Build. It.
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The businesses in rehabbed houses further east on Manchester sayin ‘hold my beer!’STLinCHI wrote: ↑Oct 18, 2022The existing structures, if rehabbed, would not activate the street at all. The setbacks are an issue and very inconsistent.
This is practically a carbon copy of Chelsea on Pershing. Not incredible, but hey I'll take it.dylank wrote:This may be it. Found on the architect's website. Notice the brick storefront on the left.
Really? I’m surprised you also believe that these Historic houses if rehabbed would not activate the street ‘at all’ (quoting here)Suds wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022This is practically a carbon copy of Chelsea on Pershing. Not incredible, but hey I'll take it.dylank wrote:This may be it. Found on the architect's website. Notice the brick storefront on the left.
Gotta agree with CHI here. I hate tearing down buildings but those houses, even if kept in good shape, don't serve as a noticeable entrance into the area. Houses are great on the main strip but they do little for activation or the density the Grove can accomplish. Hopefully this can do what Chroma did to the East entrance.
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https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 46cb6.htmlBarzantny, 38, is in the middle of it. Grove Properties has rehabbed nearly 50 buildings to produce about 125 apartments. Occupancy is steady at 95 percent, said Barzantny, adding that most tenants are students or workers at the nearby Cortex tech district or the BJC complex.
I said they would do little for activation. A larger mixed-use building like this (still wish it were more unique, but oh well) fits the current vibe of the neighborhood more and works toward the density the neighborhood is capable of. It might be a different store had these buildings not been neglected and been more integrated into the rest of Manchester. But as things are now, even if renovated, they wouldn't be the best use of that land in my opinion. Definitely sad to see beautiful buildings go but if that rendering is real I think it's an improvement.imran wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Really? I’m surprised you also believe that these Historic houses if rehabbed would not activate the street ‘at all’ (quoting here)Suds wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022This is practically a carbon copy of Chelsea on Pershing. Not incredible, but hey I'll take it.dylank wrote:This may be it. Found on the architect's website. Notice the brick storefront on the left.
Gotta agree with CHI here. I hate tearing down buildings but those houses, even if kept in good shape, don't serve as a noticeable entrance into the area. Houses are great on the main strip but they do little for activation or the density the Grove can accomplish. Hopefully this can do what Chroma did to the East entrance.
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As for the entrance to a neighborhood, Both large and small scale buildings can be effective if designed right.
It reminds me of a scaled-down Wicker Park.goat314 wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Forest Park Southeast is a really a sleeper candidate to becoming the most "urban" neighborhood in the city. If it keeps infilling like this I really wouldn't be surprised. Driving down Manchester is starting to give off a vibe similar to many Chicago neighborhoods in my opinion.
Yes, for sure. Has a ways to go to provide resident services. More food access, drug stores, convenience...Which makes me wonder where a large retail presence would center itself. Even spaces that provide businesses with 5,000 SF are sparsegoat314 wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Forest Park Southeast is a really a sleeper candidate to becoming the most "urban" neighborhood in the city. If it keeps infilling like this I really wouldn't be surprised. Driving down Manchester is starting to give off a vibe similar to many Chicago neighborhoods in my opinion.
Imran more density is good. Not everything is about historical preservation- there are other goals worth achieving too!imran wrote:Really? I’m surprised you also believe that these Historic houses if rehabbed would not activate the street ‘at all’ (quoting here)Suds wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022This is practically a carbon copy of Chelsea on Pershing. Not incredible, but hey I'll take it.dylank wrote:This may be it. Found on the architect's website. Notice the brick storefront on the left.
Gotta agree with CHI here. I hate tearing down buildings but those houses, even if kept in good shape, don't serve as a noticeable entrance into the area. Houses are great on the main strip but they do little for activation or the density the Grove can accomplish. Hopefully this can do what Chroma did to the East entrance.
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As for the entrance to a neighborhood, Both large and small scale buildings can be effective if designed right.
Density built on an empty parking lot is great. Replace a gas station? all day!brianadler6545 wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Imran more density is good. Not everything is about historical preservation- there are other goals worth achieving too!imran wrote:Really? I’m surprised you also believe that these Historic houses if rehabbed would not activate the street ‘at all’ (quoting here)Suds wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022This is practically a carbon copy of Chelsea on Pershing. Not incredible, but hey I'll take it.
Gotta agree with CHI here. I hate tearing down buildings but those houses, even if kept in good shape, don't serve as a noticeable entrance into the area. Houses are great on the main strip but they do little for activation or the density the Grove can accomplish. Hopefully this can do what Chroma did to the East entrance.
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As for the entrance to a neighborhood, Both large and small scale buildings can be effective if designed right.
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So much to respond to in that. Let me just leave a couple pictures here. You can study them for number of stories, consistent setbacks etc. it’s okay to say you’re excited by new development and willing to sacrifice legacy architecture. Let’s try to avoid forced rationalizations.STLinCHI wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022The buildings west of Handlebar shown in Imran's picture are are together with no toothless gaps. None are single story like the two small homes on the east side of the proposed tear downs. Apples and oranges. I would only advocate for removal if the new building is financed and sure to be built. Adjacent buildings on both sides of the project are built right up to the sidewalk. Continuity of the streetscape would be a real plus. As it stands, this section of The Grove is a no-man's land.
Nothing forced. I'm a 40-year preservationist. Not just in words, but actual work. Rehabbed an 1876 alley flounder in Soulard for my first home in 1982. Was the only inhabitant on the block at the time. Rehabbed the farthest west commercial space in the Tivoli building in 1992 for my first retail business. It's the only storefront in the building with the original plaster still intact and was the only one to stay open through the gut rehab project. Rehabbed a 1914 two flat in 2004 for my first home in Chicago. None of these were gut rehabs. All were restorations. With that said, I do believe bringing the street wall up to the sidewalk would stitch the south side of Manchester together and the residential density would be beneficial to the entire neighborhood. Wasn't saying the building setbacks were inconsistent as a group, but certainly with regard to adjacent structures. In my opinion, three of the six houses have little merit. The other three are quite beautiful with amazing brickwork and would be a loss. None of the six should demoed unless the new project proves financing in place.imran wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022So much to respond to in that. Let me just leave a couple pictures here. You can study them for number of stories, consistent setbacks etc. it’s okay to say you’re excited by new development and willing to sacrifice legacy architecture. Let’s try to avoid forced rationalizations.STLinCHI wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022The buildings west of Handlebar shown in Imran's picture are are together with no toothless gaps. None are single story like the two small homes on the east side of the proposed tear downs. Apples and oranges. I would only advocate for removal if the new building is financed and sure to be built. Adjacent buildings on both sides of the project are built right up to the sidewalk. Continuity of the streetscape would be a real plus. As it stands, this section of The Grove is a no-man's land.
If you still cannot see it, I’d be happy to mock up a rendering of how these could be brought back as a stunning collection of small businesses to anchor this ‘no man’s land’
Looking at the sales history, 4556 last sold in 2003 and 4552 in 2006. Maybe there's a transaction missing, as 4542 (one of the vacant lots) seems to have last sold in 1989. Maybe all three properties were bundled with something else and Groveland LLC picked them up in transactions that aren't showing, but that's where I got the idea they've been slowly collecting them with the intent to eventually demo them and do something big. And the fact they've been in the neighborhood at least that long makes it believable. I'm thrilled that they've done good work elsewhere in the neighborhood, but I am infuriated they've simply let this entire strip slowly fall down. It's very much the Drury problem. I don't hate Drury. They've done some solid preservation work. (Saving the International Fur Exchange was no small feat.) But the way they just let the strip on Kingshighway rot, because it didn't fit their vision bugs me. This feels identical. And I find it especially perplexing when they have an office down the street.quincunx wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Looks to me like he acquired these 2015-18. Where do you see 20 years? Austin Barzantny has been rehabbing buildings in the neighborhood for many years. He did 4101 Laclede. Here's an article about his activities from 2016.
https://www.stltoday.com/business/local ... 46cb6.htmlBarzantny, 38, is in the middle of it. Grove Properties has rehabbed nearly 50 buildings to produce about 125 apartments. Occupancy is steady at 95 percent, said Barzantny, adding that most tenants are students or workers at the nearby Cortex tech district or the BJC complex.
Sure, in 1950 when families 5-10 bodies deep were living in 2-3 bedroom flats. Even if we still had all of our 1950 housing stock, no way it could support 850K people in 2022.imran wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Density built on an empty parking lot is great. Replace a gas station? all day!brianadler6545 wrote: ↑Oct 19, 2022Imran more density is good. Not everything is about historical preservation- there are other goals worth achieving too!imran wrote:
Really? I’m surprised you also believe that these Historic houses if rehabbed would not activate the street ‘at all’ (quoting here)
As for the entrance to a neighborhood, Both large and small scale buildings can be effective if designed right.
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But density without historic preservation to me is warehousing of people while losing the soul of a community.
And St. Louis is not yet at a level of infill and population growth that we should feel forced to make difficult choices. We Can have both historic restoration and dense infill. Remember this City at one time housed 800k people within it without everything being boxy towers.


