
Zumwalt testified that Crown 40 purchased the properties to prevent a competitor from purchasing the buildings and opening a gas station that might compete with Crown 40's new Crown Mart gas station near I-44 and Jefferson Avenue. Crown 40 has no intention of building a gas station on the site but -- and this gets weird -- wants to buy the two buildings to the east, demolish all of them and some day build something new there. This desire is odd because the corner building is occupied by a dental clinic that was not represented in Monday's proceedings. The other building is for sale.
Perhaps 2626-30 Chouteau (the large wagon company warehouse at right in the photograph above) is eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places. In my professional opinion, the other buildings are not -- not even as a district. The alterations have damaged historic integrity, and there is not sufficient context for a larger listing.
Of course, many buildings are preserved without official landmark designation and without tax credits. Can these be? Sure, but the owner doesn't seem interested. What can change his mind?
4 comments:
"What can change his mind?" My guess, just off of the top of my head: filthy lucre.
This town is messed up.
I'm all for free enterprise, but another Crown gas station in the city 3 within the 3 mile stretch of Jefferson and 12+/- in the metro bistate area. Monopoly in action.
Now the Building Division has posted on the doors that this building is condemned. Now what?
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