They owe the public to rebuild those buildings
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They are a total loss, coming down.delmar2debaliviere2downtown wrote: ↑1:24 PM - Apr 24They owe the public to rebuild those buildings
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I disagree. I wish STL would utilize its waterfront more. I understand thats tricky with flood control and what not, but plopping a data center there is short sighted. Soulard is so disconnected from Downtown. I really wish 7th/Broadway/4th street was more built up and populated with restaurants/bars/shopping/residential. It sucks that Kosciusko was so gutted, and will be hard to change that area to be anything but industrial. This development would have been a good help with that.DogtownBnR wrote: ↑6:11 PM - Apr 28^Seems like a great place for a data center if the Gateway South plan falls through. These under-utilized locations, that are tough to develop make great places for data centers, vs. putting them near populated areas, natural areas/parks & dense urban areas like the Armory.
Oh totally its an eyesore. I just really want the original intent of the site to happen, and not just throw up more tilt up storage, shipping, insert whatever heavy industrial use that YES will provide tax revenue, but be completely void of any human interaction, use or activity.DogtownBnR wrote: ↑2:53 PM - 11 days ago^ I completely agree! I want the riverfront to be developed. However, if it comes down to nothing ever being put on the south RF or data centers, I go with something over nothing. Choteau's Landing was discussed over 20 years ago. Now Gateway South is either stalled or moving VERY slowly (or maybe not happening, who knows). Then they decided not to secure the existing buildings, sealing their fate. Now we have this MAJOR eyesore greeting travelers into our City. As they cross the Bridge, let's hope the Arch can distract most travelers. It is an absolute embarrassment. The owners should be forced to clean up the site. If they plan to move forward at some point, they would have to demo most of the damaged buildings anyway. Can't imagine any of them are salvageable at this point. . .
Every other city on the Mississippi River has some sort of activated riverfront. I’ve never understood why people in St. Louis act like it can’t be done here toobwcrow1s wrote:I was just in cape girardeau this weekend and you can literally walk from water street and onto the riverfront cobbles.
Is there no plausible interaction availability points we can capitalize on? It's a main attraction to be that close to the river. Of course there is a flood wall as well but the access points are very easy to navigate to from the CBD. It's just a system of doors that seal in the case of high water (and it was very high this weekend to where most were closed).
The lack of development on the river is unbelievable - The city has almost all of it zoned industrial and seems to be stubbornly locked into thatSTLcommenter wrote: ↑4:03 PM - 11 days agoEvery other city on the Mississippi River has some sort of activated riverfront. I’ve never understood why people in St. Louis act like it can’t be done here toobwcrow1s wrote:I was just in cape girardeau this weekend and you can literally walk from water street and onto the riverfront cobbles.
Is there no plausible interaction availability points we can capitalize on? It's a main attraction to be that close to the river. Of course there is a flood wall as well but the access points are very easy to navigate to from the CBD. It's just a system of doors that seal in the case of high water (and it was very high this weekend to where most were closed).
“Because…” broadly waving at everything already on our riverfront,STLcommenter wrote: ↑4:03 PM - 11 days agoEvery other city on the Mississippi River has some sort of activated riverfront. I’ve never understood why people in St. Louis act like it can’t be done here toobwcrow1s wrote:I was just in cape girardeau this weekend and you can literally walk from water street and onto the riverfront cobbles.
Is there no plausible interaction availability points we can capitalize on? It's a main attraction to be that close to the river. Of course there is a flood wall as well but the access points are very easy to navigate to from the CBD. It's just a system of doors that seal in the case of high water (and it was very high this weekend to where most were closed).