For the most part a police headquarters isn’t much different than any other office, so reusing a 1990 office building makes perfect sense. During the open house last Saturday I saw every floor of the new St. Louis Police headquarters, it seems like the space worked well for their needs.
Vacant 1915 Olive in December 2010Saturday morning before the ribbon cuttingThe open house began while the festivities were still going on outside. We started at the top, 7th floor, and worked our way down floor by floor.The new office of Chief Sam DotsonView looking north on 19th Street from the 5th floorThe only clue this isn’t most offices is the bank of holding cells and nearby interview rooms.
It’ll take a few weeks for police and civilian staff to get relocated into the new building. Hopefully having the long-vacant building occupied again will lead to nearby storefronts getting new businesses. The police are leaving their old headquarters built in 1927 because renovating it for their continued use would’ve cost considerably more. Besides, they couldn’t have stayed during renovations.
The electric power downtown never goes out because the lines are underground and not subject to storm damage like overhead wires, or so I thought. But Wednesday night many downtown did lose power, we didn’t thankfully. Old infrastructure was to blame. Though not the cause of Wednesday’s outage, the substation at 13th & Cole, built in 1948, is ready to be replaced.
A 1951 photo of the 1948 substation at 13th & Cole. To the left you can see the 1947 building that housed KWK Radio & KWK-TV (precursor to KMOV). In the background is the Shrine of St. Joseph. The high rise Cochran Gardens public housing project began a year later. Source: Ameren
Ameren has been planning to replace this substation for years, in January I unknowingly posted two pics related to their effort.
On January 3rd I posted about ongoing utility work downtown, this at Washington Ave around 16th. Click image to view post.Then on January 20th, as part of my annual post on Dr. Martin Luther King Drive I posted this image from December 2013, the site at 1901 MLK was purchased more than a decade ago. Click image to view post.
In late May my friend Kent Martin from Ameren’s communications department emailed me a pitch about their work to replace an old downtown substation and update the underground power grid. Seeing the 1951 image shown above I was interested, but busy prepping for my June 8th wedding. I wanted to see the old substation in person so we emailed back and forth but we couldn’t find a time to meet. Finally we agreed on Wednesday morning, but then postponed to Thursday morning so he could get one of Ameren’s Chevy Volt electric cars to pick me up, plus the weather would be nicer.
I’d gone by the old substation in my wheelchair Tuesday morning, and hours before the outage, I drove my husband by the old and new substations on our way home from dinner. Sitting on our balcony later we noticed the street lights on Locust go out. We still had power but soon a message was posted online about a power outage downtown. I thought I knew the problem, but it turns out a combination of problems at other locations led to the outage.
Still it drives home the point the infrastructure is old. How old? Over a century in some places!
This photo of 8th & Olive shows the mass of overhead wires on Olive (look closely). The photo is marked as 1889, but the tall Union Trust wasn’t built until 1893. The 1896 Chemical building isn’t built yet so that narrows the age of the photo. Source: AmerenAs early as 1904 the mess of wires downtown were being buried beneath the streets & alleys. The exact date & location of this photo is unknown. Source: Ameren
I had no idea overhead wires were moved underground so early! So much of the trenching in downtown’s streets over the last 6-12 months has been replace old conduit and wire. The new substation being built on Dr. Martin Luther King between 19th & 20th will start going into use in late September and by April 2015 the old substation on Cole will be out of service.
I got to see the new and old substations yesterday.
The east end of the new substation, along 19th, is a MSD-required bioswale to handle water runoff. The brick piers and fencing is much nicer than the chain link at the Cole substation. I’m told the entire site will be landscaped once construction is complete. I’m going to suggest street trees between the curbs and new sidewalks.Much of the new site is open with weatherproof transistorsFour prefab buildings made in Fulton MO hold more sensitive electronicsWorkers inside one of the fourOver at 13th & Cole you notice the heavy door and detailed masonry.The plaque on the brick wall proclaiming “Union Electric of Missouri”You also notice the trailer outside handling a lot of the switching duties after some equipment inside failed.Thanks to project manager Matt Haffer (left) and director of Ameren’s underground division John Luth for showing me both facilities.
The Cole substation will be razed next year, some remediation will be performed on the site. Ameren will retain & landscape the site.
I February 2010 I posted I would live at 4005 Delmar, then a vacant & boarded building, I was dreaming of it being renovated.
Boarded storefronts at sidewalk level, February 2010
The building at 4005-4011 Delmar has since attracted the attention of a developer, who also dreams:
We believe being a dreamer is every bit as important as being a do’er. In our personal and our professional lives, the members of The Vecino Group are dedicated to imagining a better world and then working to make it happen.
I too agree it is important to dream, I’ve shared mine here for over 9 years.
Last year:
A housing developer from Springfield, Mo., has embarked on a $12.7 million project to renovate the building as 68 affordable apartments for homeless vets. The five-story building, at 4011 Delmar Boulevard, is in the city’s Vandeventer neighborhood, about three blocks from the John Cochran VA Medical Center.
Plans call for the building, named Freedom Place by the developer, to be redone as 20 studio apartments, 24 one-bedroom units, 16 two-bedroom units and eight three-bedroom units. Monthly rents are scheduled to range from $369 to $640. (stltoday)
According to city records, the building had 100 one-bedroom apartments and three “other” units. Hopefully the new mix of units will work well.
I pass by this project on the #97 MetroBus, but recently I was in the area photographing for my post on the North Sarah Apartments so I got a closer look at the progress.
New windows greatly improve the appearance
I’m curious to see how the ground-level will be used. Will a neighborhood coffeehouse be able to open? A small local market perhaps? The area desperately needs economic activity to create jobs for the veterans that will live here, as well as others.
Directly across the street a 1945 commercial building is vacant. With its side parking lot this could be a good market for the area.At 4035 a commercial storefront addition in from of a 19th century house has collapsed.
Housing for these vets is huge, but we must also finds ways to rebuild the local economic base to create jobs. One local effort is Bridge Bread:
Bridge Bread is a social entrepreneurship initiative designed to provide job opportunities for guests of The Bridge. The goal of the initiative is to help disadvantaged guests engage in a financially rewarding effort that enhances self-worth, promotes dignity and enables the guests to help themselves.
It takes much more than a shelter cot to rebuild the lives of the homeless. Kudos to the people behind The Vecino Group!
Shortly after the weekly poll started last week I realized a flaw in how I constructed the answers, lumping walk-up ATMs and drive-up ATMs together as one:
Q: You’ve got a check to deposit into your checking or savings account, pick your two preferred methods from the following list:
ATM 45 [28.85%]
Lobby teller 39 [25%]
Drive-thru teller 34 [21.79%]
Smartphone app 32 [20.51%]
Mailing check to my financial institution 5 [3.21%]
N/A — I don’t have a checking/savings account 1 [0.64%]
Had I broken the ATM answer down into the two types as I did with tellers the results would’ve been different. Still, the results are interesting. In a few years I think we’ll see smartphone apps increasingly used for depositing increasingly rare checks.
US Bank on Tucker between Olive & Locust has so much space devoted to the drive through and drive-up ATM.
For decades banks razed buildings to build drive through lanes. Decades ago these lanes were full of cars but now fewer and fewer use them. Last year Bank of America began closing drive-up teller service at some locations.
In the latest move to scale back its branches, Bank of America is ending drive-up teller service at some locations, including in the Charlotte region.
The reason? Too few people are using the drive-thru lanes, the bank says.
The move comes as the Charlotte-based lender is in cost-cutting mode, closing branches nationwide and shrinking its number of automated teller machines. (Bank of America to close drive-through teller lanes)
The Bank of America branch at 800 Market still has drive-thru lanes, but their website indicates the branch hours will change on August 4th. Will they close then? Don’t be fooled, the banking industry is changing big time:
Drive-through teller stations, once promoted as a convenience for the after-work crowd wanting to keep Bob Dylan songs playing while depositing their paychecks, are losing some of that traffic to mobile apps. As consumers increasingly use self-service channels from wherever they wish, financial institutions are reimagining their physical footprints, including drive-ups, to adjust. (American Banker)
The lobby branch of Bank of America at 100 North Broadway will close in November, according to their website. They surveyed their customers:
Almost two-thirds of consumers (62%) have at least tried to use mobile banking. The most common activities performed using mobile banking are account balance monitoring and statement viewing. Bank of America now has over 15 million active mobile banking users who access their accounts on a mobile device over 165 million times per month, according to SVP and mobile solutions executive Marc Warshawsky. This number is growing by more than 200,000 customers per month.
However, visits to bank branches are still the preferred method for managing accounts. Around 84% of respondents have visited a bank branch over the last six months. And 23% of the respondents said that they complete the majority of their banking transactions at a branch. About half (47%) of the respondents said that they use the bank’s mobile app or website as a preferred method for certain tasks. (Forbes)
When I deposit a check via ATM I don’t like having to use an envelope, the newer ATMs that read/scan the check as you deposit it are much more 21st century. I’ll revisit this in five years.
July 31st marks 21 years since the 8th & Pine MetroLink light rail station opened downtown, the Arcade-Wright building on that corner remains undeveloped. For nearly 20 minutes at the June Parking Commission meeting Otis Williams (SLDC: St. Louis Development Corporation) & Steve Stogel talked about a variety of downtown development issues, including why a lease for parking spaces in the 7th Street garage was critical.
The Arcade portion of the Arcade-Wright, 8th & OliveThe Wright portion of the Arcade-Wright, 8th & Pine, entry/exit to station (WB) next to buildingThe Arcade-Wright across 8th Street from the 8th & Pine MetroLink light rail station (EB)The city-owned 7th Street parking garage
During the 18 minute discussion many details about the proposed redevelopment are revealed.
The Arcade-Wright building:
is owned by the LCRA (Land Clearance for Redevelopment Authority), for about 5 years
is one of the last buildings awaiting redevelopment downtown.
has roughly 500,000 square feet
Webster University will lease the 1st floor, mezzanine & 2nd floor, 55,000 sq ft. Their campus will be about 90,000 sq ft total
Upper floors will be a combination of (202) affordable and (80) market rate apartments
$118 million dollar project
LCRA bought the Arcade-Wright building for $4,500,000 after John Steffen’s Pyramid Constriction firm collapsed with 7-9 downtown buildings
Mortage was held by Bank of America. Total for this mortgage and several other buildings was $32 million
Interest had accrued and property taxes hadn’t been paid on the properties
Development will let the LCRA get reimbursed for all expenses
Not enough parking in the building, “the 200 affordable units have to park somewhere”, seeking long-term lease in the 7th street garage so the residents in the affordable units have parking
Other:
Redevelopment of the Chemical building at 8th & Olive will move forward once the Arcade-Wright is underway
The owner of the Laclede Gas Building is planning a renovation once Laclede Gas moves out
Jefferson Arms is the other building that was held by Steffen in 2008 that hasn’t been renovated yet
April 23, 2008 John Steffen asked Steve Stogel to help him liquidate. (Note: Pyramid shut down on April 18, 2008)
The Chemical building is 160,000-180,000 sq ft
This was on June 12th, I’ve not seen any announcements since. I recorded (audio) of the nearly two hour meeting, you can listen to the last 18 minutes about the Arcade & development here.
So all 202 affordable (subsidized) apartments at a MetroLink stop need a parking space in the garage a block away to finance the redevelopment. It’s unclear if parking at Dominium’s Leather Trades & Metropolitan is included in the base rent or an additional charge. I’m not sure anyone involved realizes the building is adjacent to an underground light rail station — one people would need to walk past to reach the parking garage! Enterprise CarShare also operates downtown, for times when residents need wheels.
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