Aesir wrote:Lux has absolutely nobody to blame but themselves. Run absolutely roughshod over residents, engage in bullsh*t lawfare on tenants and competing projects, build with trash quality. Little to no maintenance on buildings leading to unsanitary conditions for residents and even partial building collapses. Do this for years and act shocked and hurt when people finally wise up to it.
The only disappointing thing here is "urbanists" willing to shove it, all of it, under the rug just to get something - anything built on a stretch of Kingshighway.
Good for the Neighborhood Association and residents for absolutely nailing it. Urbanist desires to see a cookie cutter plywood box on Kingshighway do not trump the physical safety and peace of mind of Lux's residents. Both KC and STL officials have now gotten firsthand touring of Lux's properties and interviews with Lux residents. The result - overwhelming negative reviews and warnings to stay away.
Yeah I think it’s a problem when people take an obviously sh*tty company and then take something obviously bad and exaggerate it through the roof like this. Just don’t see how that helps.
You talk about structural collapses in the plural, but so far as I know, that was an isolated incident with no injuries that was resolved.
I have lived in one of their old buildings and toured a couple of new ones. Frankly, our neighbors were totally fine with our building and I’ve seen and spoken with happy residents at other ones. I also know from experience that when something breaks, like a microwave, you might not get prompt responses. I’m also not a shill for the a**holes who own the place - I wrote a lengthy article detailing their sh*tty business practices.
But your framing exists seemingly to justify further behavior on the part of neighborhood associations that probably goes way past what their duties should be, based on a premise of some extraordinarily evil company. But that’s not the role of these orgs. If the company is doing something illegal, that’s a matter for ordinance and for law enforcement.
You are calling for orgs to deny otherwise completely compliant buildings, like the first edition of this project that would call for no variances. The only reason it ended up asking for variances was to satisfy neighborhood concerns.
There was also another resident of one of their buildings at the meeting who spoke quite a bit about how he enjoyed the amenities and likes his apartment. He was then called a shill by Michael.
But we have to stop being so crazy as to assume that nearly fully occupied buildings probably summing thousands of tenants don’t have any happy residents.
And at some point, there has to be some agency for the renters too. They are entering a contract on their own free will. You are advocating for an organization that has a handful of votes at best to choose it’s leaders to deny people of their choices in housing.
That’s a bad precedent, I think. If you think they have shoddy practices, then call for the accountability elsewhere, with orgs and individuals that are more accountable.
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