This slide shows the ward boundaries and project outline:

This slide shows the proposed timeline for approval of tax increment financing and a redevelopment ordinance (a pretty fast track):

More slides available online here.


What It Is
Ecology of Absence is a voice for historic preservation and a chronicle of architectural change in the St. Louis region that started as a companion to the website of the same name. The blog focuses on changes in the built environment that come about as a city attempts to stem the deindustrialization, depopulation, shrinking public services and loss of architectural fabric that define the modern American urban condition. There is occasional coverage of other cities and rural areas.
Header image by Jesiey Mead.
Editor
Michael R. Allen is an architectural historian currently serving as director of the Preservation Research Office, a technical assistance and preservation consulting firm. Allen also serves on the boards of the St. Louis Building Arts Foundation and Preservation Action.
michael.ross.allen-AT-sbcglobal.net
Submissions
Always welcome.
1 comments:
That is the shortest possible timeline for approval and suggests a "rubber stamp" review process.
Does McKee plan to submit the entire project area as one redevelopment plan?
Will there be financial details and specific project information available for review by the general public?
How does the tradition of aldermanic courtesy play out on a project of this scale?
Post a Comment