Tuesday, July 15, 2008
The Phoenix, 14th Street
One of the most important local preservation success stories ever is unfolding at the present moment: the rescue and rehabilitation of 26 historic buildings around the 14th Street commercial district in the Old North St. Louis neighborhood. The $35 million project centers on two blocks of the commercial district closed to vehicular traffic in 1977 and redubbed the "14th Street Mall," infamous as an urban ghost town after a majority of buildings fell vacant by the 1990s, with all but two vacant by 2005.
When I first started exploring the neighborhood, contemplating the purchase of a building, the 14th Street Mall was an eerie void in the heart of a rebounding neighborhood. Rehab activity was eroding the decayed quality of many blocks in the neighborhood, but not the two blocks closed to traffic. These blocks were the exception: blocks getting worse, losing vitality and sucking it away from surrounding blocks. No part of the neighborhood seemed to be as formidable a reminder of the neighborhood's plight -- or as valuable an asset.
For years, neighbors had been trying to revive the commercial district. Without the capacity to reopen the closed streets (14th and Montgomery) and tackle a large number of the buildings at once, the Old North St. Louis Restoration Group had little success at attracting development. A bid by an Atlanta developer to acquire the entire four-block mall area spurred a capacity-building partnership between the Restoration Group and the Regional Housing Community Development Alliance. The impossible became the actual. Acquisition began in 2004, and intricately-arranged financing was ready in fall 2007.
After I moved into Old North in 2005, I always spoke of the 14th Street project in the future tense. Even last summer, as the reality of the project seemed imminent, I noticed a reluctance in the neighborhood to speak about the project in the present tense. As if naming the project were a curse that would doom the ghostly landscape’s chances at revival, people remained cautious. Who could blame people?
Then, all of a sudden, at the end of September 2007, an army of contractors descended. Dozens of buildings were gutted, walls were rebuilt, fences erected and roofs removed. The whole tone of Old North changed – the dead center, 14th Street, was now the hot bed of neighborhood action. Like a phoenix, the heart of Old North began to rise. By spring 2008, a handful of historic buildings on Warren and Montgomery streets had been fully rehabbed and leased to new residents.
By the spring, the streets should be reopened and the rehabbed buildings will house 78 housing units and 6,000 square feet of retail space. The life will continue to grow. For now, even incomplete, the difference is life-affirming for this old neighborhood.
Labels:
historic preservation,
northside,
onsl,
rehabbing
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2 comments:
Thanks for the nice reminder of the signficance of our Crown Square development. Just a few small corrections to point out: the entire development is comprised of 27 buildings (14 on the former "14th Street Mall" blocks and 13 on adjacent blocks), with 80 residential units (50 on the "mall" and 30 off the "mall," and about 35,000 square feet of commercial space (all on the "mall"). To make it clear that we are putting the streets back in and knitting the center of the neighborhood back together we have tried to ban "14th Street Mall" from our vocabulary in hopes that we can dispell the notion that we are putting a "mall" back into re-use and to put the long misguided "pedestrian mall" episode in the past.
Seeing this development take it's course has been very exciting and brings alot of new hope to the residents of Old North. I live right across the street from Crown Square and watching has been the highlight of my day for some time now. Cannot wait till it is completed and the street is put back into place. What a great improvement so far and you can actually see a picture in your mind of how it might look in the future. When people travel down St. Louis Avenue I have seen them stop, park thier cars and just look in amazement. More and more people that come to our beloved Crown Candy have started eating that that ice cream outside and watch the workers as they rebuild these beautiful old buildings. Word to the wise...Crown Candy- Start outside seating!!! They can't believe what is happening. They have done a great job on the completed buildings so far. It will be so nice when businesses arive also, not to mention PEOPLE.
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