it does. But I’m not going to get angry about the drop off lane given the average age of the SLSO attendee. Yes it would be nice if there was little parking and everyone arrived/departed via public transportation. But we need to be honest about the demographics. We need to not look at this from the point of view of mobile 20 to 50 year olds._nomad_ wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022It feels like a suburban site plan on an urban site. Specifically the setbacks, the pick-up drive, and demoing buildings in the way rather than working around them. Granted it's a fairly vague site plan in that we can't see the interior floor plan or if they plan on incorporating the existing house somehow, but that's the feeling I get from it. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to see the investment and a lot of their goals and plans seem good, I just think the site plan could improved.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022What about the plan makes you feel that it's not being "done well"?
I dislike this justification. While because of the class & race of most SLSO attendees I think it's unlikely they get there via public transportation, there are plenty of elderly people who ride it/depend on it, and there's nothing in the plan about adding benches to nearby stops so they can sit while waiting for a bus.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022In a way it does. But I’m not going to get angry about the drop off lane given the average age of the SLSO attendee. Yes it would be nice if there was little parking and everyone arrived/departed via public transportation. But we need to be honest about the demographics. We need to not look at this from the point of view of mobile 20 to 50 year olds._nomad_ wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022It feels like a suburban site plan on an urban site. Specifically the setbacks, the pick-up drive, and demoing buildings in the way rather than working around them. Granted it's a fairly vague site plan in that we can't see the interior floor plan or if they plan on incorporating the existing house somehow, but that's the feeling I get from it. Don't get me wrong, I'm happy to see the investment and a lot of their goals and plans seem good, I just think the site plan could improved.dweebe wrote: ↑Mar 17, 2022What about the plan makes you feel that it's not being "done well"?