Anyhow, the obvious guess is that Jeff Vander Lou takes it's name from Jefferson and Vandeventer which serve as east/west boundaries, but where does the "Lou" come from? Sure St. Louis Avenue runs through the neighborhood, but Natural Bridge is the northern boundary and Delmar the southernmost boundary. Maybe we should change the name to a more contemporary and accurate moniker such as Natty Del Vandy Jeff...just kidding...I think Jeff Vander Lou is cool sounding and next to the Patch, is my favorite St. Louis neighborhood name.
An acquaintance alerted me to keep my eye out for some of the coolest street names in the entire city right in JVL. It's true there are some gems, and I feel I've gotta give a tribute to some of my favorites...
The Tower Grove South Neighborhood (Updated March, 2017)
GS is a major urban success story of the last 15 years. It's got the makings of the perfect St. Louis neighborhood: a stunning park within walking distance, 2 major commercial districts, fabulous architecture and a strong neighborhood association. The bad news is, it experienced a 10% loss of residents from 2000-2010, even our nicest neighborhoods continue to post losses as TGS is down to 13,333 people. Anyhow, this is still a highly desirable neighborhood and I'd put it up there as a clear top 10 for St. Louis places to live, work and play. The neighborhood has a progressive feel.
Fox Park's Newest Music Venue: The Warehouse
Among others, St. Louis' own Tight Pants Syndrome will be playing here on July 8th.
More on the Warehouse:
Jefferson Warehouse opened its doors in November of 2010, and since then, has had extremely positive feedback from the area. With new talent coming in weekly, and existing talent returning to host additional events, there is always something new and exciting going on here.
This city needs as many live music venues as we can get. Check it out.
The Southwest Garden Neighborhood
Southwest Garden is really a tale of two neighborhoods. First is the area east of Kingshighway which is dominated by tree-lined streets with gorgeous multifamily properties. It is more similar to the Shaw neighborhood. The section west of Kingshighway seems very similar to the Hill. But it does have its own identity, .
The O'Fallon Neighborhood
It will be interesting to see if the membership rates are the same at both locations, or if they stick it to the south siders. It will also be interesting to see if they have the YMCA run the facility. I hope they do, because they run a tight ship. The proximity of this new recreation complex along with the fact that the neighborhood has a bright, dedicated young alderman, Antonio French, who I am confident can lead the area in the right direction. And to add to the positive trajectory of the area, all the buildings in the O'Fallon neighborhood will be in a historic district as of 2012. It will be nominated as a National Register of Historic Places. See the full story at the Preservation Research Office.
This is great news, as there are some AMAZING homes just south of O'Fallon Park. They are among the best looking mansions in the city rivaling Holly Hills Boulevard, Lindell, DeBaliviere and other great areas, but O'Fallon has not fared as well as far as retaining people with the means and dedication to maintain the architectural heritage.
Spielin' on the linguisticalities of the verbiage...St. Louis style that is
If anything pisses me off, it's people who look down on others based on the way they speak. What an ass, you don't get it do you? Our differences make us stronger. Listen to Nelly and then listen to Q-Tip and then listen to Common. Drastically different...all great. This is what makes cover songs fun. This is what makes the messenger interesting. Listen to a white dude read a Maya Angelou poem (most likely on NPR), or a black dude read a passage from Willa Cather (has this ever been recorded, please Alan Lomax help us). Great spins on great words. Totally new and exciting or overly intellectual and boring, you make the call. The Rolling Stones made a career on imitating and adding to the playing of black dudes.
Whatever you call it, I like folk music, folk writing, folks in general. If the internet age and technology has brought us anything, it's folk art. Any chump can write or sing or perform or whatever and the world can access it and critique it, laud it, ignore it or ban it immediately. It's a new audience if nothing else. We see what people are doing all over the world and we're all having fun and are unique. Tosh.O, this blog, you name it.
So let's celebrate the times and talk some shit about words and the modern society and culture and urban context of words in St. Louis.
One of my upcoming series after the neighborhood thing I'm doing will be spieling on words with an urban context that have completely taken on new meanings in modern times (read ghetto or gangster) or words that are inflammatory or confusing or just flat out misunderstood (read gentrification, hipster, urban or hoosier). I can't wait to get started on this and I'm going to try to enlist the help of some better read/versed friends to help me with this. I hope to interview some folks and neighbors and anyone else interested. If you have a word or an accent or a dialect that you think is unique, confusing or different in St. Louis than anywhere else, drop me a line and I'll try to work on it.
In the on-deck circle: GHETTO!!!!!! Stay tuned kind reader.
The Downtown West Neighborhood
Most people in the region, and even city residents consider DTW to be Downtown. In fact, DTW doesn't even have it's own link on the city website, it simply points to the DT website. This is yet another data point toward my hypothesis that St. Louis could consolidate many of its neighborhoods down from 79 to ~50. But make no mistake, this is an important part of the city, and one of our greatest, most high-profile parts of town. It is a distinct neighborhood gaining population and is an extremely important connection between Downtown and the burgeoning Midtown area giving us a more and more impressive central corridor.
The Wells/Goodfellow Neighborhood
As with any neighborhoods in a state of severe residential decline, there are signs of when the area was thriving and quite dense; but sadly, those days are over. There were the once bustling commercial corridors of MLK, Natural Bridge, Goodfellow, Union and St. Louis Avenue, as well as signs of many intra-neighborhood corner stores...
The Vandeventer Neighborhood
The Fairground Park Neighborhood
It's hard to think about the massive losses we've experienced as a city over the years. It's hard to believe we let this happen. What a disposable society we are that allows this kind of architecture and history to fall by the wayside. Fairground Park is crumbling and is a tad threatening in more ways than one. This has been a volatile place when it comes to race relations in St. Louis going back to the 1940s. There was some major violence back in 1949 when the city ordered the desegregation of the swimming pools in the park. After a couple days of violence and blood shed, the city decided to go back to segregation. There's an excellent retelling of the story summarized on the Missouri History Museum website...
The North Riverfront Neighborhood
The vast majority of structures are surface lots for trucking distribution and other operations. Metal scrap yards, recycling facilities, salvage yards and contemporary metal sheds housing businesses of all kinds. I tried to point out the areas with a little more character, so you won't get a real feel for what the neighborhood looks like...which is frankly quite bland. For instance the Dial Corporation has a huge facility that makes detergents; but it's really nothing special to look at. Another thing to point out is that much of the property in North Riverfront is private and access is a challenge. The best way to take in this "neighborhood" (really an industrial area) is from atop the hills of Calvary Cemetery or from the Riverfront Trail. If you haven't checked out the 10 mile asphalt Riverfront Trail, you must. It takes you right along the Mississippi River in some spots and and also skirts some impressive industrial operations allowing you sight access to some otherwise unattainable areas. A ride north of Downtown will serve as an important reminder that St. Louis is still a working river town.
Hyde Park Neighborhood
There are lots and lots and lots of dilapidated and crumbling structures new and old in Hyde Park today. But I just can't put my finger on the way these neighborhoods make me feel. On one hand, it's clearly depressing to witness, but on the other hand, you can't help but notice the beauty and care that went into making this neighborhood an important place. The Germans that settled here did there best at making this a European-like self-contained turn of the 19th Century masterpiece of a neighborhood. Their diligence and good design can still be felt today, and it's awe inspiring. There's evidence of some positive efforts from those that have stuck it out over the years and maybe some new investment going into maintaining this place. Maybe enough to stabilize it for future generations to try to figure it out and fix it so it's a show place and contributor to St. Louis status as the premier American city of neighborhoods.
The Peabody Darst Webbe Neighborhood
The Kingsway West Neighborhood
Not unlike Kingsway East, I would describe the current state of Kingsway West in the area between "holding on" and "stable". It's seen better days, but there are still businesses serving the area, a decent park with tennis courts, ball fields, a football field and indoor/outdoor swimming pool in the Wohl Community Center and enough housing stock in decent condition to provide hope for a bright future.
The Mark Twain Neighborhood
Neighborhood Profiles in 2011
I've been putting off the neighborhoods with the largest area simply out of laziness. I'm VERY interested in Carondelet, Dutchtown, Baden and others...but they are huge and will take me all day or weekend to capture.
Central West End and Downtown will probably be last on the list simply because they will require walking to do them justice and I could take 1000s of pictures of these two premier locations in St. Louis.
1.5 miles from a micro-brewery
I feel like a kid again as there is a microbrewery less than 1.5 miles from my house where I can fill my growler for $10 with tasty seasonal selections of hand crafted beer. Lucky me, now if I could just send my kids to get it for me....
I love living in a big city with plenty of neighborhood micro-brews. I love supporting small business and helping unique businesses thrive in our neighborhoods. St. Louis still needs more business to compliment the amazing housing stock. This would really set us apart from other cities in the United States.
The Fountain Park Neighborhood
Daydream # 383
The housing market has seen a downturn no doubt. But people still need a roof over their heads. We still have and need a diverse set of housing stock to meet the ups and downs of a housing market that can appeal to both prospective owners and renters and lessees. Rentals, townhouses, single family homes...all coexisting to create a whole neighborhood.
There are many, many re-habbers making great progress in this city. I've seen them as far north as Riverview and as far south as the Patch. People that care and want to see properties brought back to life while making a living seems like the perfect match. Grassroots efforts are WAY more impactful for the long term health of our neighborhoods and our city as a whole than the huge entertainment projects like Ballpark "Village" (no residential?), Bottle District, etc. that get so much attention around town.
I drive down many dilapidated streets and see a property being rehabbed and I laud the efforts of these folks, but I can't help but feel like their efforts are overwhelmed by the staggering amount of negativity and neglect that surrounds their noble efforts in some parts of the city. On the other hand, I've seen some homes being renovated on streets in Tower Grove South, Shaw, Lafayette Square or Soulard that are the last shell or rehab available on the block...the icing on the cake so to speak. Both are important, and there's so much left to be done.
So why not call all re-habbing hands on deck to work together in a concerted fashion to work toward transforming and marketing streets, blocks, neighborhoods to new residents. The sweeping power of an effort of this scale would be overwhelming. Money would more easily be made if folks worked together to reclaim an entire street. Resources could be pooled.
An entire neighborhood, take Fox Park for example, which is working toward extending its historic status south of Shenandoah to cover the entire neighborhood could be a perfect case study for this type of effort. Start on Ann Street and work south to the end of the neighborhood. Market the neighborhood to renters, owners and lessees. Work toward drawing small business, the local and national press and everyone else to take notice of the concerted efforts to take a single neighborhood on the fringe and elevate it to a regional showplace.
I have always said that bringing a vacant property back to life is the single greatest thing one can do for the betterment of St. Louis. Taking a 4 family down to a 2 family townhouse or a 2 family to a single family dwelling is what we need. We have a city built for 1 million when we only have ~350,000 residents. We should prepare for a solid 500,000.
Hey I can dream can't I?
Yours truly is getting ready to toss our hat in the ring....more on those adventures in 2011.