Home » Accessibility » Recent Articles:

The Galleria Revisited

On October 11th I posted Reaching The Galleria Not Easy For Pedestrians and noted the accessible route let to the one entrance that didn’t have automatic doors.

img_0310
ABOVE: The entrance directly inline with the access route from post on the 11th

I wrote: “On my next visit I will see if I can go around the former Mark Shale space to reach the entry by Restoration Hardware.” I visited again on Wednesday and discovered I could reach an entrance with automatic doors.

img_0845

img_0846More distance but hey I’ve traveled a long way already.

ABOVE: Blue line represents my path from the nearby light rail station
ABOVE: Blue line represents my path from the nearby light rail station

So I can access the mall without working my way through the parking lot or struggling with a manual door.  But nobody should have to travel that far to reach an accessible entrance.  The Galleria needs to look at building some new structures between Brentwood Blvd and the mall, aligned with the Galleria Parkway that leads to the transit station.

– Steve Patterson

 

Reaching Forest Park A Challenge For Pedestrians Near SW Corner

claytonskinkeraerial
ABOVE: Forest Park (upper right) is walking distance to many. The center is Clayton & Skinker. Image: Google Maps (click to view)

Forest Park is a major regional asset, larger than New York’s Central Park. Many people live within walking distance of the park but reaching the park isn’t an easy task.  This post is about trying to safely reach Forest Park via Skinker & Clayton Ave.

claytonskinker
ABOVE: Aerial of Clayton & Skinker (vertical) showing no crosswalks across either road into Forest Park, hard to reach bus stop.

If you look the image above, with the top intersection being Clayton & Skinker, you can see crosswalks don’t cross either into Forest Park.

img_0449
ABOVE: No crosswalk or pedestrian signal looking east across Skinker from the NW corner at Clayton
img_0448
ABOVe: From the same corner looking south, a crosswalk & pedestrian signal are provided
img_0452
ABOVE: looking west from the SW corner of Forest Park
img_0453
ABOVE: rotating to the right (north) you see there is no sidewalk along Skinker to reach the bus stopÂ

img_0450
ABOVE: Once on the corner of Forest Park you see the jogging trail
img_0455
ABOVE: looking south from the corner of Forest Park, no crosswalk or signal

ABOVE: looking north toward Forest Park new concrete where a crosswalk should be
ABOVE: looking north toward Forest Park new concrete where a crosswalk should be

Pedestrians (able-bodied & disabled) need to reach Forest Park.

– Steve Patterson

 

Walkability Around The Maplewood MetroLink Station

img_0275
ABOVE:worn path where a sidewalk should be, west of the Maplewood MetroLink station on Manchester Rd.

The “Cross County” MetroLink extension opened in August 2006.  In that time many would expect new development and increased walkability around the new stations but we had no plan beyond the line.  I’d plan for and require dense development and walkability over time.  But  not in our region, here we can spend hundreds of millions on transit infrastructure but not change the land planning to justify the infrastructure capital investment.

maplewoodmetrolink
ABOVE: Aerial view of the Maplewood MetroLink station along Manchester Rd, just east of Hanley. Image: Google Maps

To make the transit investment worthwhile there must be nearby destinations (housing, office, retail, etc) and the ability to walk to/from transit and these nearby destinations. In cities where transit is planned and zoning is changed in anticipation of a transit line you get new dense & walkable development occurring before the line even opens for riders.

– Steve Patterson

 

Reaching The Galleria Not Easy For Pedestrians

In May 1988 a small mall in the St. Louis suburb of Richmond Heights began planning to expand, from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on May 15, 1988:

“Earlier this month, Hycel Properties Co. announced an ambitious plan to quadruple the size of the Saint Louis Galleria. The Richmond Heights shopping mall will add four department stores, 100 new specialty stores, a 300-room luxury hotel, two covered parking garages and up to three office buildings.”

At the time both sides of Brentwood Blvd was lined with buildings.  The developer needed help from the Richmond Heights:

“The St. Louis Galleria said Monday that it would seek eminent domain power from the city of Richmond Heights to acquire 94 of the 113 commercial buildings and houses in the Clay North neighborhood.” – P-D Aug 30 1988

Richmond Heights granted the power of eminent domain but did nothing to ensure pedestrians could also reach the expanded Galleria.  The mall has five entrances to the outdoors and a few more connecting to the parking garage along the west side of the mall. The expansion was built in the early 1990s, after the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 became law.

galleriaaccessroute
ABOVE: Blue is accessible route from MetroLink, red is the direct route

The expanded Galleria would be open for nearly 15 years before the MetroLink light rail line would open nearby but since the mall is surrounded by housing & businesses they should have planned for customers to arrive on foot rather than behind the wheel. In a minimal way, they did but I’ll get to that in a bit.

img_0018
ABOVE: Pedestrians have worn a path in the grass getting to/from the Galleria
img_0012
ABOVE: less direct but staying on a sidewalk seems safer
img_0013
ABOVE: sidewalk leads to curbs and crosswalk leads to shrubs & cars, not an entrance

I did “drive” my wheelchair through the parking lot to reach the nearest entrance – once. On my next visit I followed the perimeter sidewalk trying to access an entrance without risking my life wheeling through the parking lot.

img_0032
ABOVE: At Brentwood & Clayton able-bodied pedestrians can walk down the stairs to the parking lot. You see the entrance, don’t you?
img_0037
ABOVE: west along Clayton I then encountered an exit from an underground service garage, the sidewalk picks up on the other side
img_0042
Above: look, a sidewalk heading toward the mall
img_0309
ABOVE: and a properly marked & signed crosswalk
img_0310
ABOVE: There is the entrance, straight ahead!
img_0312
ABOVE: Four of the five entrances have automatic sliding doors but the one entrance with a direct path for pedestrians does not

That’s right, the other four entrances have sliding door that open automatically but this entry has standard doors! The door on the right has a wheelchair sticker at the bottom but no opener so I don’t get why.  But I was able to get past the doors and the set of doors right behind but it involved considerably more work than wide sliding doors.

On my next visit I will see if I can go around the former Mark Shale space to reach the entry by Restoration Hardware. A lot of work to reach the mall, someone working at the office building just across I-64 would never travel this far on foot to the mall on their lunch break or after work.  Nor would they walk through the parking lot from the public sidewalk along Brentwood.  The Galleria at Clayton & Brentwood could have easily been designed with pedestrian routes to five entrances.  Very little effort, very little cost — but lasting benefits.

– Steve Patterson

 

Door Openers Added At Culinaria

October 9, 2010 Accessibility, Downtown Comments Off on Door Openers Added At Culinaria

In August 2010. a year after opening, door openers have been added to the two front doors at Culinaria downtown.

img_0003These went up just days after I posted about the absence of them.  These were already in the works so my post had nothing to do with them being installed.  They were just waiting to determine if the State of Missouri was going to foot the bill for their installation. You see, we taxpayers own the 9th Street Parking Garage where Culinaria is located.

– Steve Patterson

 

Advertisement



[custom-facebook-feed]

Archives

Categories

Advertisement


Subscribe