Sprawl & Eminent Domain Alert in St. Louis County

January 18, 2005 Planning & Design 1 Comment

It doesn’t seem to end. Big boxes have saturated the blighted corn fields of St. Peters so now they are moving toward the core – taking people’s homes in the path of “progress.”

Back in November I commented on the new Walmart, Sam’s Club & Lowe’s abomination on Hanley Road. Also in November I shared my viewson the proposed Schnuck’s & Lowe’s at I-55 & Loughborough. The RFT did a story on this a few weeks later. Just a couple weeks later I talked about a proposed Home Depot at Goodfellow and I-70. This is a lot of big box stores for a region that is not greatly expanding its population.

Well, add another to the ever expanding list. This morning I learned of a proposed Walmart at I-55 & Weber road in South St. Louis County. According to Yahoo Maps this is only 1.3 miles from the I-55 & Loughborough Schnuck’s grocery/Lowe’s. Both involve eminent domain – the taking of people’s homes for the greater public good. Of course, greater public good means a developer think the houses are in the way of their generic box stores and massive and barren parking lots. We can’t let people’s homes get in the way of progress can we? Let’s ask the folks over in McRee town shall we???

Oh that is right – we can’t ask the folks in McRee town because their homes have already been razed. How silly of me to forget. After all, I can clearly see the fact McRee town is missing when I drive by on I-44. Some of the destruction is still on-going but they are making quick headway of erasing decades of history. Reminds me of the wreck-less destruction for housing projects in the 1950s. Displace the poor so we can remove from our sight reminders that people are poor. I’d better stop now – this post is supposed to be about big box stores not the systematic displacement of people.

So, just over a mile from one abuse of eminent domain is another abuse of eminent domain. Since they go hand in hand with each other why not have public hearings on both projects on the same day? That way the big wigs from Walmart only have to come into town to threaten and intimidate for a day. No point dragging things out right?

Tuesday January 25th at 9am will be a public information meeting on the I-55 & Weber project. The meeting will be held at Stupp Brothers – the proposed site. At 7pm that same day will be a public information meeting on the I-55 & Loughborough project. That meeting will be held at the Carondelet Athletic Club which is next door to Schnucks.

One of the key phrases you’ll hear now is “county buyout.” That is the new kindler, gentler politically correct phrase for using tax money to take people’s homes through eminent domain. I’m not sure what the new phrase is for when the tax payers also rebuild the highway interchanges at Loughborough & Weber to handle the additional traffic demanded by these regional big box eyesores. Any thoughts?

– Steve

 

Sprawl & Eminent Domain Alert in St. Louis County

January 18, 2005 Planning & Design 1 Comment

It doesn’t seem to end. Big boxes have saturated the blighted corn fields of St. Peters so now they are moving toward the core – taking people’s homes in the path of “progress.”

Back in November I commented on the new Walmart, Sam’s Club & Lowe’s abomination on Hanley Road. Also in November I shared my viewson the proposed Schnuck’s & Lowe’s at I-55 & Loughborough. The RFT did a story on this a few weeks later. Just a couple weeks later I talked about a proposed Home Depot at Goodfellow and I-70. This is a lot of big box stores for a region that is not greatly expanding its population.

Well, add another to the ever expanding list. This morning I learned of a proposed Walmart at I-55 & Weber road in South St. Louis County. According to Yahoo Maps this is only 1.3 miles from the I-55 & Loughborough Schnuck’s grocery/Lowe’s. Both involve eminent domain – the taking of people’s homes for the greater public good. Of course, greater public good means a developer think the houses are in the way of their generic box stores and massive and barren parking lots. We can’t let people’s homes get in the way of progress can we? Let’s ask the folks over in McRee town shall we???

Oh that is right – we can’t ask the folks in McRee town because their homes have already been razed. How silly of me to forget. After all, I can clearly see the fact McRee town is missing when I drive by on I-44. Some of the destruction is still on-going but they are making quick headway of erasing decades of history. Reminds me of the wreck-less destruction for housing projects in the 1950s. Displace the poor so we can remove from our sight reminders that people are poor. I’d better stop now – this post is supposed to be about big box stores not the systematic displacement of people.

So, just over a mile from one abuse of eminent domain is another abuse of eminent domain. Since they go hand in hand with each other why not have public hearings on both projects on the same day? That way the big wigs from Walmart only have to come into town to threaten and intimidate for a day. No point dragging things out right?

Tuesday January 25th at 9am will be a public information meeting on the I-55 & Weber project. The meeting will be held at Stupp Brothers – the proposed site. At 7pm that same day will be a public information meeting on the I-55 & Loughborough project. That meeting will be held at the Carondelet Athletic Club which is next door to Schnucks.

One of the key phrases you’ll hear now is “county buyout.” That is the new kindler, gentler politically correct phrase for using tax money to take people’s homes through eminent domain. I’m not sure what the new phrase is for when the tax payers also rebuild the highway interchanges at Loughborough & Weber to handle the additional traffic demanded by these regional big box eyesores. Any thoughts?

– Steve

 

Sprawl & Eminent Domain Alert in St. Louis County

January 18, 2005 Planning & Design 7 Comments

It doesn’t seem to end. Big boxes have saturated the blighted corn fields of St. Peters so now they are moving toward the core – taking people’s homes in the path of “progress.”

Back in November I commented on the new Walmart, Sam’s Club & Lowe’s abomination on Hanley Road. Also in November I shared my viewson the proposed Schnuck’s & Lowe’s at I-55 & Loughborough. The RFT did a story on this a few weeks later. Just a couple weeks later I talked about a proposed Home Depot at Goodfellow and I-70. This is a lot of big box stores for a region that is not greatly expanding its population.

Well, add another to the ever expanding list. This morning I learned of a proposed Walmart at I-55 & Weber road in South St. Louis County. According to Yahoo Maps this is only 1.3 miles from the I-55 & Loughborough Schnuck’s grocery/Lowe’s. Both involve eminent domain – the taking of people’s homes for the greater public good. Of course, greater public good means a developer think the houses are in the way of their generic box stores and massive and barren parking lots. We can’t let people’s homes get in the way of progress can we? Let’s ask the folks over in McRee town shall we???

Oh that is right – we can’t ask the folks in McRee town because their homes have already been razed. How silly of me to forget. After all, I can clearly see the fact McRee town is missing when I drive by on I-44. Some of the destruction is still on-going but they are making quick headway of erasing decades of history. Reminds me of the wreck-less destruction for housing projects in the 1950s. Displace the poor so we can remove from our sight reminders that people are poor. I’d better stop now – this post is supposed to be about big box stores not the systematic displacement of people.

So, just over a mile from one abuse of eminent domain is another abuse of eminent domain. Since they go hand in hand with each other why not have public hearings on both projects on the same day? That way the big wigs from Walmart only have to come into town to threaten and intimidate for a day. No point dragging things out right?

Tuesday January 25th at 9am will be a public information meeting on the I-55 & Weber project. The meeting will be held at Stupp Brothers – the proposed site. At 7pm that same day will be a public information meeting on the I-55 & Loughborough project. That meeting will be held at the Carondelet Athletic Club which is next door to Schnucks.

One of the key phrases you’ll hear now is “county buyout.” That is the new kindler, gentler politically correct phrase for using tax money to take people’s homes through eminent domain. I’m not sure what the new phrase is for when the tax payers also rebuild the highway interchanges at Loughborough & Weber to handle the additional traffic demanded by these regional big box eyesores. Any thoughts?

– Steve

 

Let Us Turn Our Thoughts Today to Martin Luther King

The following is one of my favorite works about Dr. King:

Let us turn our thoughts today
To Martin Luther King
And recognize that there are ties between us
All men and women
Living on the earth
Ties of hope and love
Sister and brotherhood
That we are bound together
In our desire to see the world become
A place in which our children
Can grow free and strong
We are bound together
By the task that stands before us
And the road that lies ahead
We are bound and we are bound

If you are a fan of singer/songwriter James Taylor you know those words from his song “Shed a Little Light (iTunes link).” His words echo what I think King symbolizes – “hope and love”, “sister and brotherhood”, “all men and women.”

A very relevant part of his song is “We are bound together/by the task that stands before us/and the road that lies ahead.” The road that lies ahead is Martin Luther King Blvd which runs from downtown to the city limits. The task is returning this street to an important part of the community – a street worthy of its name. We are all bound to this task because we cannot rebuild our city by continuing to ignore the north side.
… Continue Reading

 

A Sunday Drive in St. Charles County

January 14, 2005 Planning & Design 3 Comments

dp_cityhall.jpg

Sunday I was out in the municipality of Dardenne Prairie located in St. Charles County. A friend is one of their six aldermen. He and his wife were sharing their experiences from campaigning last year. I like that their municipal elections are non-partisan. Are parties even relevant at a municipal level?

On the way to their home (with the obligatory front facing 3-car garage) I had to stop and snap the picture to the right. This photo is completely untouched – I did not digitally add the ‘Dardene Prairie City Hall’ sign in front of a trailer. No, this is the Dardene Prairie City Hall. Tragic huh?

During my visit our conversation turned from campaigning to city planning. Well, after a short discussion of Macs vs. Windows and how her team (USC) kicked my Alma Mater (University of Oklahoma) in the Orange Bowl. I started hearing about some of the issues they face. O’Fallon is next to them and wants to overtake them. Prior administrations let their city limits shrink because they wanted to remain a bedroom community. Without commercial development it is hard to provide city services – much less build a real city hall.

Soon Dardene Prairie will have one of those multi-screen theaters that has enough screens to show every movie currently out. But what I learned is that their Mayor, Pam Fogarty, wanted the theatre and other developments to be a bit more connected. She wanted to be able to go to dinner and then walk to the movie without having to get back into her car. Guess what? She is getting what she wanted. Granted, she’ll be walking in a strip mall but it is a start.

The three of us got in their SUV (ownership of at least one SUV is required in St. Charles County) and headed over to Winghaven. For those of you that don’t know, Winghaven was the region’s first attempt at New Urbanism. I hadn’t seen it in years – it was barely started last time I was there. In August 2001 the RFT did a story about the development. Some took exception with the characterization that Winghaven was New Urbanism. Todd Antoine, an urban planner currently with Great Rivers Greenway, green Architect John Hoag and yours truly authored a letter to the editor in response.

From our letter:

New Urbanists believe strengthening the urban core is vital to sustaining long-term regional growth while acknowledging that greenfield development will continue. New development, whether in the urban core or in greenfields, benefits by incorporating New Urbanist principles. New Urbanism does not imply a strict return to nostalgic remembrances of the past. Instead, it is based on design and planning principles nurtured and refined over centuries of town-building that have been largely forgotten over the last 50 years.

The following week was 9-11 which made our concerns of defining New Urbanism immediately insignificant.

OK, so we are in the SUV heading to Winghaven. I learn more. As we head out of their subdivision I note that the main feeder road in the subdivision only has sidewalks on one side. When they go for a walk in their subdivision they have to walk across the street and across grass to get to a sidewalk. Sad. We pull onto the two lane country road that was probably charming at one time. It will soon be widened by the county – it will still be two lanes but it will gain curbs, a center turn lane and a sidewalk on one side. The county only pays for one sidewalk. The much older subdivision across the street and to the north will not have a sidewalk on its side of the main street. Just as well, they have no sidewalks within their subdivision.

Now we are on Bryan Road which becomes Winghaven Blvd when we cross highway N. The first thing I notice is the blank land before we get to highway N. “Oh, that will be where Page Ave extends.” Page Avenue will continue through the middle of Dardene Prairie and connect with highway 40.

winghaven_daves.jpg

On the drive past little “villages” of mostly suburban housing on our way to the Boardwalk – their commercial town center. They explain how their Mayor, the aforementioned Pam Fogerty, bicycles from her house to this commercial area. Wow, cool. First she wants crazy things like being able to walk from dinner to a movie without driving to the next parking lot and now she bicycles from point A to point B in suburbia rather than drive an SUV. I’m really starting to like Mayor Fogerty. I look forward to meeting her.

Then I learn that my friends don’t do their grocery shopping at a massive Shnuck’s or Dierberg’s. They go to Dave’s on the Boardwalk in Winghaven. Earlier in the day, Dave himself took out their groceries to their SUV. Who knew such friendly neighborhood markets existed – much less in a new area in St. Charles County. This is not some glorified convenience store – they have a full selection of groceries including fresh produce and a deli. Plus, the store was very attractive in a smart way – much like our small Straub’s chain. I had low expectations and was immediately surprised.


winghaven_walkup.jpg

The ice creme shop across the street from the grocery store includes a great feature – a pedestrian walk-up window. Again, I’m totally shocked. Someone had to actually assume they’d have enough walk-up traffic to justify the cost of the window.

In terms of ADA accessibility they did a pretty bad job. Flagstone steps through mulched beds to get from SUV to sidewalk, lots of steps and narrow sidewalk widths.

winghaven_bike.jpg
A couple of bike racks are located on the two short blocks at the center. Unfortunately, this one is located on the side of a building in a less than visible location. Also, it is a bit too close to the building to make access comfortable. But, I’m always glad to see bike racks at commercial areas.

The adjacent townhouses are a mockery of real urban townhouses. The alleys are wider than lots of streets I know. The single family detached housing, also adjacent to the commercial area, is a little better. My friends observed, correctly, that the houses felt too close to the street not because of the actual distance but because of the bright white vinyl siding which jumps out at you. Again, these alleys are really wide and the houses have driveways and attached garages. One had a 3-car garage off the alley and no backyard. Lame.

Winghaven is not New Urbanism. It is better than typical suburban sprawl but it is a far cry from the City of St. Louis or even old town St. Charles. One could wonder if Winghaven was necessary to get to New Town at St. Charles – a genuine example of flood field New Urbanism. Maybe, but don’t pass it off as New Urbanism.

My friend reads Urban Review – St. Louis on a daily basis. Issues I raise about connecting people and places are being discussed with their Mayor and other Aldermen. I’m flattered. Dardene Prairie recently approved TND (Traditional Neighborhood Design) zoning for a couple of parcels of land within their city. I’ve yet to see the specifics of the ordinance but I’m encouraged the city is taking pro-active steps to mold the way it develops rather than just approving whatever a developer proposes.

I lent them my copies of David Sucher’s book City Comforts as well as the recent issue of New Urban News. I haven’t even been elected to the St. Louis Board of Aldermen yet and I am already working on improving the whole region. The power of sharing ones views & knowledge – I love it.

– Steve

 

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