Policy Analysis, St. Louis City, Transportation

N-S MetroLink: Devil In The Details

This past weekend we got good news (about the North-South MetroLink expansion) that quickly turned into bad news. The good news is that the expansion is moving ahead: The Bi-State Development Board of Commissioners approved a resolution authorizing the BSD team to plan, design and develop the Jefferson alignment of the extension utilizing $7.4 million… Continue reading N-S MetroLink: Devil In The Details

Policy Analysis, Regional, St. Louis City, Transportation

To Unlock Promise of MetroLink, TOD is Key

Now that the dust has (finally) settled on the first round of voting in the St. Louis aldermanic primary, I want to take some time to advocate for a policy change that the City should implement but which the entire region would benefit from. That policy is the legalization of Transit Oriented Development (TOD) through… Continue reading To Unlock Promise of MetroLink, TOD is Key

Development, Housing

42-Unit “Aria” Coming to Downtown

Update 10/02/2023: New Renderings were made available in Monday's Architectural Review Board agenda: Additionally, in an interview with the St. Louis Business Journal, the developer stated that price ranges for non-penthouse condos would range from $750,000 to $1.5 million. That's a lot of dough, but if Kirkwood can stockpile 42 rich families on a single… Continue reading 42-Unit “Aria” Coming to Downtown

Policy Analysis, Transportation

Grant’s Trail: More Work to Do

Update 01/27/2023: Good news! Kirkwood will, in fact, be pursuing Phase 1B in this year's call for STP grant proposals according to next week's City Council agenda. The proposal matches that which I outlined below, running from Fillmore to Leffingwell. The city is asking for $1,731,310 in Federal funding and will match that share, should… Continue reading Grant’s Trail: More Work to Do

Policy Analysis

How To Adjust To The Remote Work Era

Happy 2023 Kirkwood, thanks for another great year. In 2022 we: Approved 60 new homes and additional retail via the Kirkwood Apartments Began construction on another 152 homes and retail via The James Completed construction on The Hutton's 12 homes Finished 24 townhomes along Big Bend known as The Townes at Geyer Grove These were… Continue reading How To Adjust To The Remote Work Era

Policy Analysis, Transportation

Getting Over the Line: A Road Diet Update

Update: 9/13/2023 The diet is happening and the plan is to follow all the established best urbanist practice save for the fact that the lanes should be 10-ft wide rather than 12, but we fight on! Here's Council Member Gibbons with the update: At the work session last week, the Council reviewed new plans for… Continue reading Getting Over the Line: A Road Diet Update

Policy Analysis, Transportation

Kirkwood Rd Needs a Diet

Update 09/13/2023: At the work session last week, the Council reviewed new plans for narrowing Kirkwood Road from Adams to Bodley.  Based on lessons learned from the demonstration project, the new plans call for 12-foot, single lanes going north and  south and a 14-foot, center, turning lane.  There will be no parallel parking on either side of Kirkwood Road.   The proposal includes 6-foot sidewalks… Continue reading Kirkwood Rd Needs a Diet

Environment & Nature

A Denser Downtown Needs Better Parks

Recently, I've been proposing ideas to add to Kirkwood's housing supply, including reforms to our minimum lot size requirements, and an overhaul of our ADU rules. Even more recently, I laid out a process by which we could make public transit a more useful asset in Kirkwood and curb the relationship between added density and… Continue reading A Denser Downtown Needs Better Parks

Policy Analysis

So You Want Affordable Housing…

Last Thursday, as the seven city council members offered their thoughts on the Kirkwood Apartments project, something seemed to be afoot. The approval of the project was a forgone conclusion. The developers had crossed their t's and dotted their i's and had come up with a proposal in full compliance with the city's code. The… Continue reading So You Want Affordable Housing…

Parking, St. Louis County, Transportation

Kirkwood TOD: Cutting the Gordian Knot

Noticeably absent from my series on attainable housing in Kirkwood was Transportation Oriented Development (TOD). Transportation Oriented Development is the idea that it makes the most sense to add housing around places that have access to public transit. That way you can reap the benefits of additional housing without absorbing as much of the costs… Continue reading Kirkwood TOD: Cutting the Gordian Knot