view of the thoughtless design and weird/dark entrance
So, when news that the property was purchased and would be re-developed by Green Street Properties and designed by local firm UIC...people in the area got excited.
The Post-Dispatch reported on this property back in November, 2011:
A grocery is high on the list of potential tenants, said Green Street's Phil Hulse, though the neighborhood likely can't support a full-size, stand-alone supermarket there. Hulse said he expects to split the building among tenants, and plans to put up a second retail building of 5,000 to 8,000 square feet. He said he's in discussion with a variety of retailers, but wouldn't name specific tenants yet. "There's certainly a lot of voids in that market," he said. "We're out speaking to a fairly diverse group that would play well to surrounding community and would do well there."
To help fund the $6.6 million project, Green Street is asking the City of St. Louis for $1.36 million in tax increment financing, and to establish a Community Improvement District on the site, which would levy an extra 1 percent sales tax and raise $340,000. The TIF was set for a public hearing in January and will need approval by the Board of Alderman. Hulse hopes to start construction in the spring, and finish in late summer.
A second phase would involve buying an existing retail building next door and rehabbing it - though Hulse said he doesn't yet have that building under contract.
Read the full story here.
So we subsidized this developer to the tune of >$1M...lucky them. Let's see what became of the property and what Green Street was able to land for us to improve this vitally important part of the city.
Keep in mind this part of the city is a major sway area that can swing the pendulum toward quality contributors to the city such as Lafayette Square and Compton Heights, parts of Fox Park, McKinley Heights, the burgeoning Lafayette Avenue corridor between Jefferson and Grand. This area is brimming with potential and needs to start aiming higher on all future developments than what the 1970s-1990s ushered in.
Additionally, this part of the city was deemed a "food desert" by the USDA, so obviously food options were needed to serve the many residents that live in these parts.
Hopes were high. Let's aim for a development that will elevate the city, right?
Fast forward to a public meeting organized by then Alderman Kacie Starr-Triplett to engage the neighbors on Green Street's proposal. There was a short presentation by UIC. The building was going to be largely reused, yet stylistically re-fashioned. I'm sure they'll do good work based on their previous work in the city. OK, I'm listening, hoping for the best when the tenants were announced.
Then Green Street unveiled what we had all been waiting for. A fitness club (Blast), okay, that's nice...a stand alone sandwich shop (Subway...interest fading) and then the bomb was dropped....Sav-A-Lot was to be the "anchor tenant".
What? We subsidized a Sav-A-Lot?
This low-end discount grocer aims at the lowest demographic in the area. They cater to cheap junk food, processed dry foods, discounted canned and frozen prepared foods and their fresh selections at the Loughborough and Jefferson location (just down the street) are days away from rotting. This place is not good. Trust me, I used to frequent the Loughborough location when I had little ones who drank 2 + gallons of milk a week (they had the cheapest milk in town).
The places smell horrible upon entry and they don't exactly add to the city in any meaningful way. They are not pleasant places to shop. They don't say: "wow, I want to live around this place".
I was not alone in my disappointment at the meeting, the neighbors: white and black, young and old, Gate District/Fox Park/Lafayette/McKinley Heights, you name it everyone was pissed at worst, disappointed at best. You could see it in the eyes of everyone in the room, maybe even the developers. Try and think of a lower-end grocer...what would it be? Aldi's is a step up for Pete's sake.
I can see subsidizing a Culinaria, Trader Joes, a Field's Foods Hub type concept (which is going in on Bohemian Hill, opening this winter, just east of here on Lafayette Ave). But subsidizing a freakin' Sav-A-Lot? The rug was pulled out from under the room. The public comments ranged from anger to utter disappointment to the usual, hey its better than nothing lackeys. But it appeared too late. The deal was done.
Why, do we make these decisions over and over? We aim to appease the lowest common denominator in the equation. Just say no until something that will elevate the area comes to the table.
I realize Trader Joe's doesn't like St. Louis' numbers, but it would have been PACKED. It would have done great, and the ghetto potential would be MUCH lower than a Sav-A-Lot. It would have brought in people from all over the city, Downtown, South Grand, you name it. THAT would have been worth subsidizing with our tax dollars. That would have elevated property values. That would have gotten the eye of potential new home owners...not a Sav-A-Lot.
Again, I'm all for subsiding quality development that will elevate the options and property values. Stuff that'll draw home owners and quality renters to the area...not crap. I get doing this for IKEA, not Sav-A-Lot.
This will not elevate the area by any means. But, now that the building renovation is complete, I've got to say it looks pretty darn good. And that alone will allow many to tout this as a success.
There was also talk of a hardware story (Ace); that would have been awesome too. Nothing yet. Back in May, 2012 KSDK reported on the development:
There are also plans for a hardware store, coffee shop, fitness gym and bank.
No hardware store, no coffee shop, no bank (or is HR Block the "bank"?).
The other stand alone building is now a Family Dollar store which has saturated the STL market of late. There is a brand new, way more urban-designed one just down the street from this one in the McKinley Heights neighborhood which replace a shuttered Burger King (a step up) across from Trader Bob's Tattoo and the Way Out Club.
Sav-A-Lot is the lowest end discount grocer in our market. They will be the "anchor tenant". The Blast fitness is nice, we are members, it is okay. There is an HR Block (who uses these things) that is largely vacant most of the time (except income tax season) and other vacant storefronts.
Now again, UIC did a respectable job. It has good pedestrian access from Jefferson, decent from Lafayette. Heck, it might be the coolest, sleekest suburban styled strip mall in the city...but the end result is still a Subway (which already existed in the now Family Dollar building). A Wing Stop...check out their menu HERE. Take that food desert....more junk food...a discount fitness club, HR Block and a damn Sav-A-Lot. Thanks a lot...here's $1M Mr. Developer...we can't have nice things. Thanks so much for considering the city of St. Louis where anything is better than nothing. Damn shame.
But as I said, the building looks pretty damn sharp for new construction. Here's the Subway/Wing Stop: