Makes me wonder if failure is the only option and could be in part by design. Mess things up on purpose and then say government is the problem in order to justify less government and more tax cuts.
Nice article on Great Streets for Gravois - In Affton
http://www.websterkirkwoodtimes.com/Art ... treet.html
http://www.websterkirkwoodtimes.com/Art ... treet.html
StlToday - Group bike ride on Gravois Avenue seeks to call attention to traffic violence
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/cri ... 05d64.html
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/cri ... 05d64.html
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Sounds like MODoT is holding an open house on a Gravois project March 3 from 4-7 pm at the Five Star Senior Center 2832 Arsenal. I don't know a thing about this project, but judging from MODoT's past projects they need all the input we can give them. Here's the post article on it, but there's not much there apart from the notice.
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/met ... b899b.html
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/met ... b899b.html
Here's the MoDot notification: https://www.modot.org/node/83520symphonicpoet wrote: ↑4:40 AM - Feb 18Sounds like MODoT is holding an open house on a Gravois project March 3 from 4-7 pm at the Five Star Senior Center 2832 Arsenal. I don't know a thing about this project, but judging from MODoT's past projects they need all the input we can give them. Here's the post article on it, but there's not much there apart from the notice.
https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/met ... b899b.html
And of note:
For those who are unable to attend the meeting in person, the information shared during the meeting as well as a survey form will be available at Missouri Route 30 (Gravois) Pavement Resurfacing and Safety Improvements in St. Louis City | Missouri Department of Transportation on the day of the meeting. People are welcome to view the information and provide comments about the project until Tuesday, March 17.
And a link to the Project main page: https://www.modot.org/projects/missouri ... louis-city
View From The Lou - MoDOT finally wrote down the reason Gravois stays dangerous.
https://viewfromthelou.substack.com/p/m ... the-reason
https://viewfromthelou.substack.com/p/m ... the-reason
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MoDOT finally wrote down the reason Gravois stays dangerous. TY I wondered why it was so wide
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St. Louis failed in spectacular fashion on every single urban planning decision over the last 100 years. You would think there would be at least one urban planning success story just by accident but, no, every single urban planning decision was a huge spectacular failure with massive negative ramifications. Some could conclude that "urban planning" destroyed the city.
Ah yea, MoDOT, famously controlled by St. Louis.
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Yeah yeah. I'm talking about everything in its entirety, the interstates, the failed subway plans, public housing, the Arch (I consider the Arch grounds an urban planning failure), bridges (last 100 years only), and despite it all if you squint and look past a few major flaws it's still pretty damn nice.
I consider your entire ideology an urban planning disaster.leeharveyawesome wrote:Yeah yeah. I'm talking about everything in its entirety, the interstates, the failed subway plans, public housing, the Arch (I consider the Arch grounds an urban planning failure), bridges (last 100 years only), and despite it all if you squint and look past a few major flaws it's still pretty damn nice.
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The Lost St. Louis Riverfront 1930-1943
https://www.umsl.edu/mercantile/pott/lost-stl-riverfront.html
https://www.umsl.edu/mercantile/pott/lost-stl-riverfront.html
We were pretty ahead on Metrolink and Historic Tax Credits. But since those were tiny victories compared to the potential of what they could've been with real leadership....I'll 100% agree with you.leeharveyawesome wrote: ↑12:20 PM - 11 days agoSt. Louis failed in spectacular fashion on every single urban planning decision over the last 100 years. You would think there would be at least one urban planning success story just by accident but, no, every single urban planning decision was a huge spectacular failure with massive negative ramifications. Some could conclude that "urban planning" destroyed the city.
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StL made some good urban planning/revival decisions in the 80s but that’s been about the only period where the city has looked like it may make a dramatic comeback since the 1950s decline. I think a lot of that progress was halted quickly by how much crime escalated in all cities in the US in the early 90s and the narratives around it
There have been small victories but we need huge swings and home runs. I am growing severely concerned where our population in the city has hit and continues to decline at one of the fastest rate in the nation since COVID, together with the county’s population wall and metro east continued decline. The other peers and cities that struggled with decline seems to now be recovering or at least have stopped th COVID drain
StL sq miles is small but we are approaching the population of cities and suburbs that do not have near the economic prowess but we can’t seem to retain residents
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There have been small victories but we need huge swings and home runs. I am growing severely concerned where our population in the city has hit and continues to decline at one of the fastest rate in the nation since COVID, together with the county’s population wall and metro east continued decline. The other peers and cities that struggled with decline seems to now be recovering or at least have stopped th COVID drain
StL sq miles is small but we are approaching the population of cities and suburbs that do not have near the economic prowess but we can’t seem to retain residents
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