The photographs here show derelict historic buildings. From condition to building type, these shots are a lot like those from the north side that have flooded urbanist blogs in the last two years. Perhaps few in Soulard then would have imagined that thirty-one years later the same conditions would persist and remain the subject of controversy. Certainly that neighborhood's history is testament to the power of concerted effort to resolve thse conditions through smart historic preservation strategy. Still, there were glaring blunders in Soulard that north siders today can avoid. While Soulard in the 1970s faced a dense neighborhood with a high level of vacancy, the north side today faces conditions that combine low density with a rising level of building vacancy. Soulard could not afford the losses shown here; we really can't afford to lose another building!
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The hard lesson learned -- and one that Paul McKee ought to consider in north city -- is that large scale development tends to create collateral damage among historic properties. No developer can do it all, and none should try. The second lesson is that historic buildings will simultaneously be subjects to and victims of tax credit incentive programs. Developers will always try to discard buildings that are "unworkable" under incentive programs. That's where city preservation ordinances do their duty.
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These next two photograph show unidentified buildings.
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Please send identification if you know what these photographs show.
There are obvious and much-mentioned good lessons for near north St. Louis neighborhoods to take from Soulard, but the harder lessons need to be heeded as well. The situation on the near north side makes each historic building extremely fragile, and preservation an urgent cause. McKee's project lurks in every discussion of the area because it involves so much of the area's remaining historic building stock. Mead McClellan never owned enough of Soulard to remove the neighborhood character from whole swaths; in St. Louis Place and JeffVanderLou, McKee does. What he intends to do with that power is unknown, but what residents want him to do with it should be clear. Other property owners -- ranging from churches to out-of-town landlords -- also hold the future of many near north side buildings in jeopardy.
The best lesson from Soulard may be the power of vigilance at the community level. So many residents decided that they simply would not let the buildings be lost. While not always successful in individual attempts, Soulard's residents won the larger battle of retaining the historic character of the neighborhood. Can near north side residents do the same? Can we draw the line on preserving our buildings? At this critical point, we must. Even Soulard lost the beautiful buildings I've shown above, and many others.
5 comments:
I could be wrong but that first unidentified photo looks like a section of Menard like 2300 block.I am actually shocked to see soulard in the shape. It is always fascinating to me to see the vision that some people have had. It makes all the difference when it comes to building a sense of community.
is the first picture 11th street just north of Menard?
^
I think that is 11th Street.
The 70s were powerful years. Soulard saviors stood strong. Harvey Milk led gay rights in SF.
Today, these folks are largely forgotten.
As the film "Milk" is about to come out, a pathetic piece on NPR had 20-somethings essentially writing off the significance of Harvey Milk, these young people instead more interested in people of their own generation.
Lightweights.
The southeast corner of Menard and Shenandoah today.
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